Gallery, Projects and General > How do I?? |
Holding Lead Screw in lathe chuck? |
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pete3000:
offering another soft grip solution, aluminium duct tape, aka builders tape. Used for sealing vent ducts and insulation joints etc on hevac syatems, cheap enough and sticks to most surfaces. It is thin enough and made from thin 30 or 40 micron soft aluminium. Wont slip very easily Pete |
Tony Wells:
Plumbers copper tubing large enough to slip over the leadscrew, then slit one side with a saw. Two cuts if needed to make a gap wide enough collapse enough. |
raynerd:
Hi Guys, despite playing at engineering for the last 3-4 years, I`m still scared of my 4 jaw! However, I took the plunge last night and managed to get it nicely centred with some ally drinks can shims. Seems to have worked very well. Thanks for all the ideas. I like the split collet idea of using a slitted copper tubing. I`ve held delicate clock arbours like this so I don`t know why I didn`t think of that. Thanks again for all the quick replies yesterday. Chris |
Fergus OMore:
Chris, Most of the 4 jaw problems are caused because most people have only ONE key to adjust the opposing jaws. Simply make up a spare set-- and life will become far easier. However, if you make up a set of throwaway 'soft jaws' for your three jaw, you get repeatable accuracy but only in one diameter. Cheers FOM |
pete3000:
try and use older copper tubing, the newer stuff isn't proper copper. It looks ok but has a steel/nickel content, which is harder, the new 2p coins after 1992 are copper plated steel alloy, try it with a magnet. :doh: the older 2p coins and older copper pipe are purer in copper content Just shows you older is better in more ways than one. I heard recently alternators and motors are now being produced using ally windings as it's 5-6 times cheaper than copper. |
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