I have re-aligned headstocks with adjustments, when such were available, by scraping and shimming when they were not. I have rebuilt carriages, compound slides, tailstocks. I once had to repair a 22x120 lathe which had a piece which was parted off get between the chuck jaws and the ways. It twisted the countershaft in two. Made and heat treated the new shaft. That was twenty five years ago and it is still in service, so I guess it worked out.
About twenty years ago I had a 28 inch CNC lathe which had an accumulation of chips pile up in front of the tailstock. The result was, when the turning operation finished, the carriage went back to zero, pushed the tailstock back, disengaging the center. This resulted in a 12 inch shaft, five feet long, falling onto the carriage and climbing over the toolpost. The machinist (it was I) was lucky to have survived that one. If the cabinet had not held, I'd have been squashed like a bug. Near scared me to death! After that, I became fanatic about keeping chips blown clear. It took me two days to repair the lathe. I was happy I was able to do so.
I have yet to see a floating toolholder which does not cut to center (its own center mind you) under load. The exceptions are the ones which will get stuck offset under load. Mike Bryant's pusher system can work well. A solid holder can work very well providing alignment is perfect. Tool post holders are the same. If perfectly aligned, they control the reamer perfectly. I support the reamer on the center, as a rule. I have made mistakes. in nearly fifty years of cutting chambers, it happens. I always cover any remedial work and parts. Most gunsmiths are more than capable of troubleshooting these problems, if they just take the time to think. Many, perhaps the majority, certainly know more than I. WH
About twenty years ago I had a 28 inch CNC lathe which had an accumulation of chips pile up in front of the tailstock. The result was, when the turning operation finished, the carriage went back to zero, pushed the tailstock back, disengaging the center. This resulted in a 12 inch shaft, five feet long, falling onto the carriage and climbing over the toolpost. The machinist (it was I) was lucky to have survived that one. If the cabinet had not held, I'd have been squashed like a bug. Near scared me to death! After that, I became fanatic about keeping chips blown clear. It took me two days to repair the lathe. I was happy I was able to do so.
I have yet to see a floating toolholder which does not cut to center (its own center mind you) under load. The exceptions are the ones which will get stuck offset under load. Mike Bryant's pusher system can work well. A solid holder can work very well providing alignment is perfect. Tool post holders are the same. If perfectly aligned, they control the reamer perfectly. I support the reamer on the center, as a rule. I have made mistakes. in nearly fifty years of cutting chambers, it happens. I always cover any remedial work and parts. Most gunsmiths are more than capable of troubleshooting these problems, if they just take the time to think. Many, perhaps the majority, certainly know more than I. WH