Thanks Kym. I have gotten some really good deals off of Craigslist before but it's not easy to do so I got lucky. I just realized that getting a lathe is going to lead to me wanting a mill...I think I am going to die broke...but I'll have alot of toolsMosquitoMoto wrote:Congratulations, well done.
Must feel good to finally have found the right machine. You are going to have so much fun.
Kym
General welding questions that dont fit in TIG, MIG, Stick, or Certification etc.
exnailpounder
- exnailpounder
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Ifyoucantellmewhatthissaysiwillbuyyouabeer.
- MosquitoMoto
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Joined:Sat Aug 01, 2015 8:38 am
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Location:The Land Down Under
You and I both...I need a lathe and I also need a mill, but before I buy either of these I simply need a bigger shed! The plan is to move out to a property in the hills and build a truly enormous shed into the deal when we buy.exnailpounder wrote:Thanks Kym. I have gotten some really good deals off of Craigslist before but it's not easy to do so I got lucky. I just realized that getting a lathe is going to lead to me wanting a mill...I think I am going to die broke...but I'll have alot of toolsMosquitoMoto wrote:Congratulations, well done.
Must feel good to finally have found the right machine. You are going to have so much fun.
Kym
Hey, post some pics of your new toy when you get a sec, okay?
Kym
No shit. My buddy was turning a high speed finish pass on something for me and he snatched my ass to keep me from walking into the spinning chuck jaws.electrode wrote:Just remember to be careful if you never used a lathe before. No long sleeves. Safety glasses. And no distractions.
Raymond
Everlast PowerTIG 255EXT
Everlast PowerTIG 255EXT
kiwi2wheels
- kiwi2wheels
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Ace
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Remember, he who dies with the most toys wins !exnailpounder wrote:Thanks Kym. I have gotten some really good deals off of Craigslist before but it's not easy to do so I got lucky. I just realized that getting a lathe is going to lead to me wanting a mill...I think I am going to die broke...but I'll have alot of toolsMosquitoMoto wrote:Congratulations, well done.
Must feel good to finally have found the right machine. You are going to have so much fun.
Kym
Very nice find. Now go buy a lottery ticket..........
exnailpounder
- exnailpounder
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Joined:Thu Dec 25, 2014 9:25 am
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I have been looking for awhile and biding my time. Now a friend of mine offered me a really nice little Atlas lathe that he has had sitting in his garage for 20 years. I am waiting to find out what tooling he has to go with and I just might have to buy it. Is there a 12 step program somewhere for wayward welders and tool collectors? I need helpFoxZulu wrote:Man, that was quick. Well done, I hope you'll both be very happy together
Ifyoucantellmewhatthissaysiwillbuyyouabeer.
I have been looking for awhile and biding my time. Now a friend of mine offered me a really nice little Atlas lathe that he has had sitting in his garage for 20 years. I am waiting to find out what tooling he has to go with and I just might have to buy it. Is there a 12 step program somewhere for wayward welders and tool collectors? I need help [/quote]
Well sounds like your going to be two tools closer to the cure for the disease.
Well sounds like your going to be two tools closer to the cure for the disease.
I have more questions than answers
Josh
Josh
Here's how you solve that problem:
1). Send the first lathe to me (you pay shipping).
2). Send the next one to Poland after you purchase lathe #3 (stipulation from step #1 applies here as well).
3). Keep repeating this process with other site members til you go broke.
4). Problem solved.
1). Send the first lathe to me (you pay shipping).
2). Send the next one to Poland after you purchase lathe #3 (stipulation from step #1 applies here as well).
3). Keep repeating this process with other site members til you go broke.
4). Problem solved.
Raymond
Everlast PowerTIG 255EXT
Everlast PowerTIG 255EXT
Tom Osselton
- Tom Osselton
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Workhorse
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I've got my fathers Clausing in the basement and a Atlas in the garage that was my grandfathers I haven't bought mine yet!
It's strange but I can finally walk through the tool departments and not see something I need it's disturbing!!
It's strange but I can finally walk through the tool departments and not see something I need it's disturbing!!
exnailpounder
- exnailpounder
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- 1947 Logan Lathe.JPG (128.47 KiB) Viewed 1910 times
Ifyoucantellmewhatthissaysiwillbuyyouabeer.
exnailpounder
- exnailpounder
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I have a high-end tool store a couple miles away and I do a "walk through" from time to time and I am in the same boat...Lots of new goodies I would love to have but I already have the beat-up version that's paid for.Tom Osselton wrote:I've got my fathers Clausing in the basement and a Atlas in the garage that was my grandfathers I haven't bought mine yet!
It's strange but I can finally walk through the tool departments and not see something I need it's disturbing!!
Ifyoucantellmewhatthissaysiwillbuyyouabeer.
exnailpounder
- exnailpounder
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- 20161201_134209.jpg (78.9 KiB) Viewed 1910 times
Ifyoucantellmewhatthissaysiwillbuyyouabeer.
Tom Osselton
- Tom Osselton
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Location:Calgary Alberta
Looks like your almost there! I'd love to have one with the taper attachment but I haven't found one yet.
You did all that in one day? Wow! That was quick. Looking good.exnailpounder wrote:20161201_134209.jpgHere is my lathe after I tore it down to parts, stripped off the old paint, re-painted it and started putting it back together. The paint is as close to the 1947 original color as I could get but the flash makes it look like Ford blue but it is actually very dark. I love refurbishing great old equipment. I'll send a couple more when I get her running again.
