¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

Date

Re: machining in a small shop

 

Need a bigger one .Dave?


Re: DC power supply grounding

 

My whole life I have operated on the principal of a fuse is the first thing inline on the positive side after the source, switch, to the consumers. In some cases, DC, there may be a large fuse inline from source, switch or battery, that then branches off to other consumers. And those lines that go into separate consumers all have their own lower rated fuses. But never have I heard of fuses being in the return side or the negative side. Even though power, DC , runs from neg to plus side. Anyway, we are talking about the basic 120 circuit. I just looked up the circuit in my micro mark 7x16 lathe and sure enough, the fuse is located just after the switch on the power side.

george


On Sunday, December 31, 2023 at 06:50:44 PM PST, Tony Smith <ajsmith1968@...> wrote:


Correct, it DOES matter that the fuse goes on the HOT side.

You essentially have one in, and two outs.? Fusing one of the outs is not doing you any favours.

In this case you can blow the fuse, and power is still going through your device - that can cause much excitement if the device isn't grounded, or even if it is (hot chassis and all that jazz).

And for the love of god don't put fuses on both the live & neutral.? (And yes, I've seen fused earths, gotta cover all the bases to be extra extra safe, y'know.? Gah. See)

Tony



On Sun, Dec 31, 2023, 05:39 BuffaloJohn <johndurbetaki@...> wrote:
The fuse can only protect when there is only one path for a return current and fusing N does not protect L from returning on GROUND. Yes, it does matter where the fuse is.

On Sat, Dec 30, 2023 at 9:44?AM Chris Albertson <albertson.chris@...> wrote:
The purpose of a fuse is to protect the wires and prevent a fire.? In that case it does not matter where the fuse is. ?


--
Buffalo John


Re: machining in a small shop

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

??? That's a small one ,? Here's one that the big boys play with . These folks probably had a sub-station outside of their building .

animal

On 12/31/23 7:08 PM, Charles Kinzer wrote:

For those who may have never seen one, a vertical lathe is configured quite differently than a normal lathe.? Bullard is THE name for this type of machine.? Originally called vertical boring mills, and then called a vertical turret lathe with a turret head added, and many just call all of them a "vertical lathe" today.

Here is a photo of a 54" table model, the largest they made.? We had one where I last worked (not sure if it was a 54" one, though) and eventually sold it.? They moved it out onto the asphalt parking lot area in back of the building (do you see where this is going?) and after a short while somebody noticed it had sunk down a foot or two into the asphalt and was also tilted.? It weighed nearly ten tons.




Charles E. "Chuck" Kinzer

On Sunday, December 31, 2023 at 06:36:02 PM PST, Tony Smith <ajsmith1968@...> wrote:


There was a thread many years ago where someone was planning on mounting their lathe vertically in their van to take up less space.

No sure how successful they were.

Can't see why it wouldn't work, as pointed out you'd need to counterweight the carriage (and tailstock) to stop them squishing your pinkies when they're loose.? Also means more chance of crap winding up in the headstock.

Vertical lathes are a thing, although generally reserved for turning really big stuff for wherever reason.? They have their chucks at the bottom, which makes sense if you you think about it.??

Aside from saving space, I can't think of any real advantage of running a lathe vertically.? Might as well push your mini mill over and use it horizontally as well.

Tony

On Sun, Dec 31, 2023, 13:52 Miket_NYC <mctaglieri@...> wrote:
"You can also permanently mount the lathe on end and use it vertically."

Have you tried this? I suppose it's possible, but I don't see the point.? Something I've toyed with (but haven't tried), is to hold a mini-lathe vertically with the HEADSTOCK end on top. This would be difficult because that's the heavy end and there's nothing large enough on the tailstock end to make a stable platform.??

But the point would be to convert the mini-lathe into a precision miniature drill press. You could make a lever action to operate the tailstock ram and put the drill press table in the tailstock, or you could put the drill press table on the carriage.? I thought about this for a long time, but I admit I became less interested when I bought a mini-mill which also functions nicely as a drill press.

Mike Taglieri?

On Sat, Dec 30, 2023, 5:34 PM Ralph Hulslander <rhulslander@...> wrote:
You can also permanently mount the lathe on end and use it vertically.

