So I attempted to make this spanner wrench, based on
@darkzero's thread.
View attachment 324184
Everything went relatively well... Except at the end. It's ok for a first tool, save for the pin. There's plenty of little things wrong with it, but it would be serviceable.
The hole for the pin ended up too large, so the 0.1875" pin falls out. Now, I drilled the hole with a #14 drill, followed by a #13 drill, followed by a 0.1870" reamer. The idea was to have 0.0005" interference fit. What I didn't account for was the runout of my old drill press. I miked the drills and the reamer, and they check out ok. Then I measured the chuck runout using the reamer as the reference. It was a little larger than 0.005". Yeah, more than 10x greater than what I was trying to hit. That's not going to work.
So I need a long and short term solution. Short term: What tool is used to measure the ID of the hole accurately? (0.1800 -0.2000) I can turn a pin to the right size, but knowing the diameter might help! Might take a few goes at it, but that's ok. Or, I could drill the hole out, and machine a screw. The screw would thread in from the back. I could machine off the threads that protrude to form the pin. Longer term:
Is upgrading my drill press with good bearings worth the effort, or should that money (plus extra I'd presume) be better spent on a real mill? Doing anything precision on this current setup right now is a waste of effort. So what to do? Seeking some practical advice. Temporarily have lost the wind in my sails.