syrtismajor
Junior Member
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- Feb 15, 2010
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Has anybody else had this trouble with their lathe?
Mine is a Sieg II Metal Lathe that has an annoying feature that I cannot remove. Ever since I got it I have followed every tutorial online to make it as good and reliable as possible. This includes taking the whole thing apart, cleaning every last screw, polishing every moving part and carefully reassembling it. The increase in performance is very noticeable, I'm happy to call it my new lathe since it replaced my older Sieg I.
Now, both the cross slide and compound slide have proved to be the snag. At first the quality of the slide was a little questionable due to their machining marks etc. but I manage to solve that with excessive polishing. All of the slide areas now have a shiny surface rather than the previous 'gritty' appearance. I was hoping this would take care of the little 'wobble' they had that led to some annoying vibration.
If this sounds a little confusing, hopefully my 'crap-o-cad' will help...
A is how I set up the slides. The screw holds the jib in place which isn't quite the correct shape. Since only one side connects, I cannot foresee this being much of an issue. I tighten all of the holding screws until the slide moves freely.
B is what happens when I'm running the lathe. Generally It's not noticeable until I cut steel where a vibration starts. The little gap (by the red arrow) opens up to about 1/4 of a millimetre leading to the cutting head suddenly vibrating. This can lead to a broken tool or a distorted part. What really confuses me is that the opening will not go beyond that 1/4 of a millimetre.
I have tried tightening the holding screws to remove any chance of vibration, but that locks up the slide completely which sort of ruins the point of the lathe...
I've checked the mating parts on the other side of the slide and they match up perfectly, this was using a permanent marker pen so there is no chance that is where the wobble originates. The only area that I can see causing this where the jib is located as it must give some room to let this happen. Maybe it's rotating a little? If so, what can I do to fix it?
Mine is a Sieg II Metal Lathe that has an annoying feature that I cannot remove. Ever since I got it I have followed every tutorial online to make it as good and reliable as possible. This includes taking the whole thing apart, cleaning every last screw, polishing every moving part and carefully reassembling it. The increase in performance is very noticeable, I'm happy to call it my new lathe since it replaced my older Sieg I.
Now, both the cross slide and compound slide have proved to be the snag. At first the quality of the slide was a little questionable due to their machining marks etc. but I manage to solve that with excessive polishing. All of the slide areas now have a shiny surface rather than the previous 'gritty' appearance. I was hoping this would take care of the little 'wobble' they had that led to some annoying vibration.
If this sounds a little confusing, hopefully my 'crap-o-cad' will help...
A is how I set up the slides. The screw holds the jib in place which isn't quite the correct shape. Since only one side connects, I cannot foresee this being much of an issue. I tighten all of the holding screws until the slide moves freely.
B is what happens when I'm running the lathe. Generally It's not noticeable until I cut steel where a vibration starts. The little gap (by the red arrow) opens up to about 1/4 of a millimetre leading to the cutting head suddenly vibrating. This can lead to a broken tool or a distorted part. What really confuses me is that the opening will not go beyond that 1/4 of a millimetre.
I have tried tightening the holding screws to remove any chance of vibration, but that locks up the slide completely which sort of ruins the point of the lathe...
I've checked the mating parts on the other side of the slide and they match up perfectly, this was using a permanent marker pen so there is no chance that is where the wobble originates. The only area that I can see causing this where the jib is located as it must give some room to let this happen. Maybe it's rotating a little? If so, what can I do to fix it?