Ralph

On Sat, Dec 30, 2023 at 4:45?PM gcvisalia@... <gcvisalia@...> wrote:
I use cardboard. I use it under the ways. Its deep enough to reach from the front of the bench to near the rear of the bench. I also have large piece as backsplash. It rests on the piece under the lathe. Works rather well for me. Collects debris, swarf and oil. Lathe can easily be brushed clean into the tray, then cleaned onto the cardboard. It is then pulled out and the swarf , etc, can easily dumped. Then the cardboard is then returned. Once it gets bad it's easily replaced. The piece under the lathe is cut to perfectly fit.

george

On Saturday, December 30, 2023 at 10:27:07 AM PST, Charles Kinzer <ckinzer@...> wrote:


I don't see any reason you can't store a mini-lathe on end.? (Unlike some larger lathes, it doesn't have any "oil bath" areas where oil could run out.)

Regarding clean up, usually it is common to just use a brush(es) to brush everything to a point and sweep it into a dust pan or container.? Yes, most chips fall down.? But some will inevitably go elsewhere, especially on the floor, onto the bottom of your shoes, and tracked elsewhere if you aren't careful.? (I just have an old piece of regular carpeting from where my machine tools are to a door into the house and it works nearly perfectly for the "shoe" problem.)

I think it is exceedingly uncommon, if ever, to use "dust collection" with a lathe except in an industrial setting where a hazardous material like pure beryllium is being machined.? Usually, the chips aren't very dust-like.? And if using any cutting oil, also damp.? Machining cast iron will produce something that is closer to "dust", but still not that fine.? I would not relate it to the dust produced in woodworking.

For small lathe, it can be handy to have a little removable tray that just fits under the full length of the ways.? Most chips will end up there and it is easy to remove and dump, and then, by brush or vacuum, clean the little that is left around the area and on the lathe.? These lathes come with a chip pan which the lathe is bolted to, but you don't need to use it.? Sort of a judgement call in my view.? On a larger lathe, you may be using a lot of oil, or coolant, and need something to catch it.? That's not typical on a mini lathe.

You can certainly use a vacuum device if you want.? But you mentioned "long swirls of swarf" which I think are more commonly called "stringy chips."? That suggests another topic which is that you should NEVER be producing long stringy chips.? They are a hazard as they can suddenly wrap around and grab something like fingers and instantly pull them into the spinning chuck and workpiece.? In fact, in some machine shops, producing stringy chips can be a firing offense.? They are way to control chip production, especially having a "chip breaker" feature ground into the tool.

If you want to store the lathe front to back on a workbench when not in use, you might be able to put the lathe on wood or MDF piece bolted near the end of the bench (left or right) where you want to store it front to back.? Then it could just be swiveled to normal position? ?Then swiveled back to the storage position, and as a bonus be held down to the bench, at least at one end..

Charles E. "Chuck" Kinzer



On Saturday, December 30, 2023 at 09:57:04 AM PST, Paul Fox <pgf@...> wrote:


My small shop is decidedly mixed-use:? wood work (manual, plus
occasional CNC milling), some electronics (Raspberry Pi type stuff),
general homeowner workbench use, and, hopefully someday soon,
machining.

So, in thinking about getting a mini lathe, I'm trying to think about
how it will fit into my shop, in various ways.? And I'm sure other
folks here have had the same issues.

The first is simply space:? my shop is "cozy".? I think it's about 12'
x 12' out of a longer room that also holds our furnace and laundry
machines.? I have two workbenches, a band saw, a grinder/sander, and a
drill press in that space, and some low cabinets which currently hold
my CNC mill at chair height.? The lathe will live either where the CNC
mill is now (but currently that would mean sitting and/or leaning to
use it, rather than standing), or on one of the work benches (but that
means losing the other uses of that bench while doing lathe projects).
It might also be able to live crosswise at the end of one of the
benches, since the benches are about as deep as the lathe will be
wide, but I'm not sure how practical that will be.

Thoughts on any of that?? Is sitting in front of a lathe a no-no?? It
works for the CNC mill, but they're somewhat different animals.

