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-   -   What is a turret mill? (https://www.diybanter.com/metalworking/87410-what-turret-mill.html)

Brent Burton January 21st 05 04:39 AM

What is a turret mill?
 
A buddy has a knee mill (a Bridgeport) that has a new Anilam controller
and whatnot. I understand, at a very basic level, how it works and how it
can manipulated.

How is a turret mill different?

Dan January 21st 05 05:28 AM

"Brent Burton" wrote in message
...
A buddy has a knee mill (a Bridgeport) that has a new Anilam controller
and whatnot. I understand, at a very basic level, how it works and how it
can manipulated.

How is a turret mill different?


Same thing different name. When you import these mills U.S. Customs
classifies them as "turret" mills. So you'll see that term more often with
imported machines than the more familiar term "knee" mill.

Dan



yourname January 21st 05 02:43 PM

I suppose you have to see a cincinnati up close to ponder the
difference betwen turret and knee

useful content: if you look at a bridgeport style mill, the four bolts
heading down into the base casting allow the top 'turret' to rotate,
allowing the machine to make much larger or irregular parts than
otherwise possible, earlier machines had a fixed 'C' frame, beefier, but
less flexible.

Tom wrote:
Dan wrote:

"Brent Burton" wrote in message
...

A buddy has a knee mill (a Bridgeport) that has a new Anilam controller
and whatnot. I understand, at a very basic level, how it works and how it
can manipulated.

How is a turret mill different?


Same thing different name. When you import these mills U.S. Customs
classifies them as "turret" mills. So you'll see that term more often with
imported machines than the more familiar term "knee" mill.

Dan



If it was good enough for Bridgeport to market their machines
as turret mills, surely the Asian clone makers can't be wrong?

Ton



Ned Simmons January 21st 05 03:07 PM

In article , says...
A buddy has a knee mill (a Bridgeport) that has a new Anilam controller
and whatnot. I understand, at a very basic level, how it works and how it
can manipulated.

How is a turret mill different?


A Bridgeport is both a knee mill and a turret mill. The table is mounted
on a knee that cranks the table up and down. The head ram mounts to a
rotating turret at the top of the base casting that allows flexibility
in positioning the head, though not while making a cut.

Ned Simmons

Brent Burton January 21st 05 05:43 PM

Ned Simmons wrote:
| In article , says...
| A buddy has a knee mill (a Bridgeport) that has a new Anilam controller
| and whatnot. I understand, at a very basic level, how it works and how it
| can manipulated.
|
| How is a turret mill different?
|
|
| A Bridgeport is both a knee mill and a turret mill. The table is mounted
| on a knee that cranks the table up and down. The head ram mounts to a
| rotating turret at the top of the base casting that allows flexibility
| in positioning the head, though not while making a cut.
|
| Ned Simmons

Ah, I see. There is a mill for sale locally that is also a Bridgeport,
but was just labeled as a turret mill. Thanks for the description, I
see exactly how these are both.

-Brent


Tom January 22nd 05 03:45 AM

Dan wrote:

"Brent Burton" wrote in message
...
A buddy has a knee mill (a Bridgeport) that has a new Anilam controller
and whatnot. I understand, at a very basic level, how it works and how it
can manipulated.

How is a turret mill different?


Same thing different name. When you import these mills U.S. Customs
classifies them as "turret" mills. So you'll see that term more often with
imported machines than the more familiar term "knee" mill.

Dan


If it was good enough for Bridgeport to market their machines
as turret mills, surely the Asian clone makers can't be wrong?

Ton


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