willray
Well-Known Member
(regarding the back cover)
Since I believe there is a language barrier getting in our way here, I think we need extra clarity on the parts that are being discussed.
You have removed the backing plate with the spindle mount.
There should also be an internal cover that goes over the scroll and pinions, and that seals the "moving parts" inside rather well against ingress of swarf/chips.
Does your chuck normally have that internal cover plate in place?
Is there some substantial gap between it and the part of the chuck body where we see the stamp "582"?
If that inside-cover plate is present, you should _not_ be getting any substantial amount of crud inside the chuck, unless you are blasting it with high pressure coolant or air, and are machining stuff that makes dust.
I recently opened up a couple 3-jaw scroll chucks that were probably in industrial use for 50+ years and never previously opened, and while they had accumulated a small amount of powder from iron, and there was a bit of detritus just from the decades of wear on the scroll, they were not even close to dirty enough that they needed to be cleaned out.
If you are getting a significant amount of swarf/chips moving from inside the bore of the chuck out into the space with the pinions in home-shop type use, I'm going to say that there is something wrong with how your chuck is assembled.
It is just removed during cleaning .
...
Since I believe there is a language barrier getting in our way here, I think we need extra clarity on the parts that are being discussed.
You have removed the backing plate with the spindle mount.
There should also be an internal cover that goes over the scroll and pinions, and that seals the "moving parts" inside rather well against ingress of swarf/chips.
Does your chuck normally have that internal cover plate in place?
Is there some substantial gap between it and the part of the chuck body where we see the stamp "582"?
If that inside-cover plate is present, you should _not_ be getting any substantial amount of crud inside the chuck, unless you are blasting it with high pressure coolant or air, and are machining stuff that makes dust.
I recently opened up a couple 3-jaw scroll chucks that were probably in industrial use for 50+ years and never previously opened, and while they had accumulated a small amount of powder from iron, and there was a bit of detritus just from the decades of wear on the scroll, they were not even close to dirty enough that they needed to be cleaned out.
If you are getting a significant amount of swarf/chips moving from inside the bore of the chuck out into the space with the pinions in home-shop type use, I'm going to say that there is something wrong with how your chuck is assembled.