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More time in the metal shop.

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More time in the metal shop.

Postby 9fingers » 21 Mar 2016, 23:45

I spent some of the weekend making these parts.

Image

Image

Making parts with only parts of circular features is a bit of a pain with manual machines designed for cutting straight lines (milling) or round things on a lathe.

You start by calculating the coordinates of where the edge of a circular cutter will intersect with the profile that you want to cut. Spreadsheets can be very useful for this once you have the maths correct.

Once you have a list of the coordinates like this:-

Image

You set pairs of x y coordinates and make a cut, move to the next pair and repeat. This table covers 90 degrees of the circle. For the rest of the profile, the numbers are the same you just flip the sign, remembering to stop when the curve turns into a straight line or other different part of the profile.

Then it is a case of hand work with files and emery to blend the surface into a smooth curve like this.

Image

Can you work out what these parts are for? Clue: it's relevant to my recent other project.

Bob
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https://drive.google.com/file/d/1dBTVXx ... sp=sharing
Email:motors@minchin.org.uk
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Re: More time in the metal shop.

Postby Rod » 22 Mar 2016, 00:21

Clever stuff - the power of maths!

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Re: More time in the metal shop.

Postby Wizard9999 » 22 Mar 2016, 00:34

My guess would be that they are part of the DX set up for the new thicknesser, but maybe the radius is too small.

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Re: More time in the metal shop.

Postby 9fingers » 22 Mar 2016, 08:28

Yes Terry the bore of the compete circular bracket is 48.9 mm so too small to be DX related.

Bob
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Re: More time in the metal shop.

Postby 9fingers » 22 Mar 2016, 22:26

Here is an other clue

Image

But now the prize fund has been halved :lol:

Bob
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Re: More time in the metal shop.

Postby Rod » 22 Mar 2016, 22:51

Digital readout depth gauge

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Re: More time in the metal shop.

Postby 9fingers » 22 Mar 2016, 23:32

Rod wrote:Digital readout depth gauge

Rod



Give that man a coconut!

This is my third thicknesser to have this Wixey gauge fitted to it. However this planer has been the most complex to fit with not a flat surface in sight to mount it on.

The ring bracket fits on the top of one of the four pillars that support the cutter head.

Image

Two small grub screws hold this in place. Not easy to see but you might just spot them here

Image

The next curved bracket fits on the part of the cutter head that runs up and down the pillar.

Image

The long steel strip has the other small steel part screwed on and fitted top the top bracket covering the access holes to the 'secret' grub screws.

Image

At the bottom, a thread is tapped into the casting to take the hex bolt. The trick was to make sure everything was in line and sliding smoothly as any misalignment makes the gauge move in jerks.
It did take a bit of fiddling but the vertical steel bar is spot on parallel to the axis of the pillar and proved to be well worth the effort.

Previous incarnations of my mounting attempts still need to be tapped like a barometer to ensure the reading was right.

Now the easy bit - fit the gauge.

Image

Next the embarrassing confession :lol: The bracket holding the read head was fractionally too large meaning I could not open the battery cover :oops:
Still easily fixed with a few strokes of a coarse bastard (file) and now the display works

Image

Just to the left of the "MM" on the read head, you might just see the precision shim needed to perfect the alignment - 4 layers of masking tape did the trick.

I think I need to get back to working with this strange fibrous material now. About 3 months after buying the machine, I'm almost ready to make some shavings :eusa-whistle:

Bob

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Email:motors@minchin.org.uk
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Re: More time in the metal shop.

Postby Jimmy Mack » 23 Mar 2016, 21:06

That looks great, could do with one of those on my P/T!...sometimes a bit of parallax error reading the flat needle edge against the gauge....a trip to spec savers might be in order too

Jim

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Re: More time in the metal shop.

Postby 9fingers » 23 Mar 2016, 21:36

Jimmy Mack wrote:That looks great, could do with one of those on my P/T!...sometimes a bit of parallax error reading the flat needle edge against the gauge....a trip to spec savers might be in order too

Jim

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I don't think wixey make that one any more but they do others.
http://www.machine-dro.co.uk/digital-sc ... ?brand=801

Bob
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Email:motors@minchin.org.uk
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