A bed stop to show you how much further the lathe saddle needs to go before you reach the end is a great help on any sort of blind hole job.
Whether quick'n dirty "something" clamped to the bed [toolmakers clamp perhaps], nicer micrometer adjustable version, full monty multi-position turret stop or uber sophisticated single tooth dog clutch variety that drops the feed when you get to the preset end-stop. I have the lot, albeit my something clamped to the bed is more engineered than quick'n dirty, and all have their place. When you work up to your "forever lathe", or at least "keep a long time lathe" I'd strongly advise investigating how to get one of Graham Meeks single tooth clutch systems fitted. So much less stressful. But thats for a year or six in the future.
+1 for the mandrel handle suggestion from Thor. With only 12 turns to do its likely to be quicker than neophyte level stepping through screw-cutting procedures and you can stop instantly when you have that panic brain turns to mush "aargh what do I do now. I've cocked up and wrecked it." moment.
Anyone who claims to have done significant screw cutting yet not had that panic moment is flat out lying.
Big time.
Fortunately you generally get away with it. Well I did, severally.
When it comes to forward and reverse running its well worth spending a bit of time and experimentation to make clear to yourself the difference between setting up for a left hand thread and cutting a right hand (normal) thread running in reverse. No need to cut anything pencil as a tool, paper wrapped round a mandrel as the work piece.
Clive