I'll just say that I have never heard anyone that actually uses the Sherline DRO complain about its system for backlash compensation. It certainly works extremely well on my lathe. I'll admit that I'm new to this and basing this judgement more upon indicator readings vs a lot of experience with making parts.I took delivery of a Sherline mill a few weeks ago. My CNC-ready model came with the zero-able handwheels. I adapted the mill to install the wheels without steppers for the moment so I could get a feel for using it manually first.
But what DRO system could fit this teeny-tiny mill?
Edit: Oh, you mean Sherline's DRO system? I would not recommend that. It measures the wheel's motion only, not the true position of the x-y stage. That means it knows nothing about the backlash of the system, and hence small errors will creep in at random, at least unless you maintain backlash discipline yourself. That's harder to do on a mill than on a lathe, and doing away with that need is a main point of a DRO on a mill. Hence, I don't think Sherline's solution is good enough.
Doing the rough layout on the part is a good practice and helps in other cases than just losing count of revolutions. I have a DRO now, but I do recall having one part with lots of revolutions between features that I couldn't (or just didn't think to) do the layout on and I resorted to a cup with the right number of washers in it. At every revolution I took one out of the cup and put it in my pocket.
I took delivery of a Sherline mill a few weeks ago. My CNC-ready model came with the zero-able handwheels. I adapted the mill to install the wheels without steppers for the moment so I could get a feel for using it manually first.
But what DRO system could fit this teeny-tiny mill?
Edit: Oh, you mean Sherline's DRO system? I would not recommend that. It measures the wheel's motion only, not the true position of the x-y stage. That means it knows nothing about the backlash of the system, and hence small errors will creep in at random, at least unless you maintain backlash discipline yourself. That's harder to do on a mill than on a lathe, and doing away with that need is a main point of a DRO on a mill. Hence, I don't think Sherline's solution is good enough.
I always set dial to zero first......if your machine has lots of backlash you need to carefully elimat without moving the table..then set dial to 0. Easy to count the times zero comes by and then any addition dial reading needed. If you go past just backup past the last zero to remove backlash .....the back to zero. Works for me!A fair number of folks don't use a DRO, preferring to count revolutions of the hand wheels.
I've tried counting each turn out loud, but it seems more often than not I end up off by one count.
What's a good way to keep count of the turns?
If you lose count, how do you re-establish your location?
Definitely agree that the Sherline DRO is very pricey for what you actually get.I've thought of using one of those little hand clickers they use to count people in line. The main reason I haven't got around to it is I'm afraid it would just distract me and just create a new issue.
Sherline's DRO needs to be treated more like a digital trav-a-dial. As long as it is reset at each use backlash shouldn't be an issue. Personally I don't think it is worth the cost for what you get, but it seems to be functional if you accept its limitations. Not really a DRO though as most people think of it.