LVLAaron
Gold $$ Contributor
I know YOU have.Hundreds of times.

I know YOU have.Hundreds of times.
There's a rabbit hole to go down. Since lathe head stocks are aligned with a test bar in the tapper of the spindle there's not even a chuck involved and then add the face plate, chuck and chuck jaws the stack up may not be what you want. Does any of that even matter since you've dialed your barrel to the centerline of your lathe?Are you checking the alignment of the chuck jaws or the alignment of the headstock?
Then if you checked the barrel treads with a thread mic you might find some taper in them. Cause- work piece deflection. And we haven't even seen the bottom of the rabbit hole yet.There's a rabbit hole to go down. Since lathe head stocks are aligned with a test bar in the tapper of the spindle there's not even a chuck involved and then add the face plate, chuck and chuck jaws the stack up may not be what you want. Does any of that even matter since you've dialed your barrel to the centerline of your lathe?
I don't own a thread mic "yet". I do this as a hobby. I have a couple of actions that I do use a tail stock for support when I cut and thread the tenon. Not having a thread mic to check it out I wouldn't know how much taper I have since I don't think there's enough oxygen to waste using wires to check the work in serval places to verify. I simply check the fit with the action.Then if you checked the barrel treads with a thread mic you might find some taper in them. Cause- work piece deflection. And we haven't even seen the bottom of the rabbit hole yet.
I don't own a thread mic "yet". I do this as a hobby. I have a couple of actions that I do use a tail stock for support when I cut and thread the tenon. Not having a thread mic to check it out I wouldn't know how much taper I have since I don't think there's enough oxygen to waste using wires to check the work in serval places to verify. I simply check the fit with the action.
A scratch pass doesn't put a load on the tool like the final pass. But like you said it's good enough. The rabbit hole is deep and wide.This isn't as good as using a 10 thou mic, but turn your tenon, and then take the lightest scratch pass you possibly can. If it looks even, alignment is "good enough for the girls I go out with" - If it is uneven, gets deeper or more shallow, etc... you're cuttin a taper.
A scratch pass doesn't put a load on the tool like the final pass. But like you said it's good enough. The rabbit hole is deep and wide.
If your cutting a taper, the tenon will be tapered as well so the scratch pass will look even since it's following the same taper. If your cutting a taper just twist the bed until th taper is gone. Or you have the taper you desire.This isn't as good as using a 10 thou mic, but turn your tenon, and then take the lightest scratch pass you possibly can. If it looks even, alignment is "good enough for the girls I go out with" - If it is uneven, gets deeper or more shallow, etc... you're cuttin a taper.
Every one of them I've measured have been 1.5 +- 0.002. That comes out to 38.1 mm which seems odd. I got my info from Josh at PVA through a lot of hinting and wink-wink nudge-nudge. AI is pretty hush-hush about the specs.All metric on the drawings.
I just did the conversion to make it simple for everyone.
So am IEvery one of them I've measured have been 1.5 +- 0.002. That comes out to 38.1 mm which seems odd. I got my info from Josh at PVA through a lot of hinting and wink-wink nudge-nudge. AI is pretty hush-hush about the specs.
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Nope, unless you're thinking of using a rigid setup.There's a rabbit hole to go down. Since lathe head stocks are aligned with a test bar in the tapper of the spindle there's not even a chuck involved and then add the face plate, chuck and chuck jaws the stack up may not be what you want. Does any of that even matter since you've dialed your barrel to the centerline of your lathe?
Spindle= headstock.Are you checking the alignment of the chuck jaws or the alignment of the headstock?
A collet doesn't guarantee anything either. When I said "mount" a test bar in the "chuck" I assumed people would understand that to mean all of the runout was dialed out of the bar, but I guess not.using an ER collet instead of a chuck so you don't get the inevitable chuck error Dave pointed out
Sometimes the method overcomes/compensates for other issues. Perceived or otherwise.A 7/16 pin does NOT fit into a 7/16" hole. They are the SAME..NO clearance. Either the pin is small or the hole is big. No ifs ands or buts. Same means just that...SAME. Which means there is no clearance. That's all I'm gonna say on this. It's basic stuff. Granted, any amount of clearance is still clearance and there is NO such thing as perfect, but the claim appears to be that a perfect 7/16'ths pin fits into a perfect 7/16ths hole. This CAN NOT be the case. Everything has tolerances and we can only get as close as humanly possible but the fact remains that two parts of exactly the same size do NOT fit into/over one another.
Otherwise, I can see the benefit of the concept, to some degree. The problem is that the two parts, even perfectly machined, can only be as closely aligned as we can indicate the two to one another. Yes, lathe bed and even temp variances matter when it comes right down to it. IMHO, there is just nothing wrong with using a floating holder as long as a reamer will follow the hole that it's put into. Frankly, this is more accurate than some machines and their operators. Not saying that we can take that to great extremes but if due diligence is given to aligning the actual throat with the axis of the spindle and a floating holder, and a pre-bored hole that is also very true...I'm just not sure that can be practically improved upon.