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Rex May 25th 05 01:27 AM

Help identify this artifact
 
I bought (yet) another lathe last week.
With it came the usual boxes of tooling, among which I found at least
one item I cannot identify. Almost sure it doesn't go to or with a
lathe. It looks too interesting to scrap.

If you would, take a look in the dropbox at

artifact 1.jpg and artifact 2.jpg

I'd love to know what this is.


Rex Burkheimer

Jeff Wisnia May 25th 05 01:40 AM

Rex wrote:

I bought (yet) another lathe last week.
With it came the usual boxes of tooling, among which I found at least
one item I cannot identify. Almost sure it doesn't go to or with a
lathe. It looks too interesting to scrap.

If you would, take a look in the dropbox at

artifact 1.jpg and artifact 2.jpg

I'd love to know what this is.


Rex Burkheimer


I'm gonna guess it's either a tachometer to measure rotation/unit time
or an "odometer" to measure the amount of something moved by it.

It looks like the "wheel" on the back could be made to rest against a
rotating cylinder and the amount of movement of the dials measured over
a time interval to calculate RPMs.

Or, the wheel rests against some moving material and the dials tell how
much it moved, or verse visa if the gadget itself was the thing moving
along.

Jeff

--
Jeffry Wisnia

(W1BSV + Brass Rat '57 EE)

"Truth exists; only falsehood has to be invented."

Al A. May 25th 05 02:15 AM

On Wed, 25 May 2005 00:27:23 GMT, Rex
wrote:

I bought (yet) another lathe last week.
With it came the usual boxes of tooling, among which I found at least
one item I cannot identify. Almost sure it doesn't go to or with a
lathe. It looks too interesting to scrap.

If you would, take a look in the dropbox at

artifact 1.jpg and artifact 2.jpg

I'd love to know what this is.


Rex Burkheimer



Rex,
That is a Trav-a-dial. Think of it as a poor man's DRO.
The modern version is he

http://www.brookanco.com/products1mt...D=24&PRODID=88

They used to sell these in the Enco catalogs and such. It gets
attached to the carrage and is pressed against the side of a lathe bed
by the spring. The serrated wheel digs in and counts off the distance
the carrige travels. The scale is read vernier style.
IIRC they where fairly pricey, over $100.00 but I could be wrong on
that.

-AL

DeepDiver May 25th 05 02:24 AM

"Al A." wrote in message
...

Rex,
That is a Trav-a-dial. Think of it as a poor man's DRO.
The modern version is he

http://www.brookanco.com/products1mt...D=24&PRODID=88


That's pretty slick!

- Michael



Rex May 25th 05 03:21 AM

Al A. wrote:
On Wed, 25 May 2005 00:27:23 GMT, Rex
wrote:


I bought (yet) another lathe last week.
With it came the usual boxes of tooling, among which I found at least
one item I cannot identify. Almost sure it doesn't go to or with a
lathe. It looks too interesting to scrap.

If you would, take a look in the dropbox at

artifact 1.jpg and artifact 2.jpg

I'd love to know what this is.


Rex Burkheimer




Rex,
That is a Trav-a-dial. Think of it as a poor man's DRO.
The modern version is he

http://www.brookanco.com/products1mt...D=24&PRODID=88

They used to sell these in the Enco catalogs and such. It gets
attached to the carrage and is pressed against the side of a lathe bed
by the spring. The serrated wheel digs in and counts off the distance
the carrige travels. The scale is read vernier style.
IIRC they where fairly pricey, over $100.00 but I could be wrong on
that.

-AL


Oh, so THAT's a Trav-A-Dial. I've heard of them but it never registered
what they were for.

Very interesting. Now I'll have to go to the shop and figure out how it
was mounted on that Enco.

Thanks much, Al.

Rex

Harold and Susan Vordos May 25th 05 05:55 AM


"Rex" wrote in message
ink.net...
Al A. wrote:
On Wed, 25 May 2005 00:27:23 GMT, Rex
wrote:


I bought (yet) another lathe last week.
With it came the usual boxes of tooling, among which I found at least
one item I cannot identify. Almost sure it doesn't go to or with a
lathe. It looks too interesting to scrap.

If you would, take a look in the dropbox at

artifact 1.jpg and artifact 2.jpg

I'd love to know what this is.


