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Wild Bill
 
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Default Long arbors for van norman no 12

It's good to hear that this has been done successfully. I've had the
separate parts just sitting around for a long time, partly due to
skepticism.

I've been wanting to try this on a lathe, though. I'll need to fabricate a
bearing arbor support rather than trying to use the tailstock.

WB
...............

"Gunner" wrote in message
news
On Tue, 16 Dec 2003 11:58:01 -0800, "Harold & Susan Vordos"
wrote:


"KD" wrote in message
. com...
I just picked up a van norman no 12, and it doesn't have any arbor to
use for over arm support, it has some small arbors and such, but that
is it. I know people have made some on there own, can someone explain
the process? Are you actually cutting the taper to slip into the
spindle or can you just make one in like 1/2 inch and use a collet and
the other end supported by the overarm? Appreciate any help.



The large taper of an arbor is intended to lend stability and provide the
driving force when using side cutters. When properly applied,

horizontal
milling machines are capable of breath taking feed rated due to the large
number of teeth found on these potentially large diameter cutters.

Based
on that, imagine the amount of torque necessary to drive the cutters

without
slipping. Driving with a 1/2" collet would certainly not be in your

best
interest. Even the largest collet you might have would be woefully

lacking
if you ran a large cutter. I've seen up to 12" diameter cutters used

on
#4 K&T mills. The mechanical advantage the cutter has is so great

there's
almost no way you could drive it with a collet. Not taking a

reasonable
feed is not the solution, either. Cutters that are not doing much work

also
don't have much of a life span. Milling cutters that just scratch away

at
material wear faster than one that is doing serious work, but cooled
properly with flood coolant.

Making or buying an arbor or two is really the best solution.

Harold

I recently made an arbor for a small Clausing horizontal. I used a 1"
endmill holder as the root, and turned a bar to fit it, then placed the
two between centers and turned the arbor to size. Worked very well until
I stuck a pair of 6" cutters on the arbor, and spun the arbor in the
endmill holder. Id only secured it with a single screw. Remaking a new
one, now secured with a bit of loctite and both screws..it chews metal
quite happily with both cutters.

BTW..doing it this way, was the fastest and most accurate way Ive found
so far in making arbors.

Gunner

The methodology of the left has always been:

1. Lie
2. Repeat the lie as many times as possible
3. Have as many people repeat the lie as often as possible
4. Eventually, the uninformed believe the lie
5. The lie will then be made into some form oflaw
6. Then everyone must conform to the lie