Second, other than hand tools and drill press, the lathe will be the
first metal machining equipment I've introduced to the shop.? Clearly
I'll want a good cover for the lathe when it's not in use, since it will
basically be a magnet for sawdust and dryer lint, otherwise.

But it will also be generating a lot of chips and swarf.? How
controllable is that?? Is a "dust collection" solution possible?? I
assume most of the chips land under the lathe, but how much get
launched several feet away?? My shop vac doubles as dust collector
for the bandsaw and mill, and since I wanted really good dust
collection, it's a Fein, and has a bag.? But its hose is just 1-3/8".
That's okay for sawdust, but I'm picturing it jamming up with long
swirls of swarf if I use it around the lathe.? Will it be at all
useful?

What tricks/techniques do you all use for controlling machining mess?
(I've been watching a bunch of YT videos, and was really hoping
Blondihacks had covered this -- it would be right up her alley.? But
haven't found anything, really, by her or anyone else.)

And finally -- a lathe storage question.? Floor space is at a premium
in my cellar, not just in the shop, so if I want to move the lathe
elsewhere (to free up its workbench, or to use the CNC mill instead),
it occurs to me that storing the lathe on end might make finding space
easier.? Can that be done?

I know -- too long, too many questions in one post.? Sorry!

paul
=----------------------
paul fox, pgf@... (arlington, ma, where it's 41.9 degrees)






Attachments:


Re: machining in a small shop

 

For those who may have never seen one, a vertical lathe is configured quite differently than a normal lathe.? Bullard is THE name for this type of machine.? Originally called vertical boring mills, and then called a vertical turret lathe with a turret head added, and many just call all of them a "vertical lathe" today.

Here is a photo of a 54" table model, the largest they made.? We had one where I last worked (not sure if it was a 54" one, though) and eventually sold it.? They moved it out onto the asphalt parking lot area in back of the building (do you see where this is going?) and after a short while somebody noticed it had sunk down a foot or two into the asphalt and was also tilted.? It weighed nearly ten tons.

Inline image


Charles E. "Chuck" Kinzer

On Sunday, December 31, 2023 at 06:36:02 PM PST, Tony Smith <ajsmith1968@...> wrote:


There was a thread many years ago where someone was planning on mounting their lathe vertically in their van to take up less space.

No sure how successful they were.

Can't see why it wouldn't work, as pointed out you'd need to counterweight the carriage (and tailstock) to stop them squishing your pinkies when they're loose.? Also means more chance of crap winding up in the headstock.

Vertical lathes are a thing, although generally reserved for turning really big stuff for wherever reason.? They have their chucks at the bottom, which makes sense if you you think about it.??

Aside from saving space, I can't think of any real advantage of running a lathe vertically.? Might as well push your mini mill over and use it horizontally as well.

Tony

On Sun, Dec 31, 2023, 13:52 Miket_NYC <mctaglieri@...> wrote:
"You can also permanently mount the lathe on end and use it vertically."

Have you tried this? I suppose it's possible, but I don't see the point.? Something I've toyed with (but haven't tried), is to hold a mini-lathe vertically with the HEADSTOCK end on top. This would be difficult because that's the heavy end and there's nothing large enough on the tailstock end to make a stable platform.??

But the point would be to convert the mini-lathe into a precision miniature drill press. You could make a lever action to operate the tailstock ram and put the drill press table in the tailstock, or you could put the drill press table on the carriage.? I thought about this for a long time, but I admit I became less interested when I bought a mini-mill which also functions nicely as a drill press.

Mike Taglieri?

On Sat, Dec 30, 2023, 5:34 PM Ralph Hulslander <rhulslander@...> wrote:
You can also permanently mount the lathe on end and use it vertically.