Rex Burkheimer




Rex,
That is a Trav-a-dial. Think of it as a poor man's DRO.
The modern version is he

http://www.brookanco.com/products1mt...D=24&PRODID=88

They used to sell these in the Enco catalogs and such. It gets
attached to the carrage and is pressed against the side of a lathe bed
by the spring. The serrated wheel digs in and counts off the distance
the carrige travels. The scale is read vernier style.
IIRC they where fairly pricey, over $100.00 but I could be wrong on
that.

-AL


Oh, so THAT's a Trav-A-Dial. I've heard of them but it never registered
what they were for.

Very interesting. Now I'll have to go to the shop and figure out how it
was mounted on that Enco.

Thanks much, Al.

Rex


When you build your mount, make sure you can tilt the indicator assembly as
it makes contact with the lathe bed. I didn't look at the picture, but if it
is, indeed, a Trav-A-Dial, or similar, they are usually calibrated by
tilting the rubber wheel, which is not square faced. It should have a
radius, which changes the reading as you rotate the indicator to use a
larger or smaller portion of the diameter of the wheel. By using a gage
block, you can calibrate the indicator to read accurately.

Harold



Harold and Susan Vordos May 25th 05 05:55 AM


"Rex" wrote in message
ink.net...
Al A. wrote:
On Wed, 25 May 2005 00:27:23 GMT, Rex
wrote:


I bought (yet) another lathe last week.
With it came the usual boxes of tooling, among which I found at least
one item I cannot identify. Almost sure it doesn't go to or with a
lathe. It looks too interesting to scrap.

If you would, take a look in the dropbox at

artifact 1.jpg and artifact 2.jpg

I'd love to know what this is.


Rex Burkheimer




Rex,
That is a Trav-a-dial. Think of it as a poor man's DRO.
The modern version is he

http://www.brookanco.com/products1mt...D=24&PRODID=88

They used to sell these in the Enco catalogs and such. It gets
attached to the carrage and is pressed against the side of a lathe bed
by the spring. The serrated wheel digs in and counts off the distance
the carrige travels. The scale is read vernier style.
IIRC they where fairly pricey, over $100.00 but I could be wrong on
that.

-AL


Oh, so THAT's a Trav-A-Dial. I've heard of them but it never registered
what they were for.

Very interesting. Now I'll have to go to the shop and figure out how it
was mounted on that Enco.

Thanks much, Al.

Rex


When you build your mount, make sure you can tilt the indicator assembly as
it makes contact with the lathe bed. I didn't look at the picture, but if it
is, indeed, a Trav-A-Dial, or similar, they are usually calibrated by
tilting the rubber wheel, which is not square faced. It should have a
radius, which changes the reading as you rotate the indicator to use a
larger or smaller portion of the diameter of the wheel. By using a gage
block, you can calibrate the indicator to read accurately.

Harold





Rex B May 25th 05 03:00 PM

Harold and Susan Vordos wrote:
"Rex" wrote in message
ink.net...

Al A. wrote:

On Wed, 25 May 2005 00:27:23 GMT, Rex
wrote:



I bought (yet) another lathe last week.
With it came the usual boxes of tooling, among which I found at least
one item I cannot identify. Almost sure it doesn't go to or with a
lathe. It looks too interesting to scrap.

If you would, take a look in the dropbox at

artifact 1.jpg and artifact 2.jpg

I'd love to know what this is.


Rex Burkheimer



Rex,
That is a Trav-a-dial. Think of it as a poor man's DRO.
The modern version is he

http://www.brookanco.com/products1mt...D=24&PRODID=88

They used to sell these in the Enco catalogs and such. It gets
attached to the carrage and is pressed against the side of a lathe bed
by the spring. The serrated wheel digs in and counts off the distance
the carrige travels. The scale is read vernier style.
IIRC they where fairly pricey, over $100.00 but I could be wrong on
that.

-AL


Oh, so THAT's a Trav-A-Dial. I've heard of them but it never registered
what they were for.

Very interesting. Now I'll have to go to the shop and figure out how it
was mounted on that Enco.

Thanks much, Al.

Rex



When you build your mount, make sure you can tilt the indicator assembly as
it makes contact with the lathe bed. I didn't look at the picture, but if it
is, indeed, a Trav-A-Dial, or similar, they are usually calibrated by
tilting the rubber wheel, which is not square faced. It should have a
radius, which changes the reading as you rotate the indicator to use a
larger or smaller portion of the diameter of the wheel. By using a gage
block, you can calibrate the indicator to read accurately.

