I am just trying to clean up some milling and drilling marks, I will ckeck with straight and dial indicator edge as Richard said. Just as easiy to live with the marks and make sure that the vise is spot on.
Will check over the next few days, many thanks for the advice.
Garry
I am just trying to clean up some milling and drilling marks, I will ckeck with straight and dial indicator edge as Richard said. Just as easiy to live with the marks and make sure that the vise is spot on.
Will check over the next few days, many thanks for the advice.
Garry
If that's the only reason, I would suggest just leaving it be. Consider any table top damage as part of machining.
It would not be worth trying to repair this, and chance screwing it up. Unless this table has some major sag on the outer ends, I would not advise trying to machine the table top for cosmetic purposes .Even if your table does have some sag at the outer ends, are you machining long items, using multiple vises?
Im sure Richard will chime in on the ins and outs of doing this, as Im sure there is many things that could cause a other wise good machine to turn into a inaccurate machine. I wouldn't let the wounds bother you.
I would suggest stoning the table with a 2" x 8" flat stone ( I use WD-40 as a lubricant ) to remove the high spots. Anything that is lower won't matter.
Has anyone used a flycutter to clean and true up Bridgeport mill table???
Garry