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Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
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#1
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Last night on my little Rockwell 21-100 mill, I was changing the radius on the underside of rifle scope base with a boring head.
As I raised the knee, there was cutting close to me, and then as I lowered the knee there was a new .001" of cutting on the mill side. Is my vise too heavy? are the knee gibbs loose? What is going on? TIA |
#2
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On Dec 16, 11:53*pm, "
wrote: Last night on my little Rockwell 21-100 mill, I was changing the radius on the underside of rifle scope base with a boring head. As I raised the knee, there was cutting close to me, and then as I lowered the knee there was a new .001" of cutting on the mill side. Is my vise too heavy? Maybe. How heavy is it? are the knee gibbs loose? Probably, but that ought to be easy to check What is going on? See above. TIA |
#3
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#4
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On Dec 17, 4:01*am, Tom Gardner mars@tacks wrote:
On 12/16/2011 11:53 PM, wrote: Last night on my little Rockwell 21-100 mill, I was changing the radius on the underside of rifle scope base with a boring head. As I raised the knee, there was cutting close to me, and then as I lowered the knee there was a new .001" of cutting on the mill side. Is my vise too heavy? are the knee gibbs loose? What is going on? TIA Is your mill aligned properly with magnetic North? *Did you account for deviation? Could you possibly give a more useless answer to a genuine metalworking question? |
#5
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On Dec 16, 11:53*pm, "
wrote: Last night on my little Rockwell 21-100 mill, I was changing the radius on the underside of rifle scope base with a boring head. As I raised the knee, there was cutting close to me, and then as I lowered the knee there was a new .001" of cutting on the mill side. Is my vise too heavy? are the knee gibbs loose? What is going on? TIA You may well do better to do your Z-axis motion with the quill rather than the knee. Use the kne to position the work, then lock it in place, then use the quill to make your cut. |
#6
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![]() wrote in message news:14522200.383.1324097638634.JavaMail.geo-discussion-forums@yqio4... Last night on my little Rockwell 21-100 mill, I was changing the radius on the underside of rifle scope base with a boring head. As I raised the knee, there was cutting close to me, and then as I lowered the knee there was a new .001" of cutting on the mill side. Is my vise too heavy? are the knee gibbs loose? What is going on? TIA It could be several things, but the most obvious is that your cutting tool has different geometry relative to the part when it's cutting in one direction versus the other. It's either digging in more in one direction, or it's pushing away from the work more in the other direction. -- Ed Huntress |
#7
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![]() "Ed Huntress" wrote in message ... wrote in message news:14522200.383.1324097638634.JavaMail.geo-discussion-forums@yqio4... Last night on my little Rockwell 21-100 mill, I was changing the radius on the underside of rifle scope base with a boring head. As I raised the knee, there was cutting close to me, and then as I lowered the knee there was a new .001" of cutting on the mill side. Is my vise too heavy? are the knee gibbs loose? What is going on? TIA It could be several things, but the most obvious is that your cutting tool has different geometry relative to the part when it's cutting in one direction versus the other. It's either digging in more in one direction, or it's pushing away from the work more in the other direction. This is typical with knee mills--the table wants to "slope" towards the column by a small amount when there is pressure on the screw and away from it when the pressure is removed. And though it might seem counterintuitive, gibs that are too tight usually tend to exacerbate the behaviour. |
#8
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"PrecisionmachinisT" wrote in message
news:G6ydncTps7y8RHHTnZ2dnUVZ_rKdnZ2d@scnresearch. com... "Ed Huntress" wrote in message ... wrote in message news:14522200.383.1324097638634.JavaMail.geo-discussion-forums@yqio4... Last night on my little Rockwell 21-100 mill, I was changing the radius on the underside of rifle scope base with a boring head. As I raised the knee, there was cutting close to me, and then as I lowered the knee there was a new .001" of cutting on the mill side. Is my vise too heavy? are the knee gibbs loose? What is going on? TIA It could be several things, but the most obvious is that your cutting tool has different geometry relative to the part when it's cutting in one direction versus the other. It's either digging in more in one direction, or it's pushing away from the work more in the other direction. This is typical with knee mills--the table wants to "slope" towards the column by a small amount when there is pressure on the screw and away from it when the pressure is removed. And though it might seem counterintuitive, gibs that are too tight usually tend to exacerbate the behaviour. That makes sense actually. If they are adjusted properly the downward force is always more on the screw. If they are a little snug then the screw can pull or push against the friction of the gibbs. I might never have thought of that on my own though. LOL. |
