Yet once again electrician dude does not show up, so lathe is still unpowered.
I decided to actually start to make an engine part on the mill, as a shakedown run. Needed to square up and mill to size a piece of brass 1x.5x.375". Started with a piece 1.7x1.5x.4 with saw marks on 4 sides and scale on the other 2.
First problem was getting a 5/8" end mill out of the spindle. This endmill got messed up milling the t-nuts for the rotab. Bridgeport has an air-operated drawbar, but it would not undo the collet. I could tell that the end of the drawbar was not fully engaging the air motor, so took off the air unit (3 capscrews). Noted that one was loose. Loosened drawbar with a wrench and collet with a deadblow. I put the air unit back on, and tightened up the mounting screws, so drawbar did engage. I was then able to mount a .5" collet and a 4-flute endmill.
Next discovery is that when milling with the side of the endmill, it pushes the x-axis sideways yielding a poor, non-flat surface. If I limited the cuts to .02" or less then I didn't have the problem. I would have liked to lock the table, but the OEM locking screw has been replaces with a socket head capscrew whose socket is larger than any allen wrench I own. So job 1 is to replace it with an easier way to lock the x-axis.
Anyway, finally got the piece sized. Replaced the mill with a drill chuck that has a .5" shank (air now seems to work) and pilot drilled two holes. Got to test out the center-find capability of the DRO, which works well.
Then I wanted to mount the cheapo rotab I got with the mill, and discovered that none of the t-nut/threaded rods from my clamping set will work as-is to clamp it to the table. The short ones don't have enough threads and the long ones are too long. So looks like I need some threaded rod, or else I will cut two of the longest ones in half with my angle grinder.