richardsnowstar
Well-Known Member
I have acquired a lathe and want to machine new sheaves for a couple of blocks. Does anyone know the best material for this? And also where to buy the material?
Thanks.
Thanks.
I made new sheaves for all my old blocks and mast using "acetal".
Its an engineering plastic, and is available in white and black. Use the original bushing from the center of the block, Grind a tool to give you the correct shape for the rope to sit in, and you will have them all done in no time.
And also where to buy the material?
Thanks.
Thanks for the tips. Is Nylon any good?
Also any advice on "grinding a tool" would be welcome. Last time I used a lathe was at school (many years ago!) so will be learning everything from scratch again.
What about the idea of making replacement sheaves in phosphur bronze, yes / no ?
I wouldn't use nylon.
Just about all you need to know about using a small lathe can be found in 'The Amateur's Lathe' by L.H.Sparey
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Amateurs-Lathe-Lawrence-H-Sparey/dp/0852422881
Bushings certainly, but I'd prefer the Acetal for the sheaves themselves (unless you sail a nice classic with beautiful blocks anyway!). My original sheaves in the mast were Aluminium. The Acetal ones are hugely better, and actually lighter as well. They run on phospher bronze bushings that I also made at the same time.
I use Acetal every day in my working life, making jigs to construct bespoke battery and power systems. Its great to machine, and is quite stable in the marine environment. My sheaves have lasted 6 years now and are still free and unworn.
I will post up a better explination of making them tomorrow.
Bushes aren't essential when using acetal or delrin as both are used to make bearings and bushes, they do deform under load if highly loaded
Neither are effected by moisture, or at least not to any amount that you need to worry about, nylon is so avoid it unless you allow for the changes
I take it you have a small lathe if the tools are only 6mm so it would struggle cutting 14mm wide grooves in harder materials but may well be OK if you go carefully as acetal/delrin are lovely to machine, to make a 14mm groove the easy way is just to grind a rounded end tool out but as you are restricted to 6mm shank size then get something like http://www.chronos.ltd.uk/cgi-bin/sh000001.pl?WD=6%20xc39%20mm%20ref%20tool%20773851%20profiling&PN=XMAS_GIFT_IDEAS_2%2ehtml#a773851 which is a 6mm shank profiling tool which takes a 6mm round insert which will cut acetal & delrin very nicely - I have a bigger version I use for acetal / dedlrin / ally / stainless / anything and they give a really good finish
You can't realistically polish acetal/delrin after you have cut it but you can file it and sand it if you aren't too worried about the finish or better still use router bits in a holder to get a really nice finish straight off the lathe - I use 1/4" shank bearing guided round-over bits to get a nice rounded finish on the front of the torch and battery canisters I make and made a holder for router bits from an ally offcut
You can get lots of acetal / delrin offcuts from ebay - Ace Materials do short offcuts http://www.ebay.co.uk/sch/ace_materials/m.html?_nkw=&_armrs=1&_from=&_ipg=&_trksid=p3686 - I bought a load of short ends of 50mm & 60mm from them a while ago and their stock changes so worth keeping an eye on them
I buy my acetal / delrin by the meter from http://www.metals4u.co.uk/ but they do short lengths as well - if you give them a ring they are really helpful
Depending what you intend to do and what you get with your lathe you may need to budget about an additional 1 to 3 times the cost of the lathe for tooling, I have a mid-sized lathe and milling machine and the actual machine cost was minor compared to the tooling costs but I have specific business needs from my machines. Hopefully you should get a few cutting tools with it.
Suggested initial purchases;
1. Mixture of material off cuts to try; deltrin, acetal, nylon are nice and easy and very forgiving to play with, aluminium is not bad, steel is cheap but much less forgiving, try different materials, speeds, feeds, etc., ebay is your friend for offcuts or lathe starter packs
2. Decent turning tools, I'd suggest as a bare minimum the profiling tool I've linked to above plus then a couple of indexable tools - indexable means that the tips are replaceable and when you blunt/chip/wreck one you just turn it around or swap it out, but they are anything from a couple of quid to maybe a fiver a pop in small sizes
3. A decent cut off tool with replacement blade as you will break it a few times to start with
4. Cheap LED light from Ikea with a bendy body so that you can see what you are doing
There is a lot of argument about whether to use indexable tools or spend the time learning to grind HSS tools - if you are turning for pleasure, have restricted time, and have the budget save up and buy indexable as the time saved is well worth it, things like an indexable cut off tool can be scary prices to start with but are lovely to work with; if your toolholder will take 8mm shanks then http://www.chronos.ltd.uk/acatalog/New_Glanze_Clamp_Type_Indexable_Parting_Tool_Starter_acks. is ideal. For plastics its overkill but has the advantage of being able to part of thick pieces and is thin so the workload on the lathe is reduced, the [h=2]Small Inserted Blade Parting Tools (Ref: PTO....) or, if it will fit, Clamp Type Parting Tool (Ref: CTPT1) on http://www.chronos.ltd.uk/acatalog/Engineering_Menu_Parting_Tools_71.html are cheaper and will get you started or the first one on http://www.rdgtools.co.uk/acatalog/Parting_Sytems__High_Speed_.html[/h]
Suggested places for tools are http://www.chronos.ltd.uk and http://www.rdgtools.co.uk/ but if you start to look around their sites you can spend a fortune
Have a look at youtube for loads of how-to videos and places like http://www.modelenginemaker.com which has loads of general turning info as well as some fantastic models and engines
If you get stuck or have any qu's just ask
I've bought all sorts of plastics from Direct Plastics Online. http://www.directplasticsonline.co.uk
I like the way their web site gives detailed properties for all the plastics. The last item I made was a bow roller for a club member in UHMWPE which I hadn't come across before. I'll be interested to see how this has fared after a season on a swinging mooring.
I've just remembered that they say that UHMWPE is used for pulleys in the marine industry.