olympic
Well-Known Member
I'm not a very good machinist, I don't have a lot of money to spend, and I have a Craftex (Canadian Busy Bee equivalent of a Grizzly G4015) B2071 lathe/mill combination. With these three strikes against me I felt that it couldn't hurt to try adapting a cheap digital caliper to make a DRO for the vertical axis of my mill.
Accordingly, I found a cheap, but stainless steel 4" digital caliper to adapt to the mill. I had to have a short caliper because of the limited space available to me, and even then I had to cut a little slot out of the drive belt cover to accommodate the height of the caliper.
With the slot made, though, things became easier. I merely laid the caliper against the mill housing and tapped a 4-40 hole in the housing. The "top" part of the caliper just screwed into place, held through a hole I drilled in the plastic scale body.
I secured the bottom ear of the caliper by drilling a hole in it and threading a 4-40 screw into an aluminium bar fastened to the collar at the bottom of the quill. The bar is what I had been using till now with a dial gauge to adjust cut depth (the mill's original scale is hopeless), and I left it long in case I have to go back to it, though I hope I don't; the dial gauge is very difficult to mount there.
I now have a single-axis DRO for my cheap old mill, and I don't intend to add anything to the other two axes, as my dial gauge is easy to use.
Everything moves freely, and as for accuracy, I seem to be consistently within .001", and that's good enough for me.
Accordingly, I found a cheap, but stainless steel 4" digital caliper to adapt to the mill. I had to have a short caliper because of the limited space available to me, and even then I had to cut a little slot out of the drive belt cover to accommodate the height of the caliper.
With the slot made, though, things became easier. I merely laid the caliper against the mill housing and tapped a 4-40 hole in the housing. The "top" part of the caliper just screwed into place, held through a hole I drilled in the plastic scale body.
I secured the bottom ear of the caliper by drilling a hole in it and threading a 4-40 screw into an aluminium bar fastened to the collar at the bottom of the quill. The bar is what I had been using till now with a dial gauge to adjust cut depth (the mill's original scale is hopeless), and I left it long in case I have to go back to it, though I hope I don't; the dial gauge is very difficult to mount there.
I now have a single-axis DRO for my cheap old mill, and I don't intend to add anything to the other two axes, as my dial gauge is easy to use.
Everything moves freely, and as for accuracy, I seem to be consistently within .001", and that's good enough for me.