Ralph

On Sat, Dec 30, 2023 at 4:45?PM gcvisalia@... <gcvisalia@...> wrote:
I use cardboard. I use it under the ways. Its deep enough to reach from the front of the bench to near the rear of the bench. I also have large piece as backsplash. It rests on the piece under the lathe. Works rather well for me. Collects debris, swarf and oil. Lathe can easily be brushed clean into the tray, then cleaned onto the cardboard. It is then pulled out and the swarf , etc, can easily dumped. Then the cardboard is then returned. Once it gets bad it's easily replaced. The piece under the lathe is cut to perfectly fit.

george

On Saturday, December 30, 2023 at 10:27:07 AM PST, Charles Kinzer <ckinzer@...> wrote:


I don't see any reason you can't store a mini-lathe on end.? (Unlike some larger lathes, it doesn't have any "oil bath" areas where oil could run out.)

Regarding clean up, usually it is common to just use a brush(es) to brush everything to a point and sweep it into a dust pan or container.? Yes, most chips fall down.? But some will inevitably go elsewhere, especially on the floor, onto the bottom of your shoes, and tracked elsewhere if you aren't careful.? (I just have an old piece of regular carpeting from where my machine tools are to a door into the house and it works nearly perfectly for the "shoe" problem.)

I think it is exceedingly uncommon, if ever, to use "dust collection" with a lathe except in an industrial setting where a hazardous material like pure beryllium is being machined.? Usually, the chips aren't very dust-like.? And if using any cutting oil, also damp.? Machining cast iron will produce something that is closer to "dust", but still not that fine.? I would not relate it to the dust produced in woodworking.

For small lathe, it can be handy to have a little removable tray that just fits under the full length of the ways.? Most chips will end up there and it is easy to remove and dump, and then, by brush or vacuum, clean the little that is left around the area and on the lathe.? These lathes come with a chip pan which the lathe is bolted to, but you don't need to use it.? Sort of a judgement call in my view.? On a larger lathe, you may be using a lot of oil, or coolant, and need something to catch it.? That's not typical on a mini lathe.

You can certainly use a vacuum device if you want.? But you mentioned "long swirls of swarf" which I think are more commonly called "stringy chips."? That suggests another topic which is that you should NEVER be producing long stringy chips.? They are a hazard as they can suddenly wrap around and grab something like fingers and instantly pull them into the spinning chuck and workpiece.? In fact, in some machine shops, producing stringy chips can be a firing offense.? They are way to control chip production, especially having a "chip breaker" feature ground into the tool.

If you want to store the lathe front to back on a workbench when not in use, you might be able to put the lathe on wood or MDF piece bolted near the end of the bench (left or right) where you want to store it front to back.? Then it could just be swiveled to normal position? ?Then swiveled back to the storage position, and as a bonus be held down to the bench, at least at one end..

Charles E. "Chuck" Kinzer



On Saturday, December 30, 2023 at 09:57:04 AM PST, Paul Fox <pgf@...> wrote:


My small shop is decidedly mixed-use:? wood work (manual, plus
occasional CNC milling), some electronics (Raspberry Pi type stuff),
general homeowner workbench use, and, hopefully someday soon,
machining.

So, in thinking about getting a mini lathe, I'm trying to think about
how it will fit into my shop, in various ways.? And I'm sure other
folks here have had the same issues.

The first is simply space:? my shop is "cozy".? I think it's about 12'
x 12' out of a longer room that also holds our furnace and laundry
machines.? I have two workbenches, a band saw, a grinder/sander, and a
drill press in that space, and some low cabinets which currently hold
my CNC mill at chair height.? The lathe will live either where the CNC
mill is now (but currently that would mean sitting and/or leaning to
use it, rather than standing), or on one of the work benches (but that
means losing the other uses of that bench while doing lathe projects).
It might also be able to live crosswise at the end of one of the
benches, since the benches are about as deep as the lathe will be
wide, but I'm not sure how practical that will be.

Thoughts on any of that?? Is sitting in front of a lathe a no-no?? It
works for the CNC mill, but they're somewhat different animals.

Second, other than hand tools and drill press, the lathe will be the
first metal machining equipment I've introduced to the shop.? Clearly
I'll want a good cover for the lathe when it's not in use, since it will
basically be a magnet for sawdust and dryer lint, otherwise.

