My lathe is a venerable 60 - 70 year old Schaublin 102VM, excellent precision, but which has several components that follow no known industrial standard. I need a light dog drive plate for small work between centers. Even if you can get one buying is prohibitively expensive. To make one I need to machine the inner thread of the spindle nose thread, which is given as M 37,6x3. So the thread top is 60 degrees, but the thread shape is nowhere close to e.g. a M 40 standard thread shape. So I decide to copy the thread on my old face plate. A good way to copy is to place 2 steelballs opposite 1 steelball in the thread and to work the new thread to the distance between the balls in the existing thread.
I decide to abuse a simple digital caliper for this purpose. I grind two parallel hollow flats on the outside of the measuring jaws.
To this purpose I mount my PROXXON grinding spindle on my WABECO milling machine. The calipers are simply fixed to an angle plate. For the light grinding involved this proves to be sufficiently stiff. The small diameter 2,5 mm steel balls are attached to the grooves with a bit of slow curing 2 component glue. I mount the calipers with the steel balls in the still soft glue carefully inside the internal thread to be copied and hope for the best. After a night curing the thing comes out OK. The double balls have not set at 3 mm distance but at the double 6 mm but that is also fine. The balls don't fall of immediately and my one-of measuring tool seems to be capable to last the probably maximum 10 measurements to be taken. And the calipers are still fit for regular use.
I decide to abuse a simple digital caliper for this purpose. I grind two parallel hollow flats on the outside of the measuring jaws.
To this purpose I mount my PROXXON grinding spindle on my WABECO milling machine. The calipers are simply fixed to an angle plate. For the light grinding involved this proves to be sufficiently stiff. The small diameter 2,5 mm steel balls are attached to the grooves with a bit of slow curing 2 component glue. I mount the calipers with the steel balls in the still soft glue carefully inside the internal thread to be copied and hope for the best. After a night curing the thing comes out OK. The double balls have not set at 3 mm distance but at the double 6 mm but that is also fine. The balls don't fall of immediately and my one-of measuring tool seems to be capable to last the probably maximum 10 measurements to be taken. And the calipers are still fit for regular use.
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