#9
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![]() "PrecisionmachinisT" wrote in message ... This is typical with knee mills--the table wants to "slope" towards the column by a small amount when there is pressure on the screw and away from it when the pressure is removed. And though it might seem counterintuitive, gibs that are too tight usually tend to exacerbate the behaviour. I've found several similar gotchas when I try to bore a cylinder on my small Clausing mill. They can be measured and hopefully corrected or dodged with a dial indicator and a good precision angle plate. jsw |
#10
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![]() Tom Gardner wrote: Did you account for deviation? That's funny, coming from the group's resident lesbian! ;-) -- You can't have a sense of humor, if you have no sense. |
#11
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On 12/17/2011 3:06 AM, rangerssuck wrote:
On Dec 17, 4:01 am, Tom Gardnermars@tacks wrote: On 12/16/2011 11:53 PM, wrote: Last night on my little Rockwell 21-100 mill, I was changing the radius on the underside of rifle scope base with a boring head. As I raised the knee, there was cutting close to me, and then as I lowered the knee there was a new .001" of cutting on the mill side. Is my vise too heavy? are the knee gibbs loose? What is going on? TIA Is your mill aligned properly with magnetic North? Did you account for deviation? Could you possibly give a more useless answer to a genuine metalworking question? Actually, it can be relevant since there is a large ferrous mass(mill spindle) spinning in a magnetic field (Earth). This could deflect the alignment of the spindle to the knee, especially since these little mills aren't all that rigid. OTOH, not REALLY likely. David |
#12
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On 12/17/2011 3:31 PM, Michael A. Terrell wrote:
Tom Gardner wrote: Did you account for deviation? That's funny, coming from the group's resident lesbian! ;-) But, but it's TRUE! |
#13
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#14
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On 12/17/2011 4:06 AM, rangerssuck wrote:
On Dec 17, 4:01 am, Tom Gardnermars@tacks wrote: On 12/16/2011 11:53 PM, wrote: Last night on my little Rockwell 21-100 mill, I was changing the radius on the underside of rifle scope base with a boring head. As I raised the knee, there was cutting close to me, and then as I lowered the knee there was a new .001" of cutting on the mill side. Is my vise too heavy? are the knee gibbs loose? What is going on? TIA Is your mill aligned properly with magnetic North? Did you account for deviation? Could you possibly give a more useless answer to a genuine metalworking question? Yep, I could have given him YOUR answer! |
#15
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On Sun, 18 Dec 2011 00:28:52 -0600, Jon Elson
wrote: wrote: Last night on my little Rockwell 21-100 mill, I was changing the radius on the underside of rifle scope base with a boring head. As I raised the knee, there was cutting close to me, and then as I lowered the knee there was a new .001" of cutting on the mill side. Is my vise too heavy? are the knee gibbs loose? What is going on? Use a dial indicator to check Y-axis movement when moving the knee. Yes, it is quite common for the knee slide to cock when the elevating screw pushes it up or down. Generally, the knee will snug up against the base when raised, and flop outward towards the operator when lowered. I never machine anything using the knee. I set the knee to the right height and use the quill to make up-down movements. If I need to move the knee to accommodate a different-length tool, I move it while not cutting, and then always finish with a lifting movement to keep the knee snug against the base. Jon Thats what I do as well. While the knee may be dropped down..I go at least an inch or 3 below the desired spot..then crank it upwards to position, then lock it. My Gorton Mastermill has a heavier and beefier table than a Bridgeport/Clone and even it requires this treatment. Gunner One could not be a successful Leftwinger without realizing that, in contrast to the popular conception supported by newspapers and mothers of Leftwingers, a goodly number of Leftwingers are not only narrow-minded and dull, but also just stupid. Gunner Asch |
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