But it will also be generating a lot of chips and swarf.? How
controllable is that?? Is a "dust collection" solution possible?? I
assume most of the chips land under the lathe, but how much get
launched several feet away?? My shop vac doubles as dust collector
for the bandsaw and mill, and since I wanted really good dust
collection, it's a Fein, and has a bag.? But its hose is just 1-3/8".
That's okay for sawdust, but I'm picturing it jamming up with long
swirls of swarf if I use it around the lathe.? Will it be at all
useful?

What tricks/techniques do you all use for controlling machining mess?
(I've been watching a bunch of YT videos, and was really hoping
Blondihacks had covered this -- it would be right up her alley.? But
haven't found anything, really, by her or anyone else.)

And finally -- a lathe storage question.? Floor space is at a premium
in my cellar, not just in the shop, so if I want to move the lathe
elsewhere (to free up its workbench, or to use the CNC mill instead),
it occurs to me that storing the lathe on end might make finding space
easier.? Can that be done?

I know -- too long, too many questions in one post.? Sorry!

paul
=----------------------
paul fox, pgf@... (arlington, ma, where it's 41.9 degrees)







Re: MicroMark 7x16 Fault Notice

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

??? ??? good deal , happy new years to all

??? animal

On 12/31/23 6:41 PM, OldToolmaker via groups.io wrote:

Hello Animal!

Great thought!
Thanks for the good idea.
I will use that method if that happens to me again.

Dick


Re: DC power supply grounding

 

Correct, it DOES matter that the fuse goes on the HOT side.

You essentially have one in, and two outs.? Fusing one of the outs is not doing you any favours.

In this case you can blow the fuse, and power is still going through your device - that can cause much excitement if the device isn't grounded, or even if it is (hot chassis and all that jazz).

And for the love of god don't put fuses on both the live & neutral.? (And yes, I've seen fused earths, gotta cover all the bases to be extra extra safe, y'know.? Gah. See)

Tony



On Sun, Dec 31, 2023, 05:39 BuffaloJohn <johndurbetaki@...> wrote:
The fuse can only protect when there is only one path for a return current and fusing N does not protect L from returning on GROUND. Yes, it does matter where the fuse is.

On Sat, Dec 30, 2023 at 9:44?AM Chris Albertson <albertson.chris@...> wrote:
The purpose of a fuse is to protect the wires and prevent a fire.? In that case it does not matter where the fuse is. ?


--
Buffalo John


Re: MicroMark 7x16 Fault Notice

 

Hello Animal!

Great thought!
Thanks for the good idea.
I will use that method if that happens to me again.

Dick


Re: machining in a small shop

 

There was a thread many years ago where someone was planning on mounting their lathe vertically in their van to take up less space.

No sure how successful they were.

Can't see why it wouldn't work, as pointed out you'd need to counterweight the carriage (and tailstock) to stop them squishing your pinkies when they're loose.? Also means more chance of crap winding up in the headstock.

Vertical lathes are a thing, although generally reserved for turning really big stuff for wherever reason.? They have their chucks at the bottom, which makes sense if you you think about it.??

Aside from saving space, I can't think of any real advantage of running a lathe vertically.? Might as well push your mini mill over and use it horizontally as well.

Tony

On Sun, Dec 31, 2023, 13:52 Miket_NYC <mctaglieri@...> wrote:
"You can also permanently mount the lathe on end and use it vertically."

Have you tried this? I suppose it's possible, but I don't see the point.? Something I've toyed with (but haven't tried), is to hold a mini-lathe vertically with the HEADSTOCK end on top. This would be difficult because that's the heavy end and there's nothing large enough on the tailstock end to make a stable platform.??

But the point would be to convert the mini-lathe into a precision miniature drill press. You could make a lever action to operate the tailstock ram and put the drill press table in the tailstock, or you could put the drill press table on the carriage.? I thought about this for a long time, but I admit I became less interested when I bought a mini-mill which also functions nicely as a drill press.

Mike Taglieri?

On Sat, Dec 30, 2023, 5:34 PM Ralph Hulslander <rhulslander@...> wrote:
You can also permanently mount the lathe on end and use it vertically.

