- Joined
- Jun 17, 2012
- Messages
- 2,215
The lathe is a select 1230G. It's taiwan made. This lathe was also sold under the Dashin Prince brand name. It's from the early 90s. It's not a bad lathe. It's very similar in a lot of respects to the Grizzly 12" models. The ways casting all seem to be the same configuration on all these 12" Asian lathes evn the ones sold today. I bought a steady rest from grizzly for one of thier 12" lathes and it bolts right up.xalky: What mask of lathe is that?
I used to make all of the steel spinning chucks for the PGA trophies. I did the same thing as you,except my setup was more crude. I have T slots running in the in and out direction of the cross slide. I just made a finger,hardened it,and screwed it into a T slot with a t slot nut. To hold the template,I just welded 2 arms on each end,and clamped them to the lathe bed with powerful metal clamps.
These templates were quite large,being trophy size. I'd start from the high spots and hand been in the down hill direction. When the roughing was done,and I was down to finishing cuts,I could switch to power feeds,still holding the finger to the template with my hand on the cross feed handle.
Years ago,LeBlonde offered a simple tracing attachment that relied on a heavy weight ion a cable to pull the disconnected cross slide towards the metal. Seemed very primitive,but worked. I have not found that a heavy hand or weight was necessary. I preferred to use hand pressure turning the cross feed handle in case something got over loaded. I could easily back off if that happened.
I have a mechanical Lehigh tracing attachment,but it only moves 1 1/2". Not enough for a 8" diameter trophy urn shape.
I thought about having some sort of spring loaded follower for it but I wasn't sure if it would work. I could picture it in my mind going into a harmonic bounce...or worse smashing the tool into the work. The other problem with that type of setup is if the ramp angle is too steep, it'll just get hung up on the pattern.
I did find a guy who had a Lehigh tracer online, and he showed how he used it. I was gonna try to copy that but I really didn't like that design all that much, it seemed a little flimsy from the photos.
You're right, the hand pressure seems to work the best and it's also the easiest to implement. It took me all of about 2 minutes to get the "feel" for it. I haven't tried it on steel yet but I will in the next week or so, because i need to make a handle for my giant rotary table to replace the bolt the last guy put on there.
I was gonna make a ball turner attachment, but I think this is way more versatile. I can picture myself having a whole stack of patterns on hand for different things. I can put 2 different patterns on one piece of sheet meta, on opposite sides. Given the amount of available travel with the blocks mounted up, I can do a pattern thats almost 18" long with the tailstocK mounted. That aint bad!
Marcel
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