C
Crow99
Guest
As if there weren't enough suggestions already..... This comes from The Machinist's Third Bedside Reader by Guy Lautard, and is a suggestion for cutting metric threads on an English lathe (may be the opposite of what you have, but might be worth a try.)
The problem inherent in the transposing gears is that you can pick up the lead screw in several different places with the thread dial on the same number, unless you pick it up at exactly the same spot in carriage travel each time. This appears to be what's happening here. So it's imperative to pick up at the same spot for every cut.
This method uses a micrometer stop for the carriage, but you can lock down the tailstock and stop the carriage against it for the same effect.
1) Set up the lathe to cut the desired thread.
2) Position the tool ahead of the starting point of the thread (back the cross slide out first.) Jog the motor until number 1 comes up on the threading dial and close the half nuts. Might have to jiggle the saddle a bit. Position the micrometer stop (or tail stock) against the right side of the saddle (carriage) and tighten.
3) Open the half nuts and zero the cross slide and compound to the work as per usual practice. Move the carriage to the right against the stop, start the lathe, and close the half nuts when number 1 comes up. Cut the thread length and open the half nuts as per usual, and move the carriage to the right against the stop (same starting point as before.) Infeed the compound, etc., and close the half nuts when the dial is on number 1 again. Repeat until the thread is finished.
This should start the thread at the same point in the lead screw / gear train each time and avoid the doubling / tripling you're experiencing. I've been meaning to try this for metric threads myself but haven't gotten around to it, so afaik it's untested data, but sounds like it should work. Hope it's of some help..
The problem inherent in the transposing gears is that you can pick up the lead screw in several different places with the thread dial on the same number, unless you pick it up at exactly the same spot in carriage travel each time. This appears to be what's happening here. So it's imperative to pick up at the same spot for every cut.
This method uses a micrometer stop for the carriage, but you can lock down the tailstock and stop the carriage against it for the same effect.
1) Set up the lathe to cut the desired thread.
2) Position the tool ahead of the starting point of the thread (back the cross slide out first.) Jog the motor until number 1 comes up on the threading dial and close the half nuts. Might have to jiggle the saddle a bit. Position the micrometer stop (or tail stock) against the right side of the saddle (carriage) and tighten.
3) Open the half nuts and zero the cross slide and compound to the work as per usual practice. Move the carriage to the right against the stop, start the lathe, and close the half nuts when number 1 comes up. Cut the thread length and open the half nuts as per usual, and move the carriage to the right against the stop (same starting point as before.) Infeed the compound, etc., and close the half nuts when the dial is on number 1 again. Repeat until the thread is finished.
This should start the thread at the same point in the lead screw / gear train each time and avoid the doubling / tripling you're experiencing. I've been meaning to try this for metric threads myself but haven't gotten around to it, so afaik it's untested data, but sounds like it should work. Hope it's of some help..