OP
86turbodsl
Well-known member
Good point. Seal should easily take that.
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Got the chuck off tonight. I heated with the torch, it rolled right off, and the nut bottomed on the lathe and started to push off the chuck. It popped off with a bang. Now to get it into the evaporust. That was the last part of the lathe that was stuck.
Good to hear.
No progress on the 16" down here. We were supposed to go look at it this weekend while visiting family where it was, but the guy has been a total flake and wasn't going to be home when he said he was and just been a real pain to deal with. I had gotten a metal chip in my eye Friday and was getting quite irritable so we didn't wait around on him. I'm not sure if we'll get it or not
I did look at a Monarch 16CY in the flesh. You don't really realize just how beefy these machines are until you see them in the flesh.
About as fun as a corneal abrasion. Ugh.Ouch. I have had metal in my eye before. NOT FUN. Hope all is better with that. ANd that your lathe expedition works out. These things can get huge. I'm super impressed with the capabilities.
Ouch. I have had metal in my eye before. NOT FUN. Hope all is better with that. ANd that your lathe expedition works out. These things can get huge. I'm super impressed with the capabilities.
Fiddled around with the 12" 3 jaw tonight and finally figured out what happened. Somebody milled the L1 threads off. What a waste. Probably wanted to sit it on a bridgeport table. Never heard of 123 blocks??? Geez.
Yes, I was thinking the same thing. Couple of notches for the v ways and about the height it needs to be. Those chucks are heavy!If you don't have one, make a wooden block to set on the ways that is cut with a radius in it to support the chuck for taking it off and putting it on, it makes it much easier to start straight and keeps from banging things up.
I can take a pic of one I have if you need me to but it is pretty simple.
Ouch. I have had metal in my eye before. NOT FUN. Hope all is better with that. ANd that your lathe expedition works out. These things can get huge. I'm super impressed with the capabilities.
...It's a 1943 Sidney, 16x54...
Good question indeed. We need one for the Sidney as well and need to make the same decision. They say the range for CXA is 13-18", of which ours are all slightly out of range, but they are also a bit beffier than your average 18.5" lathe.
I have an Aloris BX on my 10EE[...]
I do use the BX on my 13EE for some work, the 13EE is actually a 15.5 swing lathe. Your 16 size lathe is most likely an 18 or 18 1/2 swing lathe a CA is the right size for that machine.
The CXA size seems to be in high demand?
I never considered it because I wanted the ability to use the same tooling on both the 13EE and series 62.
[...]for a big powerful machine I would prefer the mass of the CA myself.
-The AXA size (or a KDK, etc.) is far more commonly used on a 10EE. While the EE has some HP to it, it's strong suit is far more about accuracy than sheer metal removal.
-Yes and no. The lathe swing is only a guideline, and it's a pretty loose one. The important measurement is the top of the compound to the spindle centerline.
Ideally, the tool block should land more or less in the middle of the dovetail on the tool post. That gives you the widest range of adjustment, both up and down, for different sized tools, odd cutters or whatever special setup you may need to finish a particular job.
Not everyone wants to have to mill a toolholder down just to make it fit the machine.
-All I can say is that it seems to me that from looking around, more people appear to be buying/selling/using CXA rather than CA.
But really, it doesn't matter what the other guy is using, what matters is what fits on your particular lathe.
-I can understand the desire, it just strikes me as too big for the EE and too small for the 62.
Personally, if I were going to go that route, I'd want it to that a tool in a specific block could be used in either machine without having to adjust it. If nyou have to adjust the height each time, that kills a fair portion of the utility of sharing blocks.
(When I set up the new cross-slide, made from scratch, for my Logan lathe CNC conversion, I made a block to mount the AXA toolpost at the exact height so that I could share blocks- without any adjustments- between it and the manual Sheldon.)
Otherwise, I'd just get a toolpost set appropriate for either machine, and a set of blocks and tools set up specifically for that particular lathe.
-The fact is, mass has nothing to do with it. That center tall setscrew with the height-adjusting collar takes the lion's share of the cutting forces. And that little rod is a small fraction the size of the body of the toolpost.
The dovetail does the locating, and through friction adds some resistance to the cutting forces, but really, the work is trying to push the tool downwards, and unless the block is resting on the compound, that means only the rod and collar are holding it up.
The CXA is more than stout enough for any work anyone here in this thread will be doing, and the CA is overkill.
Not saying you need to ditch it if you already have one, but for anyone looking to start a collection, not only is the CXA more than enough, it'll cost a fair percentage less to put together a collection. (For my Springer, I picked up a real Aloris toolpost, and something like 12 real tool blocks of various flavors, along with two imports made for 1" tools rather than 3/4", all for a little over $1,000. I got a pretty decent deal on this CA post, but all the blocks I can find that I'd want for it would cost 40-60% more per.)
Doc.
Doc, Thanks for not condemning my entire tooling arrangement[.]
Don't know if you realize that a 10EE is actually a 12.5 or 13" swing lathe[...]
[..]an A size holder is OK but, not the most common for this application.
The tool height for any machine is a function of the compound height to spindle centerline.
Your opinion is yours, the idea that price is a factor in choosing the correct tooling is something most have to wrestle with but, it alone is a poor reason to spec ANY critical parts.
I agree that for folks here a CXA size tool set would be fine, the notion that the height setting screw takes most of the force in these tools is a new one to me?
Asking why someone uses X instead of Y is one thing, second guessing is quite another.
...I'd be curious to know how much HP just the dovetail clamping force by itself could withstand...
The adjustment nut is for repeatable vertical positioning. It is doubtful that it was intended for carrying any significant loads as it is cantilevered off a fairly insignificant and loose thread.






