I fitted a 3-axis "Machine-DRO" set specified for my mill, a Myford VMC, and although I indulged in a heck of a lot of elaborate bracketry to both support and protect the sensors and magnetic strips on a machine not designed for DRO scales, I have never regretted it.
The instruction advise protecting the armoured sensor cables from coolant. I don't use flood-coolants, nevertheless I ran them through flexible conduit, actually spiral-wound polythene sink-waste hose from a camping & caravanning shop. (You'd be surprised where you can find engineering materials!) The standard electrical flexible conduit is too small to allow the sensors or connectors, passage.
One thing I did do, when setting the specified gap between sensor and strip, was use a plastic (soft and non-magnetic) feeler-gauge. I measured a few old plastic bank and club cards, which make very good shim material, and cut a strip from the appropriate one.
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It was joy on first use to drill several holes in two bits of metal to be screwed together, and find all the screws fitted through all of them first time!
The one drawback is that fitting the long axis strip and sensor lost the use of the table-stops. Some would argue that a DRO avoids their need, but as with the 3-phase conversion sets I put on this and other machine-tools, I prefer to enhance the machine as it exists, not simply replace bits. Also, once a positive stop has been set by the numbers, you don't need keep sidling up to digits or dials.
So from time to time I look at the mill to work out how to make and fit new table-stops. In any case, sometimes I do use the handwheel dials alone, on short, simple tasks. If nothing else it keeps my hand in!
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The fitting and operating instructions are nice and clear, and though I have not so far used the more advanced features like generating radii and pitch-circles, I have no qualms about doing so. Though I might practice on a bit of scrap material first!
Incidentally, I don't keep this or any of my machine-tool manuals in the workshop. To protect them, they normally stay in the house where I write the salient details from them on a notepad. If I do need the document in the shed, I put it open at the relevant page in a polythene bag or a walker's map-case.
Edited By Nigel Graham 2 on 20/05/2022 15:35:53