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Originally posted by dian View Postis the drive wheel crowned or just the idler? it seem you are running the belt pretty slow. why?
I've been using it for about a year or so now and seems to work great.
I mainly use it for general purpose fab and works great - I build maybe one to two knifes a year, so having it at the proper speed is not much an issue for me.
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Originally posted by dian View Postis the drive wheel crowned or just the idler? it seem you are running the belt pretty slow. why?
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How hard are the knifes you make from the RR spikes, a friend told me that they didn't have enough carbon to get them to 58 ??
Originally posted by gdavis2265 View Post
My Brother is the one that collected a bucket full of railroad spikes for me, so I thought it was fitting that I would make a knife out of one for him. It was great to see the look on his face this year when he opened his present.
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Originally posted by metalmole View PostHow hard are the knifes you make from the RR spikes, a friend told me that they didn't have enough carbon to get them to 58 ??
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Originally posted by metalmole View PostCool, if a file will skate on them they are indeed hard enough for a do all blade....I work with 1084 and 440c...
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Originally posted by gdavis2265 View PostI see that I designed it for about 4800 sfpm, isn't that about the correct speed for AO?
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Originally posted by metalmole View PostHow hard are the knifes you make from the RR spikes, a friend told me that they didn't have enough carbon to get them to 58 ??
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Originally posted by BobH View PostNot all spikes are created equal. The ones used near switches and other high stress areas have a higher carbon content. The top the heads have the raised letters, strangely enough, "HC". Used ones may be faint from the pounding but its there.
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Hardly qualifies as a "tool", but it is useful anyhow....
When you have any spindle tooling that does not go into the spindle taper, the taper tends to collect a bunch of swarf, and requires to be cleaned out before use for a center, or whatever. And, now that I put the vertical head back on the Lewis mill, I was getting swarf into that spindle also. Time to act.
I thought of several things, a cork, a screw-on cap (probably the best idea, actually) etc., but finally just did this... a piece cut from a sponge, and pushed into the taper.
a 1" diameter works for an MT-3 taper, so I use a 1 inch "arch punch" to cut it, but a sharpened bit of tube will cut a nice round, or even just a square of sponge material cut out and pushed in will work.
The reason for it.... you can see the cutter is well placed to toss chips right into the horizontal spindle.
It works quite well to keep chips out of the lathe spindle as well, when boring something held in the chuck, for instance.
And a clean one is pretty good at cleaning the spindle out of crud if pushed through from the back end of the spindle.CNC machines only go through the motions.
Ideas expressed may be mine, or from anyone else in the universe.
Not responsible for clerical errors. Or those made by lay people either.
Number formats and units may be chosen at random depending on what day it is.
I reserve the right to use a number system with any integer base without prior notice.
Generalizations are understood to be "often" true, but not true in every case.
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Originally posted by J Tiers View PostHardly qualifies as a "tool", but it is useful anyhow....
When you have any spindle tooling that does not go into the spindle taper, the taper tends to collect a bunch of swarf, and requires to be cleaned out before use for a center, or whatever. And, now that I put the vertical head back on the Lewis mill, I was getting swarf into that spindle also. Time to act.
I thought of several things, a cork, a screw-on cap (probably the best idea, actually) etc., but finally just did this... a piece cut from a sponge, and pushed into the taper.
a 1" diameter works for an MT-3 taper, so I use a 1 inch "arch punch" to cut it, but a sharpened bit of tube will cut a nice round, or even just a square of sponge material cut out and pushed in will work.
And a clean one is pretty good at cleaning the spindle out of crud if pushed through from the back end of the spindle.
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