This is my lathe, a 280 x 700 Impala (Optimum Maschinen). The stand I threw away and made my own with built in bed levelling. The stand is made from 50mm heavy wall tubing I had lying around, some new RHS, some 50mm x 8mm flat and some 65mm x 8mm angle I also bought.
Made in two sections, the bottom section of which is loxined to the floor. It has a drawer at top for metrology, reamers, etc, and two shelves below behind the swing out doors. The top shelf holds chucks, faceplate, change gears and steadies, while the bottom shelf just holds small stock.
The top section is of 65mm angle and has a small shelf at front under the chip tray for odds and sods. It's affixed to the the lower section by way of four bolts welded to the underneath. Trueing the bed is by way of these four bolts, 5-10 minutes tops to level, much quicker than fiddling around with shims and the bed can be trued to 0.02mm.
The stand leans to the rear a little for the coolant to exit the swarf tray via the two drains at the rear. The level I'm using is a precision machinery level, accurate to 0.02mm.
The video attached show how to true the bed.
Made in two sections, the bottom section of which is loxined to the floor. It has a drawer at top for metrology, reamers, etc, and two shelves below behind the swing out doors. The top shelf holds chucks, faceplate, change gears and steadies, while the bottom shelf just holds small stock.
The top section is of 65mm angle and has a small shelf at front under the chip tray for odds and sods. It's affixed to the the lower section by way of four bolts welded to the underneath. Trueing the bed is by way of these four bolts, 5-10 minutes tops to level, much quicker than fiddling around with shims and the bed can be trued to 0.02mm.
The stand leans to the rear a little for the coolant to exit the swarf tray via the two drains at the rear. The level I'm using is a precision machinery level, accurate to 0.02mm.
The video attached show how to true the bed.
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