Ralph

On Sat, Dec 30, 2023 at 4:45?PM gcvisalia@... <gcvisalia@...> wrote:
I use cardboard. I use it under the ways. Its deep enough to reach from the front of the bench to near the rear of the bench. I also have large piece as backsplash. It rests on the piece under the lathe. Works rather well for me. Collects debris, swarf and oil. Lathe can easily be brushed clean into the tray, then cleaned onto the cardboard. It is then pulled out and the swarf , etc, can easily dumped. Then the cardboard is then returned. Once it gets bad it's easily replaced. The piece under the lathe is cut to perfectly fit.

george

On Saturday, December 30, 2023 at 10:27:07 AM PST, Charles Kinzer <ckinzer@...> wrote:


I don't see any reason you can't store a mini-lathe on end.? (Unlike some larger lathes, it doesn't have any "oil bath" areas where oil could run out.)

Regarding clean up, usually it is common to just use a brush(es) to brush everything to a point and sweep it into a dust pan or container.? Yes, most chips fall down.? But some will inevitably go elsewhere, especially on the floor, onto the bottom of your shoes, and tracked elsewhere if you aren't careful.? (I just have an old piece of regular carpeting from where my machine tools are to a door into the house and it works nearly perfectly for the "shoe" problem.)

I think it is exceedingly uncommon, if ever, to use "dust collection" with a lathe except in an industrial setting where a hazardous material like pure beryllium is being machined.? Usually, the chips aren't very dust-like.? And if using any cutting oil, also damp.? Machining cast iron will produce something that is closer to "dust", but still not that fine.? I would not relate it to the dust produced in woodworking.

For small lathe, it can be handy to have a little removable tray that just fits under the full length of the ways.? Most chips will end up there and it is easy to remove and dump, and then, by brush or vacuum, clean the little that is left around the area and on the lathe.? These lathes come with a chip pan which the lathe is bolted to, but you don't need to use it.? Sort of a judgement call in my view.? On a larger lathe, you may be using a lot of oil, or coolant, and need something to catch it.? That's not typical on a mini lathe.

You can certainly use a vacuum device if you want.? But you mentioned "long swirls of swarf" which I think are more commonly called "stringy chips."? That suggests another topic which is that you should NEVER be producing long stringy chips.? They are a hazard as they can suddenly wrap around and grab something like fingers and instantly pull them into the spinning chuck and workpiece.? In fact, in some machine shops, producing stringy chips can be a firing offense.? They are way to control chip production, especially having a "chip breaker" feature ground into the tool.

If you want to store the lathe front to back on a workbench when not in use, you might be able to put the lathe on wood or MDF piece bolted near the end of the bench (left or right) where you want to store it front to back.? Then it could just be swiveled to normal position? ?Then swiveled back to the storage position, and as a bonus be held down to the bench, at least at one end..

Charles E. "Chuck" Kinzer



On Saturday, December 30, 2023 at 09:57:04 AM PST, Paul Fox <pgf@...> wrote:


My small shop is decidedly mixed-use:? wood work (manual, plus
occasional CNC milling), some electronics (Raspberry Pi type stuff),
general homeowner workbench use, and, hopefully someday soon,
machining.

So, in thinking about getting a mini lathe, I'm trying to think about
how it will fit into my shop, in various ways.? And I'm sure other
folks here have had the same issues.

The first is simply space:? my shop is "cozy".? I think it's about 12'
x 12' out of a longer room that also holds our furnace and laundry
machines.? I have two workbenches, a band saw, a grinder/sander, and a
drill press in that space, and some low cabinets which currently hold
my CNC mill at chair height.? The lathe will live either where the CNC
mill is now (but currently that would mean sitting and/or leaning to
use it, rather than standing), or on one of the work benches (but that
means losing the other uses of that bench while doing lathe projects).
It might also be able to live crosswise at the end of one of the
benches, since the benches are about as deep as the lathe will be
wide, but I'm not sure how practical that will be.

Thoughts on any of that?? Is sitting in front of a lathe a no-no?? It
works for the CNC mill, but they're somewhat different animals.

Second, other than hand tools and drill press, the lathe will be the
first metal machining equipment I've introduced to the shop.? Clearly
I'll want a good cover for the lathe when it's not in use, since it will
basically be a magnet for sawdust and dryer lint, otherwise.

