when I get around to getting my lathe, I am going to start doing the neck turning on it.
GSPV said:A trick that some might find useful is sitting the turner on a ziplock of ice between cases to nix heat buildup.
amlevin said:GSPV said:A trick that some might find useful is sitting the turner on a ziplock of ice between cases to nix heat buildup.
Wouldn't icing down the cutting assy cause a dimensional change? Wouldn't it just be better have a fan and hang it in the air stream. That way everything would start at ambient and measurements would be more exact. Either that or ice down the cases as well.
What kind of lube do you use, if any?
[br]GSPV said:I sit it on the ice bag between. It sucks the heat right out and keeps it from stacking. If get interrupted and am spending a longer amount of time away from turning, I set the turner off of the ice bag.
Is it necessary? I don't know. It's just a bit of insurance. I do know that I get very consistent necks.
FroggyOne2 said:I think that using that small lathe is a perfect idea!
amlevin said:FroggyOne2 said:I think that using that small lathe is a perfect idea!
For Neck Turning? Seems like overkill.
fdshuster said:Another way of doing it when a lathe is not available, as in most home workshops, but bench mounted drill presses are very common.
Takes me less than 1 minute to get a perfect cut.