Harold


This one is not made like that. The wheel is steel, approx 1.125"
diameter, and the face is about 5/8 wide, flat and smooth. The pring is
very strong though, so apparently it gets enough traction that way.
There is no internal gearing, just a straight shaft on ball bearings.
Without accurate measurement I'd say one revolution is between 3 and 4
inches. I haven't tried it in metric. Seems like one round should come
up to an even measurement of some kind.
I'm hoping the lathe has evidence of the wheel having traveled along
an otherwise unused section, like the front or back vertical bed surface.

Rex

Harold and Susan Vordos May 25th 05 06:39 PM


"Rex B" wrote in message
...
Harold and Susan Vordos wrote:
"Rex" wrote in message
ink.net...

Al A. wrote:

On Wed, 25 May 2005 00:27:23 GMT, Rex
wrote:



I bought (yet) another lathe last week.
With it came the usual boxes of tooling, among which I found at least
one item I cannot identify. Almost sure it doesn't go to or with a
lathe. It looks too interesting to scrap.

If you would, take a look in the dropbox at

artifact 1.jpg and artifact 2.jpg

I'd love to know what this is.


Rex Burkheimer



Rex,
That is a Trav-a-dial. Think of it as a poor man's DRO.
The modern version is he

http://www.brookanco.com/products1mt...D=24&PRODID=88

They used to sell these in the Enco catalogs and such. It gets
attached to the carrage and is pressed against the side of a lathe bed
by the spring. The serrated wheel digs in and counts off the distance
the carrige travels. The scale is read vernier style.
IIRC they where fairly pricey, over $100.00 but I could be wrong on
that.

-AL

Oh, so THAT's a Trav-A-Dial. I've heard of them but it never registered
what they were for.

Very interesting. Now I'll have to go to the shop and figure out how it
was mounted on that Enco.

Thanks much, Al.

Rex



When you build your mount, make sure you can tilt the indicator assembly

as
it makes contact with the lathe bed. I didn't look at the picture, but

if it
is, indeed, a Trav-A-Dial, or similar, they are usually calibrated by
tilting the rubber wheel, which is not square faced. It should have a
radius, which changes the reading as you rotate the indicator to use a
larger or smaller portion of the diameter of the wheel. By using a

gage
block, you can calibrate the indicator to read accurately.

Harold


This one is not made like that. The wheel is steel, approx 1.125"
diameter, and the face is about 5/8 wide, flat and smooth. The pring is
very strong though, so apparently it gets enough traction that way.
There is no internal gearing, just a straight shaft on ball bearings.
Without accurate measurement I'd say one revolution is between 3 and 4
inches. I haven't tried it in metric. Seems like one round should come
up to an even measurement of some kind.
I'm hoping the lathe has evidence of the wheel having traveled along
an otherwise unused section, like the front or back vertical bed surface.

Rex


I checked the link and was shocked at what I read. I've never seen that
method of mounting, but I'm obviously wrong in my assessment. Sure am
curious how they calibrate the device, it was mentioned, just not
described. Can you see how that might be accomplished?

I've used one of the devices, but the design I described. They're really
nice to use if you're not inclined to use DRO's, which I'm not. It's
been years, many years, in fact, since I used the Trav-A-Dial, so now I'm
beginning to wonder if I had the wheel wrong----maybe not rubber faced.
I'm quite sure it was calibrated as I suggest, regardless.

I'd like to hear your impressions of the device, assuming you can get it up
and running.

Harold



Rex B May 25th 05 06:50 PM

I bought (yet) another lathe last week.
With it came the usual boxes of tooling, among which I found at least
one item I cannot identify. Almost sure it doesn't go to or with a
lathe. It looks too interesting to scrap.

If you would, take a look in the dropbox at

artifact 1.jpg and artifact 2.jpg

I'd love to know what this is.


Rex Burkheimer



Rex,
That is a Trav-a-dial. Think of it as a poor man's DRO.
The modern version is he

http://www.brookanco.com/products1mt...D=24&PRODID=88

They used to sell these in the Enco catalogs and such. It gets
attached to the carrage and is pressed against the side of a lathe bed
by the spring. The serrated wheel digs in and counts off the distance
the carrige travels. The scale is read vernier style.
IIRC they where fairly pricey, over $100.00 but I could be wrong on
that.

