Sure, that makes sense. I’ll try to eliminate pieces if I can. I went ahead and ordered one of those cheap 160mm chucks. Will find out when it shows up mid (?) August.You can always make an intermediate backing plate.
Runout in the collet would be dialed out, correct?
The TBAS is for axial alignment. Radial adjustments are independent of that system. I'm not sure how a fixed collet system attached to a TBAS will work. I believe they make an adjustable 16C collet holder but the price is astronomical.If your attaching to TBAS and nothing moves, I assume you can.
Dave am I misunderstanding your statement about the Radial being "independent of that system"? I can do both Axial and Radial adjustments on my TBAS...The TBAS is for axial alignment. Radial adjustments are independent of that system. I'm not sure how a fixed collet system attached to a TBAS will work. I believe they make an adjustable 16C collet holder but the price is astronomical.
I have never had hands on one so I might be mistaken. Do you adjust radially with the TBAS or the adjustable chuck? If it's with the chuck and you replace it with a fixed collet chuck then what?Dave am I misunderstanding your statement about the Radial being "independent of that system"? I can do both Axial and Radial adjustments on my TBAS...
It sucks.I do wonder though, how much more challenging it will be to dial-in, not being able to position the throat area at a pivot point. Alex commented on this a number of pages back and I agreed with him. Being able to use one measurement point at the pivot, eliminates interaction between the two spider adjustments, etc.
Thanks, I envisioned it working kind of like you explained. I designed electronic circuits prior to retirement. In the days before microcontrollers, we used potentiometers in analog circuits. Most of the time there’d be gain and offset pots. On circuits where the two cal pots interacted, people would over time, get pretty good at tweaking them in. I imagine it will take some time to get a feel for this.It sucks.
The inside dial point moves roughly 30% of your outside point on an anglier adjustment.
Example. You're roughing in and the throat is running true, but you have .003 at the breech. You need to "overshoot" and make a .004 anglier adjustment measured at the breech because the throat is going to move also. Now you need to make a .001 radial adjustment in the opposite direction. It gets to be a lot of tail chasing just to get close.
Also, I spent a several years doing laser alignments on rotating equipment and his "radial" and "axial" terminology is ass backwards to me.
I got around it by not rotating the chuck and traversing between my two points and making angular adjustments until I got the same readings, then repeating for the other set of screws before I began my "radial" adjustments.Thanks, I envisioned it working kind of like you explained. I designed electronic circuits prior to retirement. In the days before microcontrollers, we used potentiometers in analog circuits. Most of the time there’d be gain and offset pots. On circuits where the two cal pots interacted, people would over time, get pretty good at tweaking them in. I imagine it will take some time to get a feel for this.
Same technique is key for dialing in actions for truing.I got around it by not rotating the chuck and traversing between my two points and making angular adjustments until I got the same readings, then repeating for the other set of screws before I began my "radial" adjustments.
I think that's the idea behind using his rods since it eliminates traveling over the lands.
Dialing the z axis like that will align the bore with the ways, ok if the ways are dead nuts in line with the spindle rotation centerline. I would still always check two points radially. I have seen where guys dial the z and just check the radial in one spot.I got around it by not rotating the chuck and traversing between my two points and making angular adjustments until I got the same readings, then repeating for the other set of screws before I began my "radial" adjustments.
I think that's the idea behind using his rods since it eliminates traveling over the lands.
Right. That's why I used the plural of "adjustments" but I wasn't very clear I guess.I would still always check two points radially.