Agreed. A not-so-clever solution looking for a problem. How does the half-nut disengage?Lucky if you can get thru a thread without an awwwshiiiiiiiitttttttt moment with that much slop in a tool that really needs to be rigid.
Agreed. A not-so-clever solution looking for a problem. How does the half-nut disengage?Lucky if you can get thru a thread without an awwwshiiiiiiiitttttttt moment with that much slop in a tool that really needs to be rigid.
The top gear is not going to get you there, The bottom small gear has to be flipped around to engage the outer 120 tooth gear in the 2 large gears that are sandwiched together, This is how you achieve the second gear ratio to adapt to an inch leadscrew, Changing the top gear in your pic will only change the range of inch threads you can do, With the exception of 1 or 2 metric threads, Still have to flip the bottom gear.Maybe this will help explain the whole metric setup better.
Your lathe..........should have some form of chart/cheat sheet
which details what gear to use for a particular metric thread pitch.
Not just what to set the dials and controls to but an additional simple Algebraic formula
that you cross multiply.
Pic 1 shows in the top row, the number of toothed gear to use for a certain metric thread that corresponds to whatever your dials and controls are set to.
(if anyone struggled at 3rd grade fractions they should not be machining, because you need to be able to do simple algebra also), and prefereably some Trig thrown in for fun.
Calculus will be used later when you start shooting and figuring your Standard Deviation "longhand" and calculating trajectories. (the very reason Sir Isaac Newton invented calculus in the first place.)
anyways, this chart tells you what change gears to change out to
and you must have a set of these to be able to set up the correct feed rate "Ratio"
your gears should also be stamped or marked in some way, if not ....mark them yourself
I simple dremel with a carbide tip makes for an easy and quick, engraver.
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Second pic is the gear to change out, 3rd pic is a set of these different gears
On my lathe, the top gear must be changed out or I cannot do metric threadsThe top gear is not going to get you there, The bottom small gear has to be flipped around to engage the outer 120 tooth gear in the 2 large gears that are sandwiched together,