-AL



When you build your mount, make sure you can tilt the indicator assembly

as it makes contact with the lathe bed. I didn't look at the picture, but
if it is, indeed, a Trav-A-Dial, or similar, they are usually calibrated by
tilting the rubber wheel, which is not square faced. It should have a
radius, which changes the reading as you rotate the indicator to use a
larger or smaller portion of the diameter of the wheel. By using a

gage block, you can calibrate the indicator to read accurately.
Harold


This one is not made like that. The wheel is steel, approx 1.125"
diameter, and the face is about 5/8 wide, flat and smooth. The pring is
very strong though, so apparently it gets enough traction that way.
There is no internal gearing, just a straight shaft on ball bearings.
Without accurate measurement I'd say one revolution is between 3 and 4
inches. I haven't tried it in metric. Seems like one round should come
up to an even measurement of some kind.
I'm hoping the lathe has evidence of the wheel having traveled along
an otherwise unused section, like the front or back vertical bed surface.

Rex



I checked the link and was shocked at what I read. I've never seen that
method of mounting, but I'm obviously wrong in my assessment. Sure am
curious how they calibrate the device, it was mentioned, just not
described. Can you see how that might be accomplished?

I've used one of the devices, but the design I described. They're really
nice to use if you're not inclined to use DRO's, which I'm not. It's
been years, many years, in fact, since I used the Trav-A-Dial, so now I'm
beginning to wonder if I had the wheel wrong----maybe not rubber faced.
I'm quite sure it was calibrated as I suggest, regardless.

I'd like to hear your impressions of the device, assuming you can get it up
and running.


May be a week or so. So far I've just gotten the lathe setting on the
factory Enco stand, and I'm not real impressed with the stability. I'll
probably build some outrigger feet with casters before I bolt
everything up solid.

I'm still scratching my head over the unit of measure it is made for. I
guess it could be a decimeter (? 10 centimeters), but that doesn't seem
logical. Otherwise, it could be a special-purpose unit.
And for that matter, a smaller driven wheel could be easily made. If
any smaller, it would be more prone to slippage error. If I made it for
1" carriage travel = 1 turn of the dial, I'd have a roller of around
..375" OD

Harold and Susan Vordos May 25th 05 07:30 PM


"Rex B" wrote in message
...
snip---

I'm still scratching my head over the unit of measure it is made for. I
guess it could be a decimeter (? 10 centimeters), but that doesn't seem
logical. Otherwise, it could be a special-purpose unit.
And for that matter, a smaller driven wheel could be easily made. If
any smaller, it would be more prone to slippage error. If I made it for
1" carriage travel = 1 turn of the dial, I'd have a roller of around
.375" OD


That does seem weird. I recall the old units had a fairly large wheel, but
don't recall how it related to turns of the dial. Could be they had gearing
inside. I've never seen the guts. Unless you can have it relate to common
measurements, it could prove to be quite useless, and that small diameter
shaft (pi) sure as hell sounds like it would be slippery. Be sure to post
your findings. This thing sounds like a puzzle more than anything.

Harold



Wild Bill May 25th 05 09:18 PM

Your artifact is interesting, although I don't know what it is. It appears
to be operated more like a threading dial, as a reference mark or separation
between two points, rather than general use linear measurement device.

The Trav-A-Dial devices mentioned are a product of Southwestern Industries
aka SWI. If your gem was one of their products, they might recognize it.
http://www.southwesternindustries.com/swi/prod_measurement.shtml

The more recent SWI units that I'm familiar with use a rolling steel wheel
(maybe 2.5" dia.) and internal gearing similar in ratio to a dial caliper.
The ones I have are electronic (with optical encoders), to provide counting
signals to a DRO unit.
As Harold mentioned, the rolling wheel has a crown, and the special holder
provides the drive tension/pressure, and has adjustments to insure that the
wheel is tracking properly.

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

"Rex" wrote in message
nk.net...
I bought (yet) another lathe last week.
With it came the usual boxes of tooling, among which I found at least
one item I cannot identify. Almost sure it doesn't go to or with a
lathe. It looks too interesting to scrap.

If you would, take a look in the dropbox at

artifact 1.jpg and artifact 2.jpg

I'd love to know what this is.


Rex Burkheimer




----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==----
http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups
----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =----

Rex B May 25th 05 09:48 PM

Wild Bill wrote:
Your artifact is interesting, although I don't know what it is. It appears
to be operated more like a threading dial, as a reference mark or separation
between two points, rather than general use linear measurement device.

