Half dead center for the mini lathe. By Artisan Makes. 4:28 video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B3-WmESytH4
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Half dead center for the mini lathe. By Artisan Makes. 4:28 video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B3-WmESytH4
Oh that's a good idea. I had never thought of that before. I need to make one of those.
Go to archive.org, and search machinery, machinist, machine tool, lathe, mill, etc. Check out the Hill kinks books, and kinks by itself. Colvin, Burghardt, Popular Mechanics (both their shop hints and a lot of the magazines are there) and you'll find more names to look for as you find related books and magazines. Machinery will get you old copies of the Machinist's Handbook, and the magazine that spawned it. If you need to narrow the search down a bit, try the American Library. Also, check out Folkscanomy. Also Joshua Rose, metal work, and I'm sure you can find other search terms on your own. :) I've got somewhere around a terabyte of data on my computer, much of it from archive.org. Also, check out the old books at Google Books. A lot of the old out of copyright textbooks from libraries were scanned by Google, and the ones that haven't been reprinted, are also (and sometimes exclusively) there, too.
Bill
I don't have to worry about that. SWMBO encourages me. One day, when I was moaning about how hard a time I was having re-learning how to use my Mini-Lathe, she said "Why don't you take another class?"
Been taking that class, very part-time, for nearly 7 years now. It ends this semester because they're changing the format, but I've only got about a dozen lessons/projects left under the old format left, and I've done many a private project on my own, too.
My folders are titled Electronician and Mechanician, terms used in some of those old books that delighted me.
So I'm easily amused. It keeps me out of the bars at night and is a permitted activity! ;)
Bill