- LtBadd
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Contact:
Hey Jeff, I like that straight edge you have leaning against the shelf, comes in handy.exnailpounder wrote: Here is my lathe after I tore it down to parts, stripped off the old paint, re-painted it and started putting it back together. The paint is as close to the 1947 original color as I could get but the flash makes it look like Ford blue but it is actually very dark. I love refurbishing great old equipment. I'll send a couple more when I get her running again.
Richard
Website
Website
exnailpounder
- exnailpounder
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No Craig...just an old table. It's actually very well made and thick but I'll overbuild it so it's steady.motox wrote:jeff
did it come with a set of cast legs?
craig
Ifyoucantellmewhatthissaysiwillbuyyouabeer.
exnailpounder
- exnailpounder
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LOL...now you guys get to look around my shop a little bit I use the straight edge alot when plasma cutting. Notice the 2 metal detectors hanging on the wall....my wife uses those to examine the plate in my head when I rescue an old machine. I see gold under 50 years of rust and grease...she sees junk...womenLtBadd wrote:Hey Jeff, I like that straight edge you have leaning against the shelf, comes in handy.exnailpounder wrote: Here is my lathe after I tore it down to parts, stripped off the old paint, re-painted it and started putting it back together. The paint is as close to the 1947 original color as I could get but the flash makes it look like Ford blue but it is actually very dark. I love refurbishing great old equipment. I'll send a couple more when I get her running again.
Ifyoucantellmewhatthissaysiwillbuyyouabeer.
- entity-unknown
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Joined:Mon Jul 18, 2016 2:07 pm
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Location:Mesa, AZ
I bought a Grizzly Mini Lathe a month and a half ago and I'm really happy I bought this thing! I always thought turning round parts was pretty limited but that's not all you can turn and these things a very versatile. I've already built a few things for my mini lathe with my 3D printer to help out with things like keeping chips outta the hand gears and off the rails. The rail way brush setup I have is using sponge brushes too so you can oil them, so you can keep your rail ways and always oiled.
I also took a couple models and built a DRO setup using a digital caliper and no mods to the lathe.
I've already built a few things too like new motorcycle mirrors, taper rollers for stainless steel cable, and a couple others. I need to build a tube roller soon too and so that'll be done partly with my Mini Lathe
Have fun man and enjoy!
P.S. try a sponge brush for cleanup vs. a bristle brush. Also I found that clear packing tape covering the underside where chips fall is awesome because oil and chips won't stick to it. These two saved me over half my clean up time, which makes you enjoy your lathe more
I also took a couple models and built a DRO setup using a digital caliper and no mods to the lathe.
I've already built a few things too like new motorcycle mirrors, taper rollers for stainless steel cable, and a couple others. I need to build a tube roller soon too and so that'll be done partly with my Mini Lathe
Have fun man and enjoy!
P.S. try a sponge brush for cleanup vs. a bristle brush. Also I found that clear packing tape covering the underside where chips fall is awesome because oil and chips won't stick to it. These two saved me over half my clean up time, which makes you enjoy your lathe more
Lincoln Electric AC225
Everlast PowerPro Multi-Process TIG/Stick/Plasma 256Si
Everlast W300 WaterCooler
Optrel e684x1
22+ Year Security Engineer developing cool shit and stoppin hackers
Everlast PowerPro Multi-Process TIG/Stick/Plasma 256Si
Everlast W300 WaterCooler
Optrel e684x1
22+ Year Security Engineer developing cool shit and stoppin hackers
The purpose of leveling a lathe is to ensure that both
ways run as perfectly parallel as possible with each other in the
vertical plane, and has little to do with 'level' with respect to
gravity. If the front or back way is slightly higher or lower than
the other one, it doesn't matter as long as the deviation is constant
from one end of the machine to the other.
jeff borrow a level from one of your machinist
buddies if you do not have one. carpenters
level is not accurate enough. get it within
.0005 over 8"s. length first the width.
craig
ways run as perfectly parallel as possible with each other in the
vertical plane, and has little to do with 'level' with respect to
gravity. If the front or back way is slightly higher or lower than
the other one, it doesn't matter as long as the deviation is constant
from one end of the machine to the other.
jeff borrow a level from one of your machinist
buddies if you do not have one. carpenters
level is not accurate enough. get it within
.0005 over 8"s. length first the width.
craig
htp invertig 221
syncrowave 250
miller 140 mig
hypertherm plasma
morse 14 metal devil
syncrowave 250
miller 140 mig
hypertherm plasma
morse 14 metal devil
Jim FLinchbaugh
- Jim FLinchbaugh
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This is step one. Then you need to turn 2 diameters on a foot long rod shaped like a barbell- bigger on the ends.motox wrote:The purpose of leveling a lathe is to ensure that both
ways run as perfectly parallel as possible with each other in the
vertical plane, and has little to do with 'level' with respect to
gravity. If the front or back way is slightly higher or lower than
the other one, it doesn't matter as long as the deviation is constant
from one end of the machine to the other.
jeff borrow a level from one of your machinist
buddies if you do not have one. carpenters
level is not accurate enough. get it within
.0005 over 8"s. length first the width.
craig
Turn one end then move to the other WITHOUT moving the tool in or out and turn the other end. Measure with a micrometer and if both are the same diameter, your lathe is good, if one is bigger than the other your bed is twisted and needs adjustment. This is assuming your tailstock is adjusted to the head stock, center to center
exnailpounder
- exnailpounder
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- 20161203_162558.jpg (58.4 KiB) Viewed 1910 times
Ifyoucantellmewhatthissaysiwillbuyyouabeer.
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