-
19 Attachment(s)
Tail Stock Spider
One of my current projects involves working with 4”
schedule 40 steel pipe. Specifically truing up the ends
after band sawing to length, chamfering the ends for welding,
and cleaning up the outside from welds in its previous life.
Like many others, in the past a I have used a wooden cone
shaped plug. The wood plug is typically only good for one
use. It is not adjustable for good centering. It gets in the way
of machining the ends. It is time to make a more permanent tool.
The spider idea evolved while centering a pipe with the chuck
jaws on the inside. Putting the initial thoughts on paper
I get something like this
01Attachment 49086
To get started, Layout out and rough cut a thick disk
Attachment 49087
Turn to size
Attachment 49088
Finish turn
Attachment 49089
Scribe for holes using the cross slide and cutting tool.
Attachment 49090
Transfer scribed lines to the edge, Drill and Tap
Attachment 49091
The original design needed modification. There was not
enough room between the body and the inside of the pipe
to work the wrench when centering the part. In retrospect
the body could have just been square. The bolt and sleeve
were held in the tailstock chuck to hold the part in alignment
while the chuck is tightened. Steel bars provide more
support for the part.
Attachment 49092
Since the part was already threaded, insert a set screw.
Remove after machining to clean up any damaged threads.
Attachment 49093
Note nuts added and jammed against the head of
the bolts. This provides a better surface for the wrench.
Attachment 49094
A length of PVC pipe was pressed between the spider
and the chuck which held the spider in position while
adjusting. NOT an ideal solution.
Attachment 49095
Ready to face end
Attachment 49096
After the first use, the bolt heads needed to tapered.
The flat head and hex shape made centering awkward.
The jam nuts become even more important with
the head trimmed.
Attachment 49097
Removable tabs were added to replace the PVC.
Attachment 49098
Dial in the center. Although the surface of the pipe is
rusty, pitted and the pipe is not perfectly round you can
still get it pretty close.
Attachment 49099
Remove tabs after spider is centered securely in the pipe.
Attachment 49100
Face the end. Replace the tabs after facing and slide
the spider in to be sure there is pressure holding things
together in case the spider works loose while turning the outside.
Attachment 49101
The parts
Attachment 49102
Attachment 49103
The goal. Eventually this pipe will be an extension, welded
to the crucible for my electric furnace. I have to stop at this
point until I get my furnace back in service. The welds are
just too hard to effectively machine. Hoping I will be able
to anneal the whole pipe then finish machining the welds and
bevel the ends for welding
Will keep you posted as things progress
Attachment 49104
-
Those welds look like MIG, which is usually hard as heck and pretty rough on cutting tools, as you said. The result of your experience with annealing would be very interesting.
-
<!-- BEGIN /var/www/html/homemadetools/protected/modules/zeus/views/tool/postUpdate.php -->
Thanks hemmjo! We've added your Tailstock Spider to our Machining category,
as well as to your builder page: hemmjo's Homemade Tools. Your receipt:
<div id="blocks">
<div class="block b1 pngfix">
<div class="bimg">
<div>
<a href="https://www.homemadetools.net/homemade-tailstock-spider">
<img src="/uploads/275495/homemade-tailstock-spider.jpeg"/>
</a>
</div>
</div>
<div class="head pngfix"></div>
<div class="left pngfix"></div>
<div class="right pngfix"></div>
<div class="blockover b1 pngfix">
<div class="title">
<a href="https://www.homemadetools.net/homemade-tailstock-spider">Tailstock Spider</a>
<span> by <a href="https://www.homemadetools.net/builder/hemmjo">hemmjo</a></span>
</div>
<div class="tags">tags:
<a href='https://www.homemadetools.net/tag/spider'>spider</a>, <a href='https://www.homemadetools.net/tag/tailstock'>tailstock</a> </div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<!-- END /var/www/html/homemadetools/protected/modules/zeus/views/tool/postUpdate.php -->