Has anyone, maybe Norm in his vast experience, ever built a device to do this.
RonW
I am quite baffled to be associated with full size, 12" inches to the foot sort of thing. Maybe there is confusion with another Norman Atkinson who wrote the biography of that great engineer Sir Joseph Whitworth.
As I have said- far too many times that I was a 'bean counter' until the age of 55 and at that point had enough of my version of the rat race and retired- for longer than I had ever worked.
As a MODEL( Apologies Cogsy but the message must be forced home) engineer, it seems fairly easy to assume that with sufficient horse power, people can move away from single point machining. I'm always ashamed to find that I agree with a leading expert in model engineering that people 'ask the the same silly questions and get the same silly answers' I'm like him, I spend far too much time having to work things out for myself.
As both gentlemen have have Myford ML7's, it is fair to mention that another L7 owner made a good living out of his highly modified lathe- screwcutting- and probably very little in royalties. As far as I am aware he bought half a Myford and added a One horse motor and a half horse one and drove his version with old traditional line shafting. He was too poor to finalise Patent applications or bu any tools and made and describe how he built up his workshop with fabricated mild steel sections rather than castings which he hated.
Thinking back, people do create threads with dies and looking a m sets of BA ones, they cut threads- one following the other whilst my other assorted stuff is three fold. Harking back to the 7 Series Myfords, the tailstocks have three start threads in the tailstock poppet. No doubt that they were cut at -one operation.
Returning to myself, I have travelled fairly extensively in Europe, a bit in America and Canada and not enough in the Far East. In the UK and Europe we bought property but Far from the Madding Crowd of Industry. On my wife's death, I sold up, ensured that my grandchildren would also benefit as well as my children with better educations that I was previously subject to. As a bean counter, I am constantly aware of the problems of inheritance and simply and also the need to extend charity to those who haven't been quite as lucky as myself.
So I've little time to brood especially on questions which have been discussed time without number- and which are still largely ignored.
Now at almost 90, I have real problems which only the fortunate amongst you will experience.
I hope that this goes somewhere to clear the matter and frankly, if it doesn't, it's only a hobby and should be treated as such.
Norman