开云体育

1957 Atlas 618 7
Started by Nitro @ · Most recent @
File /3) Rotary table 3" to 4" or smaller/Indexing to 100Rotary Table.PDF deleted #file-notice
The following items have been deleted from the Files area of the [email protected] group. /3) Rotary table 3" to 4" or smaller/Indexing to 100Rotary Table.PDF By: davesmith1800 <davesmith1@...>
Started by Group Notification @
Indexing on a 3" Rotary Table
Here chart for indexing most numbers between 1 and 100 using just few indexing drums. Dave See file section for full pdf version
Started by davesmith1800 @
Mini lathe 7 x12 14 8 shop drill press mill wood working sextant clocks gear milling equipment engine tractor GPS vs SEXTANT Navigation
With our reducing magnetic field, we don't need as large a solar event to cause the same problem as the Carrington Event you referred to. So, expect problems. On 05-Feb-25 1:20, davesmith1800 wrote:
Started by Jerry Durand @
Mini lathe 7 x12 14 8 shop drill press mill wood working sextant clocks gear milling equipment engine tractor My project thread
Nice finish. On 05-Feb-25 17:22, Nitro via groups.io wrote:
Started by Jerry Durand @
Stories of past hobbies builders and their tools
Please share your stories of pass builders and tools they used ? . This on someone I new a long time ago. His one of his hobbies was building steam engines . He would be right home here. His name was . Hue Darby The best I ever saw welding aluminum was friend of family in his 80's . For rod he used a pocket knife and carved a thread aluminum. Then used torch and weld about 16 gauge aluminum. The best I ever saw. He did aluminum welding in WW2 for from 1942 till 1945. He retire in 1958 and past away riding a bicycle in over 100° day at 99. He welded was structural steel till 65. He only welded aluminum for hobbies and models. Was great machinist but did not do machine work for a living All he had was a old flat belt lathe a buss box and torch. He build fantastic engines Dave
Started by davesmith1800 @
Data on ROTARY TABLES
Here one on ROTARY TABLES I just found today.? . The accuracy of TABLE are from 20 seconds to 80 seconds or 1 minute 20 seconds The digital from LMS is 70 seconds or 1 minute 10 seconds. Dave
Started by davesmith1800 @
Rotary table on mini lathe 6
My latest project a adaptor for a 48mm four jaw chuck to my 3" rotary table . I have larger but nice small for fast setup and not have take off the vise on the mill. Red Dykek read to layout for mounting hole Note tap hole in the center this for holding down parts in chuck like drawbar.
Started by davesmith1800 @ · Most recent @
File /1) Lathe manuals/1~) Fast info/1) Chang Gear Calc Nov 30 2023 (1).html uploaded #file-notice
The following items have been added to the Files area of the [email protected] group. /1) Lathe manuals/1~) Fast info/1) Chang Gear Calc Nov 30 2023 (1).html By: davesmith1800 <davesmith1@...> Description: Calculation on changes . Has a list standard gears used Works in all Web browsers { Windows any age, Apple, cellphones and list goeson it is in HTML}
Started by Group Notification @
File Notifications 2 #file-notice
The following items have been added to the Files area of the [email protected] group. /4) Upgrades for mini lathes/cross slide screw Jan 16 23.jpg By: davesmith1800 <davesmith1@...> Description: Exstension of cross slide travel . No milling to lathe The following items have been added to the Files area of the [email protected] group. /4) Upgrades for mini lathes/4) CHUCK PLATE Layout1 (1).pdf /4) Upgrades for mini lathes/20231120_160928.jpg By: davesmith1800 <davesmith1@...>
Started by Group Notification @ · Most recent @
File /5) Charts &amp; Tables for machine work/7-three-wire.pdf uploaded #file-notice
The following items have been added to the Files area of the [email protected] group. /5) Charts & Tables for machine work/7-three-wire.pdf By: davesmith1800 <davesmith1@...>
Started by Group Notification @
File /5) Charts &amp; Tables for machine work/2drill-tap-chrat.pdf uploaded #file-notice
The following items have been added to the Files area of the [email protected] group. /5) Charts & Tables for machine work/2drill-tap-chrat.pdf By: davesmith1800 <davesmith1@...> Description: This one I have in my shop hanging in extra large size for easy reading since 1970’s. I also have in my machines binder too. Very handy
Started by Group Notification @
Tapper Attachment for 10K lathe 2
Sorry delay Been sick for last 6 days. Look on ebay The prices are out of site 0 I know for new the cost after inflation is still out side. Below is a screen shot of ebay Since new it has had very little use. Hand full of Cain bolts and a few #2 Morse taper. What is worth to you plus shipping It comes with almost new cross feed screw and upgrade dial. Dave Note I always keep the price separate from shipping never shipping inculcated. I like you pickup it up next is FedEx UPS if need be and USPS a extra charge for going to the post office and hasel FYI on this sites the message had problems on groups.io Later i will send you current photos too wait for it warm up
Started by davesmith1800 @ · Most recent @
Metal standards 2
Does anyone have a cross reference from usa metal standards to European ones? Like W1 drill rod being U8A (or У8А locally). When I search for metals I keep finding various stainless but not so much of the other grades of steel and aluminum.