But it will also be generating a lot of chips and swarf.? How
controllable is that?? Is a "dust collection" solution possible?? I
assume most of the chips land under the lathe, but how much get
launched several feet away?? My shop vac doubles as dust collector
for the bandsaw and mill, and since I wanted really good dust
collection, it's a Fein, and has a bag.? But its hose is just 1-3/8".
That's okay for sawdust, but I'm picturing it jamming up with long
swirls of swarf if I use it around the lathe.? Will it be at all
useful?

What tricks/techniques do you all use for controlling machining mess?
(I've been watching a bunch of YT videos, and was really hoping
Blondihacks had covered this -- it would be right up her alley.? But
haven't found anything, really, by her or anyone else.)

And finally -- a lathe storage question.? Floor space is at a premium
in my cellar, not just in the shop, so if I want to move the lathe
elsewhere (to free up its workbench, or to use the CNC mill instead),
it occurs to me that storing the lathe on end might make finding space
easier.? Can that be done?

I know -- too long, too many questions in one post.? Sorry!

paul
=----------------------
paul fox, pgf@... (arlington, ma, where it's 41.9 degrees)







Re: MicroMark 7x16 Fault Notice

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

??? ??? Dick I forgot to mention on yer connector coming out , if ya have any thin tie-wraps ya can use them to keep the connectors together .

??? animal

On 12/31/23 5:34 PM, OldToolmaker via groups.io wrote:

Hello, Mark,
I forgot to mention that currently I am spending more and more of my time with my little Unimat lathes. I found out I enjoy machining on the smaller scale machines as well as the 7x16 scale and possibly more so. It can more challenging and that might be what draws me in that direction today. I have Two Unimat DB200 machines. Both about 50 to 60 years old.
They have vertical milling capabilities as well.
I am a longtime member of that group as well.
Have a good evening and enjoy.
Dick


Re: MicroMark 7x16 Fault Notice

 

Hello, Mark,
I forgot to mention that currently I am spending more and more of my time with my little Unimat lathes. I found out I enjoy machining on the smaller scale machines as well as the 7x16 scale and possibly more so. It can more challenging and that might be what draws me in that direction today. I have Two Unimat DB200 machines. Both about 50 to 60 years old.
They have vertical milling capabilities as well.
I am a longtime member of that group as well.
Have a good evening and enjoy.
Dick


Re: MicroMark 7x16 Fault Notice

 

Hello Mark,
Good to hear from you.
I have the issue solved, finally.
A multi pin connector had become disconnected during my reassembly process. It was as simple as that, but took some investigation to zero in on the source. I am very happy I didn¡¯t have to go deeper. The continuity check verified the status of the fuse.


Re: Chris from Clickspring just dropped an new Antikyhera fragment video

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

??? ??? I can say for a fact that mr Clcickspring has forgotten more about small machine work than myself could even imagine to have learned . This guy just keeps amazing me with every tube he puts out & we are truly lucky that he shares his knowledge with us .

animal

On 12/31/23 7:47 AM, Bruce J wrote:

How to bootstrap an ancient greek metal lathe:?

All of the Antikythera Fragment videos are very worthwhile, imo, almost more than the main vids, because they¡¯re about making the tools to make the thing.

He cheats, a bit, because he already possesses the knowledge of turning so it¡¯s not entirely starting from scratch, but then the Antikythera mechanism itself didn¡¯t spring fully formed de novo from some ancient supergenius¡¯s mind. There had to have been a long tradition of metalworking of complex devices to get to that point.?

--?
Bruce Johnson

"Wherever you go, there you are." B. Banzai, PhD


Re: Chris from Clickspring just dropped an new Antikyhera fragment video

 

Rather akin to the situation today where Frank Whittle is known as one of? the inventors of the aircraft?gas turbine. But who remembers that Edgar T. Westbuery did the precision machining that kept it together while it ran!? ?Bill i Boulder


On Sun, Dec 31, 2023 at 8:47?AM Bruce J <bruce.desertrat@...> wrote:
How to bootstrap an ancient greek metal lathe:?

All of the Antikythera Fragment videos are very worthwhile, imo, almost more than the main vids, because they¡¯re about making the tools to make the thing.

