DaveTooley
Gold $$ Contributor
I'm in the same boat.... I've thought about just decking a flat spot on the top of my tailstock... would be a lot easier.
Make a spacer to fit inside the quill to shorten up the distance.Dave, the problem on my 6913 Clausing was the plate on my tailstock has to be very thin to enable me to eject the tools.
Pull the spindle out and do it from the ass end?Make a spacer to fit inside the quill to shorten up the distance.
No make a spacer that goes inside the spindle before your tooling. I had to do that on the Haas to get my 4" rotating chuck to eject. MT3 taper with an adapter sleeve was too short in a MT4 spindle.Pull the spindle out and do it from the ass end?
I guess I need to remove the spindle and look at it.No make a spacer that goes inside the spindle before your tooling. I had to do that on the Haas to get my 4" rotating chuck to eject. MT3 taper with an adapter sleeve was too short in a MT4 spindle.
Our mind can see the needle move in a few tenth increments giving the opportunity to anticipate what's coming but looking at absolute numbers we can't anticipate the stop number approaching in those increments. Same on the Haas if I'm using the jog function say to take a few thou off a shoulder. There is a delay between the number showing up and my mind processing it. Many times I over shoot a few thou. No big deal going back some but the chance of it happening is always there.Exactly what I do on my lathe. For some reason, using a dial indicator compared to a digital caliper leads to way fewer mistakes on my part. Not sure what it is, maybe just watching a needle move all these years. Here's to "no mistakes" on the last cut!
Paul
Our mind can see the needle move in a few tenth increments giving the opportunity to anticipate what's coming but looking at absolute numbers we can't anticipate the stop number approaching in those increments. Same on the Haas if I'm using the jog function say to take a few thou off a shoulder. There is a delay between the number showing up and my mind processing it. Many times I over shoot a few thou. No big deal going back some but the chance of it happening is always there.
My tailstock would "bump" against the DRO hardware on my carriage. Is that repeatable to half a thou? I like to cut my chambers so they end up HS + .001 after barrel torque.
I do like the idea of a high resolution dial vs digital on the tailstock. I'll think about how to add a dial to my tailstock. I love the reamer stop, but I'm doing enough work that I'd prefer to not use one.
I Put some stops on my tailstock base that will bump against the carriage. It spaces the tailstock so it cant hit the scale or reader head on the carriage.You drill and tap your carriage, on the left side of your dro mount and put a stop bolt that protrudes just slightly more than your DRO cover. Now you have a positive stop for your tailstock to engage.