Started by Jerry Durand @ · Most recent @
Mini lathe 7 x12 14 8 shop drill press mill wood working sextant clocks gear milling equipment engine tractor rebuilding repair Metal standards 2
Note that color codes have changed over the years, so you have to match the color chart with the year your building was wired. I hear the UK really swapped colors around. Always check with a meter, I've seen yellow/green used for a live wire. I wasn't expecting that, I had to knock through the plaster to a junction box to fix it. On 09-Feb-25 8:30, davesmith1800 wrote:
Started by Jerry Durand @ · Most recent @
Mini lathe 7 x12 14 8 shop drill press mill wood working sextant clocks gear milling equipment engine tractor rebuilding repair Mini lathe 7 x12 14 8 shop drill press mill wood working sextant clocks gear milling equipment engine tractor rebuilding repair Metal standards 3
In the UK the power is 240V, 50Hz. Outlets are often wired in a ring, not just one linear connection. Here we have 220V, 50Hz. On the poles is 3 phase WYE, so 220V from any leg to the common and 380V from leg to leg. A typical dacha (small "country house") is connected to one leg and the common with a 25 amp breaker and RCD (like a ground fault breaker in the usa). That's all the power you get. Because of a series of murky events, we got all 3 phases so have 3 phase power for the workshop, our sauna, and the greenhouse heater. Wiring up the milling machine to 380 volts seemed odd, at that voltage it only has a 5 amp breaker (well, three 5 amp breakers ganged together). I'm still getting used to how thin wire is here, things use half the current and with the higher voltage can stand a greater voltage drop, hence thin wire. One problem with 50Hz is motors and transformers need 20% more iron in them, making them bigger and more expensive. In appliances like washing machines you'll find brushed motors instead of the induction motors the usa uses. Our refrigerator has a tiny brushless DC motor (3 phase with VFD) as we use propane/butane for refrigerant instead of the fluorocarbons we had in California. Propane/butane is more efficient and much lower pressure so refrigeration gear is pretty low power. If we were doing power systems over, probably something like 240 Volts at 100Hz would be good. It would certainly save a lot of iron and wasted wattage. But, at least we're not in the part of Japan where I hear they have 100 Volts and 50Hz, worst of both worlds.
Started by Jerry Durand @ · Most recent @
Mini lathe 7 x12 14 8 shop drill press mill wood working sextant clocks gear milling equipment engine tractor rebuilding repair Mini lathe 7 x12 14 8 shop drill press mill wood working sextant clocks gear milling equipment engine tractor rebuilding repair Mini lathe 7 x12 14 8 shop drill press mill wood working sextant clocks gear milling equipment engine tractor rebuilding repair Metal standards 2
Higher frequency uses less iron, not copper. It has to do with how much magnetic field the transformer core can hold. Slower frequency means more time to charge the core, so more iron needed. Modern power supplies convert the incoming ac to dc, then convert it back to ac, but at high frequency (up to a million hertz). From there it's back to dc. Sounds Rube Goldberg but it results in a tiny transformer. davesmith1800 wrote:
Started by Jerry Durand @ · Most recent @
Mini lathe 7 x12 14 8 shop drill press mill wood working sextant clocks gear milling equipment engine tractor rebuilding repair Mini lathe 7 x12 14 8 shop drill press mill wood working sextant clocks gear milling equipment engine tractor rebuilding repair Mini lathe 7 x12 14 8 shop drill press mill wood working sextant clocks gear milling equipment engine tractor rebuilding repair Mini lathe 7 x12 14 8 shop drill press mill wood working sextant clocks gear milling equipment engine tractor rebuil
It's what I mentioned about modern power supplies, an inverter welder is a SMPS (Switched Mode Power Supply). It converts the mains power to DC. Then Switches that at a high frequency. This means the transformer is much much smaller. You won't find big iron transformers in these, just small ferrite (a magnetic ceramic) transformers. I remember when these first came out, I worked at a MIL testing lab in the USA. We were amazed but concerned that the output voltage wasn't quite as clean as our big, boat-anchor sized, linear power supplies.
