Yes, and longer work can crash into the bed ways, carriage, or cross slide, and perhaps your hands at the same time... If you want to use a crotch center, and they can be used, the first question to ask is "What could possibly go wrong?" and think about that for a while, and then mitigate any potential hazards to you, the machine, and the tooling. You might decide it is not worth the risk to use some setups, and to improve others.I'm also thinking that if that thing spins you could ruin your tailstock taper in a second.
R
This is true but it also applies to every tapered tool you put in the tailstock. The force applied isn't different if you put a tapered drill bit in the tailstock. A simple modification to the tool would be to attach a bar that drops between the ways. I'm more concerned about what's fixed in the crotch and how it's clamped in place.I'm also thinking that if that thing spins you could ruin your tailstock taper in a second.
R
Everything goes along well until the moment the drill breaks through the backside.Crotch centers can be dangerous, especially with metals that tend to dig in when drilling. Watch out, be careful!
Crotch center: As I recall, everything there used to hang pretty much in the center. It might be my imagination, but seems now everything seems to hang lower, and a little to the left. I actually have one of those for my Craftsmen/atlas 12". Mike