Well I most disappointingly took my first foray into screw cutting, the prize would be a simple draw bar to adapt an ER 32 collet chuck with MT4 taper fitting into my lathe spindle this exercise has been shown by Blondihacks and seemed quite simple although I don't think she went into great detail about actually changing the gears but that is by the by.Now at this point I should say that my lathe is a very a similar model to her lathe and was working quite well and relatively quietly so the first thing I needed to do was to make sure that the standard line up of gears was noted to go back to after screw cutting was completed as there is no list in the manual about this and so I noted what they were as I removed them and I think it was a straight drive through on one line but duly noted I set about finding the gears required to do the M16 2mm thread needed, some were being used on the original set up and the others were in my gear set, now most of the gears were flat on one side and had a raised ridge on the edge and centre boss on the other side apart from two of the smaller gears that were both smooth both sides, any way I got the gears together to do the job in hand at this point I should say that the gear mounting mechanism was to say the least very disappointing in that when you try to undo the nut to remove the gear, the spindle and every thing comes away from the banjo in bits rather than leaving a spindle attached to the banjo to slide the new gears on to, a very poor design to my mind, anyway onward and upward as they say so I mounted the gears in the order required which basically meant the the final drive gear needed a spacer first then the gear so I fitted the spacer that was originally fitted on the other end of the last set up only to find that the last two gears then rubbed together side on side, now I thought I could use a small gear with the ridges on one side to get better spacing but I had none left small enough to do the job so I put a small washer between the gear and spacer to stop the gears rubbing and this worked.
So now to the test run, I can not tell you how bad the gear noise was despite setting them up with plenty of backlash, they were definitely not binding but these gears must be so badly manufactured that they shouldn't really be sold as usable, one of the new gears started to bind up on about 15% of its circumference so must be way out of true and none of them seemed to mesh well to one another, these are cast metal gears not plastic so all in all a very disappointing first attempt gear cutting, Still it can only get better I suppose because I don't think it could get any worse and it looks like I need to make a different system that leaves the spindles attached to the banjo when removing gears.Hey Ho life goes on and what don't kill you makes you stronger or so they say.
Well you asked what I've been doing today.
john