I haven't been working on the Gnome engine for the past couple of weeks, I decided to bring my Drummond Roundbed lathe into the 21st Century. Adding a DRO is a fairly straight-forward project for ordinary lathes such as Myfords or similar, but the Roundbed had a clever rotating saddle and a swivelling cross-slide that makes adding a DRO sensor a bit of a challenge. Here's a few photos to show how I did the cross-slide:
The bracket for the encoder has a 1" hole for the post and a small hole for a pin to locate the bracket in the correct plane on the slide
This is the bracket fitted to the slide, you can see the locating pin under the centre strip securing screw (the other two holes were to secure the bracket while boring the 1" hole):
Here's the slide fitted to the saddle with the DRO encoder bracket underneath:
And here's how it still works when the slide is swivelled. It does require a bit of space behind the machine:
Here's the work so far, the Y-axis encoder has yet to be fitted, but the most awkward was the X-axis and that's done and working:
An added benefit is that the encoder bracket thickness has raised the slide so that the Myford Dividing Head is precisely on centre height:
I'll post details of the y-axis encoder fitting - that needs to accomodate the rotatable saddle!
Richard
The bracket for the encoder has a 1" hole for the post and a small hole for a pin to locate the bracket in the correct plane on the slide
This is the bracket fitted to the slide, you can see the locating pin under the centre strip securing screw (the other two holes were to secure the bracket while boring the 1" hole):
Here's the slide fitted to the saddle with the DRO encoder bracket underneath:
And here's how it still works when the slide is swivelled. It does require a bit of space behind the machine:
Here's the work so far, the Y-axis encoder has yet to be fitted, but the most awkward was the X-axis and that's done and working:
An added benefit is that the encoder bracket thickness has raised the slide so that the Myford Dividing Head is precisely on centre height:
I'll post details of the y-axis encoder fitting - that needs to accomodate the rotatable saddle!
Richard