Hello
I wonder if someone could advise me on the use of a co-axial indicator on a milling machine. I've just bust my new one first time out of the box!
Let's start from the premise that the instructions that come with it are total gibberish and that I do know basically how they work. I wanted to centre holes in aluminium plate so I could enlarge them with a boring head to make a dashboard.
I fitted the short straight probe but was mystified why I couldn't get any resistance on it in one direction – I was expecting it to be like a dial test indicator where you push the stylus over to contact the workpiece. In this case the probe just hung limply down flopping about and no amount of tightening of the nut at the connection between the arm and beam would tension it. (Pushing it in the opposite – non-dangly direction – did produce tension against the beam and a reading on the dial).
I then, very foolishly, put it in the mill, wound it across to get tension on the probe on the side where it wasn't dangling (the instrument was now of course about 25mm off-centre). I started up at 170 rpm, the probe hit a step block holding the work and snapped off the arm.
I can probably make a new arm, and I would still like a co-axial indicator. I can't afford a Blake, that apparently is the Rolls-Royce, but any thoughts on a decent one in, say, the 200 Euro ball-park.
Many thanks in advance for any guidance on both use and purchase.
Best Martyn