The Trav-A-Dial devices mentioned are a product of Southwestern Industries
aka SWI. If your gem was one of their products, they might recognize it.
http://www.southwesternindustries.com/swi/prod_measurement.shtml

The more recent SWI units that I'm familiar with use a rolling steel wheel
(maybe 2.5" dia.) and internal gearing similar in ratio to a dial caliper.
The ones I have are electronic (with optical encoders), to provide counting
signals to a DRO unit.
As Harold mentioned, the rolling wheel has a crown, and the special holder
provides the drive tension/pressure, and has adjustments to insure that the
wheel is tracking properly.


I am pretty sure this is not a product of SWI. It has a logo on it which
is a start with a 'W' over an 'H' or so it appears. Sort of like

|-W-| with the 'W' being much bigger.

I think it must perform the same function, albeit with a much coarser
measurement. For the sake of simplicity:

Assume 1" driven wheel, which is coupled directly to the degreed wheel.
Degreed wheel has 100 graduations, so each would represent .0314.
The vernier on the frame would measure another decimal point, so
resolution would be on the order of .003".
That might have been good enough for the operations for which it was
intended.
It's certainly within the tolerances I usually work to :)

The lathe this came with was made in 1986. I would bet this is older,
and probably not from China like the lathe.
In the shop were also a BP, optical comparators, EDMs, and other things,
so it could have been used on other machines.

Tom May 25th 05 10:11 PM

Harold and Susan Vordos wrote:

"Rex B" wrote in message
...
snip---

I'm still scratching my head over the unit of measure it is made for. I
guess it could be a decimeter (? 10 centimeters), but that doesn't seem
logical. Otherwise, it could be a special-purpose unit.
And for that matter, a smaller driven wheel could be easily made. If
any smaller, it would be more prone to slippage error. If I made it for
1" carriage travel = 1 turn of the dial, I'd have a roller of around
.375" OD


That does seem weird. I recall the old units had a fairly large wheel, but
don't recall how it related to turns of the dial. Could be they had gearing
inside. I've never seen the guts. Unless you can have it relate to common
measurements, it could prove to be quite useless, and that small diameter
shaft (pi) sure as hell sounds like it would be slippery. Be sure to post
your findings. This thing sounds like a puzzle more than anything.

Harold


I think by its construction, it pre-dates Trav-A-Dial as they
weren't made until the early 60s, and I never saw a T-A-D that
was direct driven like this, they had a reduction built in.
It certainly wasn't made to be user friendly mountable to
machine tools. I would think it's off a specific manufacturing
machine, not necessarily a machine tool.

Tom

Rex May 26th 05 04:01 AM

Rex B wrote:
Wild Bill wrote:

Your artifact is interesting, although I don't know what it is. It
appears
to be operated more like a threading dial, as a reference mark or
separation
between two points, rather than general use linear measurement device.

The Trav-A-Dial devices mentioned are a product of Southwestern
Industries
aka SWI. If your gem was one of their products, they might recognize it.
http://www.southwesternindustries.com/swi/prod_measurement.shtml

The more recent SWI units that I'm familiar with use a rolling steel
wheel
(maybe 2.5" dia.) and internal gearing similar in ratio to a dial
caliper.
The ones I have are electronic (with optical encoders), to provide
counting
signals to a DRO unit.
As Harold mentioned, the rolling wheel has a crown, and the special
holder
provides the drive tension/pressure, and has adjustments to insure
that the
wheel is tracking properly.



I am pretty sure this is not a product of SWI. It has a logo on it which
is a start with a 'W' over an 'H' or so it appears. Sort of like

|-W-| with the 'W' being much bigger.

I think it must perform the same function, albeit with a much coarser
measurement. For the sake of simplicity:

Assume 1" driven wheel, which is coupled directly to the degreed wheel.
Degreed wheel has 100 graduations, so each would represent .0314.
The vernier on the frame would measure another decimal point, so
resolution would be on the order of .003".
That might have been good enough for the operations for which it was
intended.
It's certainly within the tolerances I usually work to :)

The lathe this came with was made in 1986. I would bet this is older,
and probably not from China like the lathe.
In the shop were also a BP, optical comparators, EDMs, and other things,
so it could have been used on other machines.


Update: Rolling circumference is right around 4 inches, so one full
turn of the graduated wheel is 4".
Makes me think there could be an intermediate wheel involved.

Also, the logo looks for like HWH


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