What do you propose? Im not worried about the sag when my indicator stays in the same spot and i dont turn it upside down. If you have something better than noga im all ears. In all my years in shops and industry with unlimited budget the noga is the one that gets usedWhen we're talking tenths, I'll avoid the Noga sag.
What do you propose? Im not worried about the sag when my indicator stays in the same spot and i dont turn it upside down. If you have something better than noga im all ears. In all my years in shops and industry with unlimited budget the noga is the one that gets used
Post #18. I've got Noga's too but I prefer short and rigid. Just easier for me to keep indicator in alignment with centerline of barrel. Indicator snaps between grooves, seems less mushy than when using Noga articulating arm.
I joke but I do like that setup. No needing to wipe the crossslide off... indicator always on center... I might play with it.
Sensitivity and cosine error are 2 different things. He's close to 12 degrees that Interapid should be.I wouldn't necessarily say it needs service. I think he is proving there is a cosine error happening. Does he know? I come across many that been in machining for years and have no clue what cosine error is. I very rarely use my indicator to measure with. I indicate and move accordingly till it reads zero.
Hmmm. At 38 or so in, you do see a little movement.Who's going to be polite and tell Jim, his Interapid needs service?
and a steady-rest before that. Set lots of records and won lots of trophies. Makes you wonder if any of the differing methods really matter on paper.His interapid definitely needs a refresh. He's a both-ends-dialer, so the tenths indicator is best for him anyway.
and a steady-rest before that. Set lots of records and won lots of trophies. Makes you wonder if any of the differing methods really matter on paper.