It looks as if you drilled and tapped your spindle for the outboard spider bolts. My lathe has at least as much spindle extending as you have and I would like to know how you drilled and tapped the spindle. Did you do it while the spindle was on the lathe; if so what did you use to drill and tap?
Did it with the spindle right in the lathe. I sort of wandered into doing it almost by accident, but it was a piece of cake to do it. I originally made an outboard spider out of aluminum. It clamped to the spindle using 4 set screws.
The outboard spider was rather precisely made and one day, as I was going to install it I noticed that the 4 set screws had perfectly marked the spindle with locations where I could drill and tap it and replace the outboard spider with spider screws threaded into the spindle - an advantage because it permits working on shorter barrels.
With that thought in mind I very carefully center punched the holes (very lightly, didn't want to screw up the spindle bearings), then center drilled the punch marks useing my smallest center drill in my 14.4V DeWalt battery operated drill. That was followed by a starter drill bigger than the tip web on the tap drill, and then a tap drill for a 3/8-16 tap.
Why 3/8-16? I had the bolts in the drawer and they use the same size hex wrench as the spider bolts in my spider chuck so I only need two hex wrenches on hand when aligning barrels in the head stock.
With all 4 holes drilled, I put the 3/8-16 tap in the DeWalt, set it to it's slowest speed (gear ratio), dipped it in tapping fluid, stick it in the hole, checked the alignment by eye, pushed on it a bit and pulled the trigger. Tapped the hole in about 10 seconds. Backed it out, blew the chips off, rotated the spindle a quarter turn, dipped the tap in the tapping fluid and did the next one. All told, from deciding to do it till the holes were done was about 10 to 15 minutes. The electric drill tapping method isn't something to try for the first ever time in your life on your lathe spindle, but I use the drill for that a lot, and it works just fine.
The real trick was in having them marked by the set screws. When I saw, and got the idea, I knew it was as good as done. And it was.
So then I hunted around and found some 3/8-16 SOCS of an appropriate length in a drawer, drilled and tapped a short piece of 3/4" rod to hold them in the 3J, made the 4 brass tipped spider screws in the picture, and it was done. The brass tips are glued into the spider bolts with Red LockTite.
I've used the 14.4V DeWalt to run taps in lots of times. As long as the tap is bigger than 1/4-20 (which must be the easiest tap on the planet to break) it works great.
Fitch