- Joined
- Jan 15, 2017
- Messages
- 5
I just found this thread and am looking for all the headstock and motor bearings would anyone have numbers?
I have the manual, you can find it here, but it does not mention part numbers. Mine is fine, so I did not take it appart so can not see the actual items to see any markings. What is wrong with your lathe?I just found this thread and am looking for all the headstock and motor bearings would anyone have numbers?
@kb58It's a little embarrassing to ask, but I've had a TSL-800 for about two years. As soon as I bought it, I replaced the old chuck and back plate, but don't remember how the back plate adapter mounts. I "think" there are four bolts, mounted from the tail stock side, holding the back plate adapter to the spindle, then four more bolts attach the chuck to the adapter. Is this correct?
The reason I'm asking is because I now have a 4-jaw chuck and though I'd make or buy a second adapter plate so that it can be more quickly be swapped with the existing 3-jaw without losing alignment. Now, I think that's going to be pointless if the above is correct. That is, in order to swap chucks, I think I have to unbolt the chuck and bolt the other chuck to the same adapter plate. Having a second adapter plate isn't going to save me any effort. Is that correct?
Thanks.
Mine chucks do not have back plate and the back side matches the mount place on a lathe. The chucks have pass-through holes for bolts, like you mentioned.I got a direct-mount 3-jaw, but as I recall, the "direct" part was just an adapter plate supplied with it.
Regarding your direct-mount chucks, how do they attach? I assume that there are pass-through holes in the chuck for bolts to screw directly into the spindle.
And thank you for the reply!
For my Bison 3-jaw chuck, I had to buy an "A2" adapter to use with their "tru-align" series. For my Bison 4-jaw, it surprisingly has an integral A1 or A2 interface (can't remember which).
The irritation with the adapter is that if you want to switch chucks, it means unbolting the chuck first, then unbolting the adapter. Doing so loses chuck alignment, so switching to a 4-jaw always comes with the thought "do I really need to", when it shouldn't.