Facing bar ends

Advert

Facing bar ends

Home Forums Workshop Techniques Facing bar ends

Viewing 7 posts - 1 through 7 (of 7 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #117852
    Chris Heapy
    Participant
      @chrisheapy71135

      I don't know if this is an old trick or not (it probably is – few things are new in this game). Anyway, the job is to mount some bar ends in the chuck for facing, and you want them to run true, but neither end is machined so no reference point.

      For this I use the 'bearing on a stick' method shown below. Simply, it is a ball bearing (extracted from a broken computer hard drive) mounted on a suitable length of square section steel, which itself is mounted into a tool holder.

      To use: mount the workpiece in the chuck as accurately as you can by eye, do not tighten the chuck firmly – it just needs to be tight enough to hold the piece so it won't move on its own, yet able to be repositioned when the bearing is pressed against it. The photos are self-explanatory (I hope). Spin the workpiece slowly and bring the bearing into contact (which will be intermittant), then continue pressing until it runs true. The sound it makes is as good an indicator as any. Back off the bearing and tighten the chuck more firmly and re-check, if OK tighten fully.

      By similar means the bearing trick can also be used to make thin-ish disks run true by pushing it up against it's front face, it just needs mounting along the line of the bed instead of across it.

      Advert
      #15634
      Chris Heapy
      Participant
        @chrisheapy71135

        Quickly mounting workpiece in chuck to run true

        #117857
        1
        Participant
          @1

          Chris

          You're right, it is not a new trick, I have oft seen this device called a "nudger". However, this post is a good reminder that I need to make one, especially as I have just decided to scrap an old printer which will undoubtedly produce the necessary bearing.

          Jim

          #117863
          _Paul_
          Participant
            @_paul_

            Also works well if you have a chuck which is a bit old and worn blush centralises the stock very well.

            I made a double ended one so it's then easy to change it around on the Aloris QCTP from facing to turning mode.

            Took the bearings from an old VCR.

            Paul

            #117865
            Ian S C
            Participant
              @iansc

              Been using one for years, the roller on a "stick" that I use was part of a (I think) lathe steady, got it at a machinery auction at the NZ Railways back in the mid 1980s, when the Govt was selling off anything that wasn't nailed down. I'v seen drawings of similar tools over a hundred years ago, it was in the form of a horizontal Y, the bar runs in the fork. Ian S C

              #117871
              mechman48
              Participant
                @mechman48

                You've just reminded me why I kept a reclaimed bearing from my bandsaw repairs, thumbs up

                Cheers

                George

                #117874
                Joseph Ramon
                Participant
                  @josephramon28170

                  A wooden stick with the lower end between the lathe shears, or even a screwdriver can be used to do this with care.

                  Joey

                Viewing 7 posts - 1 through 7 (of 7 total)
                • Please log in to reply to this topic. Registering is free and easy using the links on the menu at the top of this page.

                Advert

                Latest Replies

                Home Forums Workshop Techniques Topics

                Viewing 25 topics - 1 through 25 (of 25 total)
                Viewing 25 topics - 1 through 25 (of 25 total)

                View full reply list.

                Advert

                Newsletter Sign-up