- Joined
- Aug 23, 2014
- Messages
- 7
Just started to use my 7x12 mini-lathe. I put a chunk of 1/2" aluminum in it, and just tried to reduce it to 10 mm diameter. I used pretty slow speed. Then I parted it with a parting blade. The result is a cylinder about 60 mm long, 10 mm thick.
It went well, but there's something puzzling me: if I look very, very closely at the surface of the resulting 10 mm rod, the part that was close to the chuck is very smooth, very even. The other end looks a bit "wavy", for lack of a better term.
Make no mistake, this is a very small difference, most people would not notice, but it's clearly there if you look at it carefully for a few moments, you turn it around with your fingers, and the light is falling at just a certain angle. The "waves" don't show a regular pattern - they look kind of like sea waves, or like the bumps on an orange peel - just bigger.
The end that was close to the chuck is very smooth, almost lacking any features whatsoever.
Is this because the rod was flexing a little, as I was removing material from it? If so, this would not happen with a thicker rod?
The cutting tool was driven at constant speed along the whole piece, so that can't be the cause.
(I could take a picture, but I think not much would be visible.)
It went well, but there's something puzzling me: if I look very, very closely at the surface of the resulting 10 mm rod, the part that was close to the chuck is very smooth, very even. The other end looks a bit "wavy", for lack of a better term.
Make no mistake, this is a very small difference, most people would not notice, but it's clearly there if you look at it carefully for a few moments, you turn it around with your fingers, and the light is falling at just a certain angle. The "waves" don't show a regular pattern - they look kind of like sea waves, or like the bumps on an orange peel - just bigger.
The end that was close to the chuck is very smooth, almost lacking any features whatsoever.
Is this because the rod was flexing a little, as I was removing material from it? If so, this would not happen with a thicker rod?
The cutting tool was driven at constant speed along the whole piece, so that can't be the cause.
(I could take a picture, but I think not much would be visible.)