Poignard
Well-Known Member
Dead on- its what got me started!
Excellent book.
Dead on- its what got me started!
As a very small boy I can remember seeing in my grandfathers engineering works a large cast gear wheel finished on a BIG lathe and then heat shrunk on to an equally large drum which had it's rim machined on the same lath I am guessing that the diameters were in the region of 10 foot perhaps bigger but I was a young lad thenThe most memorable thing was to see three men heat it up to dull red and then sledge hammer it on to the drum
Thats when men were men and there were real fitters and turners that served 7 year apprenticeships
![]()
I worked at Westinghouse in Chippenham once, biggest machines I have ever got close to. When you realise you are standing in the working space of a pillar drill it's a bit of a shock.
And having to climb up a set of steps to the working platform if I remember correctly.
I looked at that one but in the end decided on a "retail" one which was delivered on a pallet direct to my workshop for £60 on top of the purchase price. It would have cost me over £200 to hire a jib crane then fetching it etc in the end made it a bit of a no brainer
As I work on it I can feel the heavy hand and tut tutting of 3 generations of engineers as they look down or more probably upwhen viewing my efforts.
Well I found a Mk3 AUD and at the moment just checking things out, ordered a new cross slide feed nut hoping that will take out most of the 0.3 mm backlash which is the only problem I have found. Next up is to sort out some tooling then to start on some basic exercises followed by a couple of tool builds and a dividing head kit.
You would not need a crane, just a good set of Imperial spanners and an ordinary van, though a sack barrow helps. No part of that Boxford is too heavy for two men to lift once you have stripped it down. I moved my South Bend all by myself, the bed was the heaviest bit at about 80 lb.
this one even has the rather odd geared leadscrew handle.
You don't see many of them about !
Boo2
It says it's relisted due to the buyer not completing the deal.
Well I found a Mk3 AUD and at the moment just checking things out, ordered a new cross slide feed nut hoping that will take out most of the 0.3 mm backlash which is the only problem I have found. Next up is to sort out some tooling then to start on some basic exercises followed by a couple of tool builds and a dividing head kit.
It said that before, and it is not currently listed.
I'm at a loss to know why you are worried about .3 mm backlash & what a dividing head has got to do with a lathe.I worked on many machine tools with sometimes in excess of 1/8" backlash producing aircraft components to within +- .002" & I have only ever seen a dividing head used on a mill or possibly a tool cutter grinder though I can't see why one could'nt be used on a shaper.![]()
I think anything less than .3mm backlash would tighten the leadscrew too much making it stiff to operate.
A dividing head can be offset in a 4 jaw to make crankshafts, or anything that needs multiple diameters on different centres.
If you want to screw cut multi start threads you can use the dividing head to position each start of the thread.
If you want to bore some offset holes in a lathe you can use the dividing head to create a PCD.
If broaching you can use it to create a spline.
I've been a machinist too long. Must get a life![]()
You would not need a crane, just a good set of Imperial spanners and an ordinary van, though a sack barrow helps. No part of that Boxford is too heavy for two men to lift once you have stripped it down. I moved my South Bend all by myself, the bed was the heaviest bit at about 80 lb.