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Raglan 5 inch Lathe ----- Castors and Levelling Feet
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PekkaNF:
Hello,

I have used some machine feets, can buy them from industrial sypply shop. On band saw I used two hard plastic wheels on rear and rubber mounts on front. Have to take some pictures.

Lastest - somewhat untested idea is hokecypuck. Friends use it as a jacking pad and soft pad for hammering etc.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hockey_puck

"The black rubber of the puck is made up of a mix of natural rubber, antioxidants, bonding materials and other chemicals to achieve a balance of hardness and resilience."

Sounds like it would work out good, but it will not last forever.

Pekka
loply:
You really want rigid feet. I would probably shy away from rubber. Metal is more rigid.

I don't think you need to dampen the concrete floor from the vibrations of the lathe.
Meldonmech:
Hi Guys
                Thanks for the comments. Found the video very interesting.

                                                                  Regards David
PekkaNF:
The subject of machine feet is pretty complex as a whole..."it all depends...". And I'm not pretending to understand it to any great degrees. Specially vibration dampening seems to be science of it's own. I have been helping long time ago to measure machines to see where excitation is made and what parts are merely sympathetic. Then back to drawing board to decrease excitation to dampen the elements that march along.

On hobby domain, I see mainly next purposes for feet:

1) Leveling
2) To facilitate moving of machines (ever tried to lift a machine that has foot firmly lying on the floor with no place to pry)
3) prevent machine from moving by itself
4) Stabilization. Some machine footing is pretty narrow and some sort of bolt down would be a good idea.

Then whatever reason is chosen it should not put undue load on the machine or twist the body of the machine.

I have about 1,5 metric tone knee format milling machine and the foot if it is so rigid that any kind feet that will allow leveling it would be fine. I used commercial steel feet with a rubber insert middle. Purely for leveling. There is very little danger of twisting that machine out of alignment.

I have also pretty strong revolver lathe (-revolver parts) and it has two columns. That probably would twist very easily on it's own weight. Fairly rigid feet might be the starting point here.

Then I have one bench lathe, that is on the bench and bench is on the rubber engine mounts that are used to level the bench. I'm pretty sure the lathe bed would twist the bench and not that much other way out.

In principle I am not big fan of bolting together immovably very different structures that have nearly same stiffness. Which will win tug of wars?

Random thoughts I admit,
Pekka
Meldonmech:
Hi Pekka,
              I have come to the same conclusions, some of my machines are mounted on industrial adjustable pads, of the steel and rubber/cork composition, and others on the green, water resistant flooring grade chip board. Both have proved to be satisfactory. I have a 10inch Shaping Machine which is sited in my garage only levelled on temporary packing. It performs well on slow speeds but wants to walk around the workshop at higher speeds, I don't want to to drill the floor, so at the moment the problem remains unresolved.

                                                Cheers David
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