However. Brad already paid for most all the tooling he will need.
I did?
However. Brad already paid for most all the tooling he will need.
I think the message was "Paid in Full"'.
Back at ya.
You're quite the friend, Rob!
Getting rid of chatter is somewhat of an art, to me anyway. Usually accomplished with a sharp tool, reasonable RPMs, and enough feed to keep the tool loaded. On critical parts I will make trial finish cuts to ensure the parameters are working.
It sure ain't pure science!!!!
Sometimes a fresh insert and you got chatter.
Coated inserts help......or uncoated inserts.
Or swinging a dead cat over you head.
WHATEVER works.
Brad,
Just remember one thing when it comes to mills and lathes.
"The cost of the machine tool is just the deposit".
If you buy a lathe that includes a few boxes of tooling you will likely be getting more value in those boxes than in the machine itself. Try to buy something from a private party that includes all of his tooling.
You want a 3 jaw and 4 jaw chuck if possible, drill chuck, boring bar, quick change toolpost, knurling tools, live centers, power feeds, face plate and drive dog, and a 5c collet chuck would be nice also. If any of these terms are jargon to you, research them before you buy.
Good luck, and try to buy "old" quality.
On some machines, to swing a dead cat you have to take the gap out of the bed
For a cat you need a lathe dog....
For a cat you need a lathe dog....
Very, very nice heavy and solid looking machine.
So....let's talk about those crackhead girls. :msp_w00t:
Dozerdan;
Yeah. The Italians are nice. Graziano SAG 12. Nice and bottom heavy!