Started by Jerry Durand @
Mini lathe 7 x12 14 8 shop drill press mill wood working sextant clocks gear milling equipment engine tractor rebuilding repair Mini lathe 7 x12 14 8 shop drill press mill wood working sextant clocks gear milling equipment engine tractor rebuilding repair Mini lathe 7 x12 14 8 shop drill press mill wood working sextant clocks gear milling equipment engine tractor rebuilding repair Mini lathe 7 x12 14 8 shop drill press mill wood working sextant clocks gear milling equipment engine tractor rebuil
Yep. Higher the frequency the lighter the wiring can be. Back in the day, aircraft electronics were run at 400hz, instead of the 60hz we use in households and industry. Switching would save a lot on expensive materials, but we'd have to remake EVERYTHING! Bill in OKC William R. Meyers, MSgt, USAF(Ret.) Aphorisms to live by: Good judgement comes from experience. Experience comes from bad judgement. SEMPER GUMBY! Improvise, Adapt, and Overcome. Physics doesn't care about your schedule. The only reason I know anything is because I've done it wrong enough times to START to know better. Expect in one hand, expectorate in the other. See which one gets full first. On Monday, February 10, 2025 at 10:13:12 AM CST, davesmith1800 <davesmith1@...> wrote: I wonder how make they make inverter welders so light today. It was Aluminum winding onsecondary side now they lighter. Now it is high frequency is about what know. Dave
Started by Bill in OKC too @
Mini lathe 7 x12 14 8 shop drill press mill wood working sextant clocks gear milling equipment engine tractor rebuilding repair Mini lathe 7 x12 14 8 shop drill press mill wood working sextant clocks gear milling equipment engine tractor rebuilding repair Mini lathe 7 x12 14 8 shop drill press mill wood working sextant clocks gear milling equipment engine tractor rebuilding repair Mini lathe 7 x12 14 8 shop drill press mill wood working sextant clocks gear milling equipment engine tractor rebuil
In 1986 I was attending an Army Satellite terminal training class at Ft. Gordon, GA. Had a bad storm that night that shut down our terminal. I'd been writing a letter on the Heathkit. H89 computer when I left for class. Expected it to be shut down when I got back to the dorm. Nope! The filter caps in that power supply were the size of my fists. It was only a transient power hit, but it took down the relatively modern MILSPEC satellite terminal, and didn't touch the monstrous linear old-school linear power supply. Bill in OKC William R. Meyers, MSgt, USAF(Ret.) Aphorisms to live by: Good judgement comes from experience. Experience comes from bad judgement. SEMPER GUMBY! Improvise, Adapt, and Overcome. Physics doesn't care about your schedule. The only reason I know anything is because I've done it wrong enough times to START to know better. Expect in one hand, expectorate in the other. See which one gets full first. On Monday, February 10, 2025 at 10:41:09 AM CST, Jerry Durand via groups.io <jdurand@...> wrote: It's what I mentioned about modern power supplies, an inverter welder is a SMPS (Switched Mode Power Supply). It converts the mains power to DC. Then Switches that at a high frequency. This means the transformer is much much smaller. You won't find big iron transformers in these, just small ferrite (a magnetic ceramic) transformers. I remember when these first came out, I worked at a MIL testing lab in the USA. We were amazed but concerned that the output voltage wasn't quite as clean as our big, boat-anchor sized, linear power supplies.
Started by Bill in OKC too @
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