In your manual there is a section on bearing adjustment, Yes you use an indicator to find out how much clearance you have. There are 2 large round nuts on the gear train end of the spindle on Asian lathes that you use a spanner wrench to loosen/tighten, One set the clearance, The other is a jam nut to keep it set. I have changed out spindle bearings and adjusted them, It's not that hard to do, You just need some very large snap ring pliers.I believe they’re tapered roller bearings, but I’ll have to confirm that
My old Rockwell spindle bearings use greaseSome of the older American Iron did use 90 wt gear oil, But not the machines most guys on here are running. I try to bring this up every now and then to save someone the trouble.
Take the chuck off then measure runout...Okay, so I took the chuck off and put an indicator in the spindle taper. I put a pry bar in the outboard end of the spindle and pried up. The indicator never moved. So I mounted my inboard spider on the spindle and pried up on it and saw .0001 of movement. I believe I was seeing flex in the chuck, not the bearings. So that’s a major relief
I’m not going to use that 4 jaw chuck for chambering, I’ll use my spider that had .0001 of movementTake the chuck off then measure runout...
...Good tip!
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But ummmm
now what do you do about chuck wander/the flex you're talking about
..... under load while you're turnin and burnin?
Yeah I pulled the end cover off and looked at the bearings in the rear of the spindle and they were marked “Japan NSK” on them. So they’re good bearings and I’m happy to find that they’re not shotThere's an old saying, "If it broke don't fix it"
I know a guy who went to all of the trouble of changing his spindle bearings because he thought they were making a noise, Still making the same noise, Japanese spindle bearings aren't cheap.