Hi Everyone,
I need to turn 48 pieces out of .375" 6061 round. Overall length is 3.564". The part has a shoulder on each end that is .417" long, turned down to .250" diameter. I did this using a right hand index tool to face the ends and cut the shoulders. I'm looking for a faster method to turn these parts. I have a SB 10K lathe with the micrometer stop. The problem is that I was told that I should only extend a part through a collet 3x's the diameter. In this case 1.125" would stick out. My micrometer won't allow the carriage to move in that close because the gearbox limits how far in the stop can move to the left on the way. I can set the part so that more extends from the collet but this makes me wonder about too much force against the stock and not getting a good cut.
Does anyone have any suggestions how to do this part given the constraint of the micrometer stop?
I had thought of just turning the shoulder down to .417" x .250" and making somewhat of a go/no go block out of some plastic tooling board. I would face it down to .417" on the Z, followed by drilling a .375" hole to use in marking the line with a scribe. I would also add a .250" hole to check the shoulder length after the cut. These holes would probably be .005" to .010" oversize to allow for easy placement of the stock and machined part into both holes without a tight grip.
Does any of this make sense? I'm open to any ideas that you folks may have.
Thanks!
I need to turn 48 pieces out of .375" 6061 round. Overall length is 3.564". The part has a shoulder on each end that is .417" long, turned down to .250" diameter. I did this using a right hand index tool to face the ends and cut the shoulders. I'm looking for a faster method to turn these parts. I have a SB 10K lathe with the micrometer stop. The problem is that I was told that I should only extend a part through a collet 3x's the diameter. In this case 1.125" would stick out. My micrometer won't allow the carriage to move in that close because the gearbox limits how far in the stop can move to the left on the way. I can set the part so that more extends from the collet but this makes me wonder about too much force against the stock and not getting a good cut.
Does anyone have any suggestions how to do this part given the constraint of the micrometer stop?
I had thought of just turning the shoulder down to .417" x .250" and making somewhat of a go/no go block out of some plastic tooling board. I would face it down to .417" on the Z, followed by drilling a .375" hole to use in marking the line with a scribe. I would also add a .250" hole to check the shoulder length after the cut. These holes would probably be .005" to .010" oversize to allow for easy placement of the stock and machined part into both holes without a tight grip.
Does any of this make sense? I'm open to any ideas that you folks may have.
Thanks!