Robert Haas
Well-known member
- Joined
- Sep 30, 2010
- Messages
- 1,749
I was using a simple plunger style digital read out on my quill and it did what it was designed to do, (Give me a digital readout of how far the quill moved) yet it did not give me any of the cool feature the other three axis had in the main DRO panel. So I went ahead and upgraded to a magnetic scaled 4 axis DRO and got it all mounted up. Simple stuff once you have done a few of these and I had. However mounting a scale on the quill was a whole different animal and required a serious amount of head scratching and fabrication.
There is a lot of stuff going on on the face of my Mill's head and not a lot of room for this so I had to create it from scratch. It had to be super rigid and not get in the way of the numerous controls.
Using some 1/2" by 1 3/4" 6061 anodized bar stock I created the exoskeleton style mount for the scale. It was the simplest part of the build.
The reader or head was a different story. It is what would actually mount to the quill and I had to recreate the piece that bolted to the quill shaft to a much higher tolerance then the indicator/ stop the mill was originally equipped with. My part would be over 2" long (1.125" longer the stock) It would need to be nearly a press fit into the slot machined into the quill shaft so It required some strong accuracy control as well as precise layouts. I came out very well and worked as intended.






Now I get to see all 4 lines of the display in action.

There is a lot of stuff going on on the face of my Mill's head and not a lot of room for this so I had to create it from scratch. It had to be super rigid and not get in the way of the numerous controls.
Using some 1/2" by 1 3/4" 6061 anodized bar stock I created the exoskeleton style mount for the scale. It was the simplest part of the build.
The reader or head was a different story. It is what would actually mount to the quill and I had to recreate the piece that bolted to the quill shaft to a much higher tolerance then the indicator/ stop the mill was originally equipped with. My part would be over 2" long (1.125" longer the stock) It would need to be nearly a press fit into the slot machined into the quill shaft so It required some strong accuracy control as well as precise layouts. I came out very well and worked as intended.






Now I get to see all 4 lines of the display in action.

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