I have been following this post since the very beginning, and not one mention of how you get tapered jaws in the first place.
No matter how old the chuck is I doubt very much if it could be attributed to wear, a chuck, even in a production environment can't wear that much.
So you are left with one major cause, gorilla tactics, white knuckle effect, extension tubes on the chuck key etc etc. So self inflicted to get the chuck tightened up more than it should.
It takes only one heavy application and the jaws are then physically bent from being square to being off angle (tapered) permanently.
How to cure permanently and perfectly.
You can't, and please bear with me, I have tried a few times to get jaws straightened again (not on my chucks BTW, I never over tighten them, but other peoples) using the techniques mentioned above, and not one gives acceptable results, no matter how famous the person is telling you to do it, you will NOT get your chuck back to it's original condition.
Here is a a very short video of a mate of mine TRYING to rescue his chuck by using my lathe and toolpost grinder, all to no avail.
[ame]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sOTDmY1RjQM[/ame]
I am talking about self centering chucks here, no matter how many jaws, but standard independent jawed chucks can be fairly easily fixed by regrinding them back to square on the surface grinder. This also makes the jaw tips the correct shape, flat. If you are trying to grind a self centering jaw set, you will end up with jaws that have a concave tip surface that not only isn't very strong, but will dig into your workpiece ruining the surface finish.
So what to do with a tapered jawed chuck?
Chucks are so cheap nowadays (not second hand, don't touch them at all as they may already be tapered and you are back to where you started), so throw it away and buy a new one.
There are ways to make your chuck last longer, get yourself a new sets of internal/ external jaws and hope that your scroll spiral isn't bent or damaged, or do as I do, when first buying a chuck, purchase a set of soft jaws. I use soft jaws for at least 60 to 70% of the lathe work I do and not only do I get more secure holding, I get great precision thrown in as well. A great shame really, as I have just bought a six jaw self centering which soft jaws are not available for, so I will have to be very careful about tightening up on that one, but they are designed to give superior grip because of the number of jaws, mainly on thin walled tubing etc, without deformation.
Earlier on I told you to throw the bent chuck away, but don't do that, cut it up into pieces and make yourself some engines out of it.
Take the advice or leave it.
John