He cheats, a bit, because he already possesses the knowledge of turning so it¡¯s not entirely starting from scratch, but then the Antikythera mechanism itself didn¡¯t spring fully formed de novo from some ancient supergenius¡¯s mind. There had to have been a long tradition of metalworking of complex devices to get to that point.?

--?
Bruce Johnson

"Wherever you go, there you are." B. Banzai, PhD


Re: Grizzly is doing better - I hope!!!

 

I'm sure they all have a sign in their parts dept?
" We screw the other guy & pass the savings on to you "?
animal


Re: IssuesViewing Photos on my IPhone

 

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On Dec 31, 2023, at 10:04 AM, OldToolmaker via <old_toolmaker@...> wrote:

I am trying to solve a mystery. When I view a photo on my iPhone I see a white glowing border around the item in my picture that continues to be drawn around the items in the picture I can¡¯t get it to go away.
I tried to find what may be causing this but to avail. I just want it to quit.
Any suggestions???
Dick
_.

Like this??

?

usually just tapping on the photo somewhere else makes it go away.

It only appears if you hold a finger briefly on that part of the image. I find that there¡¯s hard-to-gauge difference between getting it to work and getting it to NOT work, depending on the photo.?

It works the best if there¡¯s a clear distinction between the part you¡¯re isolating and the background, and the photo isn¡¯t too cluttered.

Once ¡¯tamed' the process is really useful for documentation purposes though.?

You may also want to play around with Settings > Accessibility > Touch > Touch Accomodations. some of the options there may help make it less sensitive if you keep doing it inadvertently.

--?
Bruce Johnson

"Wherever you go, there you are." B. Banzai, PhD


Re: IssuesViewing Photos on my IPhone

ChazzC
 

¡°Photos¡± on newer iPhones & current iOS can use AI to automatically separate the images from the background, making it easy to copy just the image.


IssuesViewing Photos on my IPhone

 

I am trying to solve a mystery. When I view a photo on my iPhone I see a white glowing border around the item in my picture that continues to be drawn around the items in the picture I can¡¯t get it to go away.
I tried to find what may be causing this but to avail. I just want it to quit.
Any suggestions???
Dick


Re: Grizzly is doing better - I hope!!!

 

On Sun, 31 Dec 2023, gcvisalia@... wrote:

Insist on all that and watch the prices rise enough to not make the hobby hobby friendly.
price increase could be the mother of invention
i once saw an article about a man building a concrete lathe


Re: MicroMark 7x16 Fault Notice

 

Hi Dick,

The fuseholders for these machines are't the best-made in the world.? The one on my old 7x12 broke off inside the chassis.? Nothing obvious from the outside and it took a bit of head-scratching to figure out what had happened.? Like you I had never found it necessary to replace the fuse.

Worth checking out.

-Mark


Re: Grizzly is doing better - I hope!!!

 

?
My budget hasn't allowed new machines but I purchase their spare parts that fit my clone RC mill stuff, they are well made,? they sell? parts? that are un available elsewhere..I give them 5 stars on that
In a message dated 12/31/2023 7:43:35 AM Pacific Standard Time, prichard.rm@... writes:
?

Lone Tree¡­
?
You ask what would happen if QC was improved¡­easy response... The cost would go up as would the quality(hopefully)..those costs would most likely be passed straight through to the consumer!
?
Reuben

On Dec 31, 2023, at 10:31?AM, gcvisalia@... wrote:

?
Insist on all that and watch the prices rise enough to not make the hobby hobby friendly.
?
george
?
On Sunday, December 31, 2023 at 07:28:04 AM PST, Craig Hopewell via groups.io <cch80124@...> wrote:
?
?
I have made purchases from Grizzly.? ?Unfortunately, due to being typical imports, with poor results (as discussed in another topic).? ?But they did take both of the defective lathes back.? ?Large companies like Grizzly can do this due to their size.? ?But my issue with the state of things is, the retail vendor simply puts these events in the loss column and move on.? ?What should happen is these vendors should insist and demand better products and better QC from the manufacturers.? ?A most unlikely situation since we buy and accept the products.
--
Lone Tree, Colorado? ?USA