Scoffin' at Swarf While Learning to Lathe
60 years ago when my atlas 10" lathe was made I don't think just anybody could own a lathe. Today home owners can own a lathe and a mill. We don't need to take a 4 or 5 year apprenticeship, just buy one and learn as you go. I've read 4 or 5 text books, watched youtube videos and spoken to machinists but it's not the same as an apprenticeship where you get structured learning alternating with hands on experience under the watchful eye of a journeyman.
I've been getting more time in on mine lately makin chips and producing swarf. I was facing some very rusty 7" plates watching thin threads of steel rise up from your work like fine silken serpents 12 to 20 inches high before they collapse into a tangled ball. Sometimes I get concerned it's going to fall forward around my hand then get tangled in the revolving chuck and tighten up but I've always scoffed at the thought in my mind thinking if that ever happened I'd just give a good jerk back and snap that little strand in half.
When I get a basket ball sized pile I stop and gently cradle my hands under it and drop it in a 5 gal. can where I stomp it down with my big boots.
This time however I had it cradled in my hands and when I turned toward the bucket one strand caught on a knob of the lathe and it happened to be a stand that looped around my finger. In a fraction of a second it sliced 1/2 through my finger. It was deep and cut some small veins and grazed a nerve so I decided to go get stitches. It took 6 to close it up. That happened last friday and I'm not supposed to do anything at all for 3 days and then do almost nothing for another 7 when I can get the stitches out. BUMMER MAN.
In hind sight I'm sure I've read on how to grind a groove on the bit to act as a chip breaker so you end up with chips instead of a mound of razor sharp spaghetti but when you're learning on your own you just don't remember everything in order all the time. I've learned the hard way and now have a whole lot of respect for swarf. I won't be scoffing at it and I'm glad it wasn't a situation where it wrapped around my wrist and got caught in the chuck so I could have done what I'd envisioned and tried to break it by yanking my hand back real hard. After this my vision is more like my hand is laying there beside the chuck.
Here are some links to discussions on chip breakers for any other newbies like me out there:
http://www.chaski.org/homemachinist/viewtopic.php?f=42&t=87325&start=0
http://www.chaski.org/homemachinist/viewtopic.php?f=44&t=75985
60 years ago when my atlas 10" lathe was made I don't think just anybody could own a lathe. Today home owners can own a lathe and a mill. We don't need to take a 4 or 5 year apprenticeship, just buy one and learn as you go. I've read 4 or 5 text books, watched youtube videos and spoken to machinists but it's not the same as an apprenticeship where you get structured learning alternating with hands on experience under the watchful eye of a journeyman.
I've been getting more time in on mine lately makin chips and producing swarf. I was facing some very rusty 7" plates watching thin threads of steel rise up from your work like fine silken serpents 12 to 20 inches high before they collapse into a tangled ball. Sometimes I get concerned it's going to fall forward around my hand then get tangled in the revolving chuck and tighten up but I've always scoffed at the thought in my mind thinking if that ever happened I'd just give a good jerk back and snap that little strand in half.
When I get a basket ball sized pile I stop and gently cradle my hands under it and drop it in a 5 gal. can where I stomp it down with my big boots.
This time however I had it cradled in my hands and when I turned toward the bucket one strand caught on a knob of the lathe and it happened to be a stand that looped around my finger. In a fraction of a second it sliced 1/2 through my finger. It was deep and cut some small veins and grazed a nerve so I decided to go get stitches. It took 6 to close it up. That happened last friday and I'm not supposed to do anything at all for 3 days and then do almost nothing for another 7 when I can get the stitches out. BUMMER MAN.
In hind sight I'm sure I've read on how to grind a groove on the bit to act as a chip breaker so you end up with chips instead of a mound of razor sharp spaghetti but when you're learning on your own you just don't remember everything in order all the time. I've learned the hard way and now have a whole lot of respect for swarf. I won't be scoffing at it and I'm glad it wasn't a situation where it wrapped around my wrist and got caught in the chuck so I could have done what I'd envisioned and tried to break it by yanking my hand back real hard. After this my vision is more like my hand is laying there beside the chuck.
Here are some links to discussions on chip breakers for any other newbies like me out there:
http://www.chaski.org/homemachinist/viewtopic.php?f=42&t=87325&start=0
http://www.chaski.org/homemachinist/viewtopic.php?f=44&t=75985
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