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Thread: two lathe stops (diy)

  1. #1
    Supporting Member celsoari's Avatar
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    two lathe stops (diy)

    how I did my two lathe stops:


    Greetings from Brazil

    Celso Ari

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    high-side (May 9, 2020), Jon (May 12, 2020), Little Rabbit (May 10, 2020)

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    Supporting Member Crusty's Avatar
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    More nice work and I know those will speed things up in the shop.

    I know that you know better than to do that but those long sleeves close in to machine tools is a venerated recipe for disaster and injury. Better to roll them all the way up or put on a short sleeve shirt everywhere around machine tools. Don't get hurt.

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    If you can't make it precise make it adjustable.

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    old_toolmaker (May 11, 2020), shopandmath (May 9, 2020), thehomeengineer (May 10, 2020)

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    Thanks celsoari! We've added your Lathe Stop to our Lathe Accessories category,
    as well as to your builder page: celsoari's Homemade Tools. Your receipt:




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    Thanks celsoari! We've added your Quick Adjust Lathe Stop to our Lathe Accessories category,
    as well as to your builder page: celsoari's Homemade Tools. Your receipt:




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    celsoari (May 9, 2020)

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    Supporting Member celsoari's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Crusty View Post
    More nice work and I know those will speed things up in the shop.

    I know that you know better than to do that but those long sleeves close in to machine tools is a venerated recipe for disaster and injury. Better to roll them all the way up or put on a short sleeve shirt everywhere around machine tools. Don't get hurt.
    thanks for the advice friend

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    Supporting Member Crusty's Avatar
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    Seriously man, don't get hurt in the machine shop - it can be a life changer. I cringed every time I saw those loose sleeves come near that spinning chuck just waiting to grab one.
    If you can't make it precise make it adjustable.

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    Supporting Member celsoari's Avatar
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    you're right

    chers

    Celso Ari

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    Comments:

    I think it is a bad design. I had a stop that used the lower, clamping piece to hold the stop rod for my lathe. It was never repeatable and any pressure on it would cause it to wiggle/move. Yours appears to have more beef to it and it uses two bolts instead of just one, but I still wouldn't trust it. When your close fit wears away, you will have problems. I made my own stop with the stop rod being held by the upper piece that is clamped onto the Vee way and all that went away.

    Also, it is not a great idea to use the stamped on lettering on the heads of the bolts as the stopping surface. It is bad enough to have them striking against the rough casting of the carriage, but those raised letters can easily make impressions in that CI surface and, worse yet, in the paint on it. You should have machined that lettering off and also made a proper strike plate to mount on the carriage. The two surfaces could be made very slightly convex so they would always hit each other in a central location and not on an edge.
    Paul A.

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    Supporting Member celsoari's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Paul Alciatore View Post
    Comments:

    I think it is a bad design. I had a stop that used the lower, clamping piece to hold the stop rod for my lathe. It was never repeatable and any pressure on it would cause it to wiggle/move. Yours appears to have more beef to it and it uses two bolts instead of just one, but I still wouldn't trust it. When your close fit wears away, you will have problems. I made my own stop with the stop rod being held by the upper piece that is clamped onto the Vee way and all that went away.

    Also, it is not a great idea to use the stamped on lettering on the heads of the bolts as the stopping surface. It is bad enough to have them striking against the rough casting of the carriage, but those raised letters can easily make impressions in that CI surface and, worse yet, in the paint on it. You should have machined that lettering off and also made a proper strike plate to mount on the carriage. The two surfaces could be made very slightly convex so they would always hit each other in a central location and not on an edge.
    Machining the screw head and other changes can be made easily.
    The device is securely attached to the bed and does not slide. Thanks for your comment



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