- Joined
- Apr 21, 2015
- Messages
- 894
Today, after all the shopping and other family stuff, I was to have the evening in the shop. I got a bit cleaned up and then went to work modifying the internal threading tool I made the other day because it doesn't quite fit inside the part.
As I was tightening a bolt on a change gear it suddenly snapped. Crap. That figures.
Side note: Tapatalk is having issues lately. If you can't see the photos just reply to this message to quote it and you'll see the images within the quoted text. If you submit it then they will once again not be visible. Anyway...
Ugly. I hadn't noticed that damage when I assembled it in April. Almost looks like someone had previously welded it or something. Only explanation I can think of for the porosity anyway.
Good news is, I have a lathe!
And it just has to keep the change gears from coming off. Not a high stress part. Far easier to repair this than to make a new one.
I put a 3/8"-16 coupler on the other end and then chucked that up in the 4-jaw, using the part itself to simplify indicating. I cleaned up the face
Center drilled it
Drilled with a 13/64 because I seem to have misplaced my pack of #7s, then tapped with 1/4"-20.
Using a HSS tap it came out nice and sharp.
This is about the point where I found my pack of #7 drill bits. In the chip tray of the lathe...
With that side finished I removed it from the coupler and replaced it with a piece of 3/8"-16 allthread with a jam nut.
I turned it down to 0.250"
then grabbed the 1/4" die, excited to be done with this and back to the project I set out to work on.
Even with the little chamfer on the end of the workpiece it still had a little trouble starting, but eventually it cut. I backed the die off to admire my work and thought, "Huh. That doesn't look like 20 tpi. That looks like a fine thread. Like 28 tpi. Oh, crap."
Sure enough, in my haste I grabbed the 1/4"-28 die. Awesome.
So I turned out the lights and went inside. It was getting late and I've found that nothing good comes when working late after I've already made a stupid mistake. Good thing it will be easy enough to redo it.
But it seems like that thread is really shallow, isn't it?
As I was tightening a bolt on a change gear it suddenly snapped. Crap. That figures.
Side note: Tapatalk is having issues lately. If you can't see the photos just reply to this message to quote it and you'll see the images within the quoted text. If you submit it then they will once again not be visible. Anyway...
Ugly. I hadn't noticed that damage when I assembled it in April. Almost looks like someone had previously welded it or something. Only explanation I can think of for the porosity anyway.
Good news is, I have a lathe!
And it just has to keep the change gears from coming off. Not a high stress part. Far easier to repair this than to make a new one.
I put a 3/8"-16 coupler on the other end and then chucked that up in the 4-jaw, using the part itself to simplify indicating. I cleaned up the face
Center drilled it
Drilled with a 13/64 because I seem to have misplaced my pack of #7s, then tapped with 1/4"-20.
Using a HSS tap it came out nice and sharp.
This is about the point where I found my pack of #7 drill bits. In the chip tray of the lathe...
With that side finished I removed it from the coupler and replaced it with a piece of 3/8"-16 allthread with a jam nut.
I turned it down to 0.250"
then grabbed the 1/4" die, excited to be done with this and back to the project I set out to work on.
Even with the little chamfer on the end of the workpiece it still had a little trouble starting, but eventually it cut. I backed the die off to admire my work and thought, "Huh. That doesn't look like 20 tpi. That looks like a fine thread. Like 28 tpi. Oh, crap."
Sure enough, in my haste I grabbed the 1/4"-28 die. Awesome.
So I turned out the lights and went inside. It was getting late and I've found that nothing good comes when working late after I've already made a stupid mistake. Good thing it will be easy enough to redo it.
But it seems like that thread is really shallow, isn't it?