I needed some better soft jaws. Previously I used
small strips of aluminum which need to be held in
place as jaws are tightened.
I rooted through my copper pipe remnants and found
suitable copper pipe.
Cleaned them up with abrasive strips
Used a wire brush on an extension to clean the inside
Mounted in the chuck and used a cut off tool to make pieces
Went to the vise to slit the pieces with a band saw
Used an old morse taper adapter pressed in using
the tail stock while slowly opening the chuck jaws as
the tube expanded.
As the first tube neared the end, I added the others
one by one until the popped off the adapter.
There was a lot of spring back. In retrospect I should
have annealed the parts before expanding
The tubes stretched over and firmly gripped the jaws.
Mounted the chuck to allow for easy spinning
Center the jaws as the tubes make contact
Slowly close each jaw 1/4 turn on the wrench at a time.
Stop when the jaws are tight against each other
Move to the bench
Used a hammer and piece of steel to flatten the
remaining curves agains the jaws. Once again,
prior annealing would have been a good idea.
Return to the spindle to provide stability while using
a fine tooth hacksaw to cut slits
Tap the tabs down around to grip the back side of the jaw.
The finished soft jaws and ready for action
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