rleete wrote:Okay, lets' see if this works. Pics, just for you Ron. And I'll type slow, because I know you can't read fast...
I needed to make cylinder caps. Thin round wafers, hard to hold. So, I parted off oversize, about 10 pieces. Then I made an adapter/collet to hold them. It goes as follows:...
Turbinedoctor wrote:Ron that is a nice finish on the parting off. I tried parting off with the live center in place and had too much pressure on it and everything got jambed up. Didn't know my lathe could make a noise like that. Still need to practice more with parting off.
Durwood
B34VD wrote:You need to drill the bore offset from center? Coat one end with layout ink and measure from the outside edge and scribe and center punch where you want to bore.
Using your drill press, spot drill the center mark. Then using your 4 jaw chuck with a parallel across the face, place the cylinder againts the parallel and use the center on your tailstock in the spot drilled hole to locate it in the jaws. You will be real close and can indicate it closer if need be.
rleete wrote:The way I've done it is to set up a piece in the mill vise. Set up a stop so you can locate successive pieces the same. Zero the mill, and step drill up to about 7/16. Bore or ream it out to size. Swap parts, and do it again. And again, etc. If you have a 1/2" reamer, that should do just fine.
Remember, a straight bore is most important. Size is secondary, as these thing will run even if loose. They just leak a little. But a non-straight bore is a killer. Having one off kilter (crooked) only affects looks (to those that can even see it).
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