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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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I just got my second rotary table... This one has a two position knob
that doesn't seem to do anything... Could anyone tell me what it's for ??? (see red arrow) One more stupid question.... What's holding this three jaw chuck onto the table... I see no attachments anywhere... Super glued ??? Picture link... http://user.pa.net/~kbeitz/Metal%20w...20question.jpg |
#3
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That was my firs thought... But it does not release .... What could be
stuck ? I also looked under the table... no connections... |
#4
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![]() wrote in message ups.com... That was my firs thought... But it does not release .... What could be stuck ? I also looked under the table... no connections... Look in the very center. |
#6
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Looking down in the vise there is no hole... But looking up from the
bottom there is something like an open pipe with a clamp around it... That part looks more like part of the rotary table than something that holds the vise on... How would a clamp around a pipe ever hold a chuck tight against the table ??? |
#7
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Can you use a lathe? The pulley is going to want to vibrate using an end
mill. wrote in message ups.com... I just got my second rotary table... This one has a two position knob that doesn't seem to do anything... Could anyone tell me what it's for ??? (see red arrow) One more stupid question.... What's holding this three jaw chuck onto the table... I see no attachments anywhere... Super glued ??? Picture link... http://user.pa.net/~kbeitz/Metal%20w...20question.jpg |
#8
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Opps wrong post
"Waynemak" wrote in message ... Can you use a lathe? The pulley is going to want to vibrate using an end mill. wrote in message ups.com... I just got my second rotary table... This one has a two position knob that doesn't seem to do anything... Could anyone tell me what it's for ??? (see red arrow) One more stupid question.... What's holding this three jaw chuck onto the table... I see no attachments anywhere... Super glued ??? Picture link... http://user.pa.net/~kbeitz/Metal%20w...20question.jpg |
#9
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![]() Most rotary tables have a Morse tapered hole in the center. It's possible that the lathe is attached to a tapered shank. If the shank has a draw bar thread, a bolt may be holding it from the bottom, otherwise it may be held by the friction of the taper alone. In which case it can be driven out. It should be visible from the bottom of the table. -- Billy Hiebert HIEBERT SCULPTURE WORKS Small Part Injection Molding http://www.hieberts.com Waynemak wrote: Can you use a lathe? The pulley is going to want to vibrate using an end mill. wrote in message ups.com... I just got my second rotary table... This one has a two position knob that doesn't seem to do anything... Could anyone tell me what it's for ??? (see red arrow) One more stupid question.... What's holding this three jaw chuck onto the table... I see no attachments anywhere... Super glued ??? Picture link... http://user.pa.net/~kbeitz/Metal%20w...20question.jpg |
#11
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In article . com,
wrote: I just got my second rotary table... This one has a two position knob that doesn't seem to do anything... Could anyone tell me what it's for ??? (see red arrow) Pull it out, and rotate the arm in which it is mounted until it is in line with the other hole enar the oil cup, and then release it so its pin enters that hole. In one position, the worm gear is engaged, so you rotate the table with the crank. In the other position, the work is disengaged, so you can rotate the table quickly by hand. (You'll have to loosen the two locking levers near the table mounting bolt notches, of course. One more stupid question.... What's holding this three jaw chuck onto the table... I see no attachments anywhere... Super glued ??? I suspect that it has a taper attached to it which matches the taper in the center of the table (probably a Morse taper, but possibly another of the several which have been standards over the years.) What do you see when you look through the T-slots? Two of them cross in the center, and you should be able to see any center pin there. The other two bypass the center, (and are parallel with one of the center ones), and you can check here as well for any T-nuts in the slots, though I doubt that there are any, as I don't see any way to tighten bolts into them. Now -- it is remotely possible that someone drilled through the table and installed bolts from the bottom to secure the chuck permanently. To determine this (if everything else shows no attachment system), you'll have to remove the table from the base. I don't know what brand it is, and I've never had one of that size in my hands anyway, but what I would suggest as a possible route would be: 1) Invert it on some stable surface, and unscrew the ring which holds the table to the base. Note whether anything else is released, such as perhaps a thrust bearing. 2) Turn it right side up again. 3) Remove the two clamp levers and clamps near the slots for the mounting bolts. 4) Rotate the knob indicated by the arrow to whichever position disengages the handwheel worm from the matching gear on the hub of the table. 5) Lift the table and chuck as a single assembly, so you can gain access to the bolts securing the chuck to the table. (There may also be a centering plug which fits the taper in the center of the table and a recess in the back of the chuck. Note carefully any small parts (such as thrust bearings) which fall from the bottom of the table as you remove it from the casting. **** WARNING *** I don't know what small parts may come popping out when you do this, and hide forever under something immovable in your shop. This is simply what *I* would do if I wanted the chuck off of the table. And -- if this *has* been done to the table (drilling to mount a chuck) there may be distortion of the table from relieved stresses, in which case, unless you are willing to tackle the job of scraping it flat again, it is likely now better off with the chuck permanently attached. Good Luck, DoN. -- Email: | Voice (all times): (703) 938-4564 (too) near Washington D.C. | http://www.d-and-d.com/dnichols/DoN.html --- Black Holes are where God is dividing by zero --- |
#12
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On 21 Feb 2005 16:56:18 -0800, the inscrutable
spake: I just got my second rotary table... This one has a two position knob that doesn't seem to do anything... Could anyone tell me what it's for ??? (see red arrow) SWAG: locking screw? (with broken tit?) One more stupid question.... What's holding this three jaw chuck onto the table... I see no attachments anywhere... Super glued ??? Open the jaws and you'll surely find t-nuts 'n bolts beneath 'em. Picture link... http://user.pa.net/~kbeitz/Metal%20w...20question.jpg -- ************************************************** ********* "Boy, I feel safer now that Martha Stewart is behind bars! O.J. is walking around free, Osama Bin Laden too, but they take the one woman in America willing to cook and clean and work in the yard and haul her ass to jail." --Tim Allen ************************************************** ********* |
#13
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That looks a lot like the table I have. The handle with the red arrow is
for releasing the worm from the worm wheel allowing the table to free wheel. However it is quite sensitive to how it is attached to the eccentric that it is clamped to. It is easy to get it wrong. If wrong you can go from loose on one side to tight at 45 degrees and then loose at 90 degrees again but not engaged. Set the table so that the handle can move through 360 degrees and you should find a spot that the table will free wheel. On my table the center hole is threaded! So yours may be also. Mine is a PM brand from Japan. lg no neat sig line wrote in message ups.com... I just got my second rotary table... This one has a two position knob that doesn't seem to do anything... Could anyone tell me what it's for ??? (see red arrow) One more stupid question.... What's holding this three jaw chuck onto the table... I see no attachments anywhere... Super glued ??? Picture link... http://user.pa.net/~kbeitz/Metal%20w...20question.jpg |
#14
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Thanks Larry... I think you got it....
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#15
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On 23 Feb 2005 16:14:18 -0800, the inscrutable
spake: Thanks Larry... I think you got it.... T-bolts under the jaws? ----------------------------------------------------------------- When I die, I'm leaving my body to science fiction. --Steven Wright ---------------------------- http://diversify.com Comprehensive Website Development |
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