Making an arbor worked out okay for my rollers, so far. I was able to finish the OD of the two idlers using a simple arbor and an end cap I 3d printed to press the roller on the arbor’s shoulder with a center:
Really that worked for the roller with the loosest fit but the other two were tight on the arbor. Heating the roller allowed it to go on the arbor and come back off (differential expansion of aluminum vs. steel); the tracking roller was tight enough to leave proud of the end of the arbor, so I could finish its width. The end-cap setup, however, doesn’t let me face the two idler rollers, which I’d like to do for width and finish. I suppose that I may need to make my arbor an expanding one after all.
Alternatively, is there a good way to hold the OD of the noncrowned rollers without damaging it? Even in the 3-jaw, I could face them to length. Can I just put some think paper between the jaws and the roller surface? I suppose I should have done the length first then the OD.
Though I could use the wheels as they currently sit:
I’m working on the drive roller, which will need a key way as I bought a 2hp 3-phase TEFC to use instead of the treadmill motor. I was considering a broach set but since it’s a single part I may try to do it with the lathe carriage once I bore the hole.
Any advice on whether/how to remove some material from the drive wheel to shorten the length of the key way? I like the idea of a long bore fit to the motor shaft but I don’t need that long of a key way. Maybe drilling a hole aligned with the key, part way through the roller’s width? The roller will get cut from the piece of stock I am working with, such that I could finish the OD in the current setup. I’ll have the same issue of facing it as I have with the idler rollers though.
My progress is slow but I enjoy the time I spend on it. I think I’m getting better with the 4-jaw...