Surely you have to swing this double indicator job round at least once anyway to check it is reading right?
You won't be able to see the gauges then! ;D
Surely you have to swing this double indicator job round at least once anyway to check it is reading right?
Whilst I can see and appreciate how the bent rod method works it seems a very messy way of doing it.
Re the Cincinnati Mills an their ilk. I went to an auction a little while back there was a couple of big machines and some shapers. Not a single bid for any of them. Crying shame to see the scrappies breaking them up with sledge hammers.
Surely you have to swing this double indicator job round at least once anyway to check it is reading right?
You want to be swinging a fairly decent radius too.
You won't be able to see the gauges then! ;D
Why didn't you bid on them? It is really the only way to save our industrial history.
If you have made the tool accurately you will only need to look at it from the front. When setting the tool up for the first time, swinging the tool round the other way would be a means of checking that your work was accurate. That is assuming that the mill was properly trammed in the first place.
I'll do another post on setting up later.
Hi folks. Today I finished mine. Here it is!
The most important thing is the perpendicularity between the D12 main hole and the bottom surface so all holes axes parallelism.
Gouge datum/reset is easy using the inspection surface plate.
Agreed. The reason I think the commercial units are so small is so that they can be used to check the X and Y axis on big mills with compound heads. I guess most hobbyists have more modest machines with heads that only tilt in one direction. My single head tool is effectively at least three times as long once rotated. It does take a little while to use it though. I still prefer this idea, similar to what I had in my mind except not as robust.
http://www.eztram.com/product_results.asp?ID=16
The way I see it those tools are basically useless. You can make any mill setup look good if you swing a small diameter.
It's designed for a mini mill so can't be too much bigger. The bigger unit designed for full size mills has at least the same size swing as the twin gauge units.
Yes they have different sizes the setup that necchiom and BaronJ made or have plans for are to small for my use I have a 9" table and a compound head so my machine would need a bigger span. Wizard69 it's all about making what suits your needs as we've said we use a bent bar to tram for years but if this will save me time and maybe be more accurate then what have I got to lose by making one? I think in my own case it will be handy because I move the head a lot to accommodate my jobs and needs, when I get the second mill up and running maybe I will not have this problem.
Todd
Yes they have different sizes the setup that necchiom and BaronJ made or have plans for are to small for my use I have a 9" table and a compound head so my machine would need a bigger span. Wizard69 it's all about making what suits your needs as we've said we use a bent bar to tram for years but if this will save me time and maybe be more accurate then what have I got to lose by making one? I think in my own case it will be handy because I move the head a lot to accommodate my jobs and needs, when I get the second mill up and running maybe I will not have this problem.
Todd
Just a couple of notes:
Sweeping a large diameter makes it easier to tram in your head not harder. Any deviation from ideal is magnified by the long sweep distance.
You are right that the machine needs to setup to meet your needs. If one never uses a fly cutter or other cutter sweeping a large diameter a perfectly. square spindle might not be seen as a big deal.
Just a couple of notes:
Sweeping a large diameter makes it easier to tram in your head not harder. Any deviation from ideal is magnified by the long sweep distance.
You are right that the machine needs to setup to meet your needs. If one never uses a fly cutter or other cutter sweeping a large diameter a perfectly. square spindle might not be seen as a big deal.
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