Author Topic: Expanding mandrels  (Read 17546 times)

Offline philf

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Re: Expanding mandrels
« Reply #25 on: March 15, 2013, 05:50:14 PM »
Neotech,

Sorry.
Following what fixerup just posted I had another look at your first design and I originally misunderstood the construction.  :doh: (In my defence, a section in a 2d drawing would be shown hatched and the slotted part wouldn't have been.)

I thought the expanding part was seperate to the body. Now I see that the line is just the bottom of the slot.

If you can stop the cone from turning when you tighten up the screw then there's no reason why it wouldn't work.

Cheers.

Phil.
Phil Fern
Location: Marple, Cheshire

Offline NeoTech

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Re: Expanding mandrels
« Reply #26 on: March 15, 2013, 06:15:32 PM »
Yeah, tomorrow will be experimentation day i think.. I have some steel, and i will photograph each setup. =)
This whole thread expanded into a much bigger discussion than i imagined. ;)
Machinery: Optimum D320x920, Optimum BF20L, Aciera F3. -- I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work. http://www.roughedge.se/blogg/

Offline fixerup

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Re: Expanding mandrels
« Reply #27 on: March 15, 2013, 11:29:13 PM »
This whole thread expanded into a much bigger discussion than i imagined. ;)

To me, this is a very interesting discussion, because learning different ways of holding a workpiece on the lathe is a great asset to know.
Good luck making your part and thanks  everyone for sharing

 :mmr:


Phil

Offline PeterE

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Re: Expanding mandrels
« Reply #28 on: March 19, 2013, 02:27:12 PM »
NeoTech,

Even though I have described a relatively complicated stepped inside mandrel/collet I think you were on the right track from start.

After having thought a bit more, my design would be something like below:

A short housing with a wider "collar" at its lengthwise center to be stop for the chuck jaw or collet nose. The back end would be drilled out so I could fit a long nut. The business end would be turned to a close fit in the part it shall hold and then drilled/bored out so it is just about 1.5 mm thick. Then cross cut to be expansionable.

A cone with suitable diameter to fit inside and a bit of threading to pull the cone in using the long nut. The cone shall preferably not protrude outside the thin end so the collet can bottom in what it shall hold.

Now pull the cone into the collet and there you have it.

I would rather use a nut to pull the cone in insterad of a screw as there would be a risk that the screw will push out the job if too long.

When it comes to measures I would go for the same length of the business end as its diameter (if not very large), the support collar about 3 to 5 mm in all sizes and the back end around 20 mm to be good enough for chauck jaws and collets.

Just another idea...

BR

/Peter

Always at the edge of my abilities, too often beyond ;-)

Offline NeoTech

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Re: Expanding mandrels
« Reply #29 on: March 22, 2013, 05:10:54 PM »
So i made a "version" of my mandrel design anyway. instead of making a cone with a thread i made a bolt with a conical cap and put a nut on the backside. And it actually works. =)

And this is the result.. it takes frickin forever though removing mount it do the outside radius and remove it file it and the next one.. 6 out of 24 done.. ;)


Machinery: Optimum D320x920, Optimum BF20L, Aciera F3. -- I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work. http://www.roughedge.se/blogg/