- Joined
- Feb 13, 2017
- Messages
- 2,138
Seems to me that power up or down is not the primary concern here. If the cross slide is run on dovetails, as most of them are, lifting of the cross slide will affect the depth of cut. The Atlas (and Craftsman) machines notwithstanding, the dovetails keep the cross slide in position on its' longitudinal travel. When there is a gap, or potential for that gap, the cross slide can move in or out.
Since the work is the power in this scenario, and the dovetails (or diamond slides) have the mating surfaces at an angle, it seems to me that any movement would be attempting to move the tool outward, while at the same time the power is driving down. That, to me, generates "chatter" or inconsistant radius of cutting.
I base my theoretical thinking on a smaller machine, out of Taiwan. (a G-1550 Grizzly) The Atlas, with its' flat ways, uses the pressure from a vertical surface against the inside of the ways. The thoughts are theoretical because I am not willing to loosen the "shoes" that keep the machine tight.
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Since the work is the power in this scenario, and the dovetails (or diamond slides) have the mating surfaces at an angle, it seems to me that any movement would be attempting to move the tool outward, while at the same time the power is driving down. That, to me, generates "chatter" or inconsistant radius of cutting.
I base my theoretical thinking on a smaller machine, out of Taiwan. (a G-1550 Grizzly) The Atlas, with its' flat ways, uses the pressure from a vertical surface against the inside of the ways. The thoughts are theoretical because I am not willing to loosen the "shoes" that keep the machine tight.
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