- Joined
- Sep 26, 2009
- Messages
- 2,210
At a glance,ie holding the slider up to the light and looking down the bore, the slider pictured did not appear [to eye] not that bad.
My bore gauge suggested it was very worn ...in fact after boring and reaming it's now 39.2 mm and still as a slight hollow 3/4 down the bore.
Standard 1.1/2 ,38.1mm ..so this was worn a staggering 1mm plus =40 thou! .
This wear is normally "more" in one plain , As Ludwig as stated oil changes are important!
I have stated before about how the spring snakes and rubs its "belly and Back" on the stanchion inner wall when compressed, this rubbing produces shards of spring steel .
These shards mix with oil/water to produce a "lovely" grinding fluid !
A modern problem is the stanchion internal surface finish , with cheaper tubes.
I have compressed a spring onto a 12mm rod and then pushed the "snake" into a stanchion , placed onto a bath scale the spring required 1 kg to get it to move..this force is greatly increased with the rougher finished Ebay stanchions . Its surprising how worn some springs become.
So change that oil yearly or sooner, remember "that" grinding fluid is also grinding away damper internals ,bushs and seals ..as well that micro chrome plating! It's not only the external dust that wears the chrome..but the beast that is out of sight :!:
The reamer is a David Brown floating type , Not really suitable in a tail stock, i am making a special holder for mounting on the tool post and power feed , and a bespoke kerosene feed through the lathe spindle , to wash out the chippings and lube the cutters.
My bore gauge suggested it was very worn ...in fact after boring and reaming it's now 39.2 mm and still as a slight hollow 3/4 down the bore.
Standard 1.1/2 ,38.1mm ..so this was worn a staggering 1mm plus =40 thou! .
This wear is normally "more" in one plain , As Ludwig as stated oil changes are important!
I have stated before about how the spring snakes and rubs its "belly and Back" on the stanchion inner wall when compressed, this rubbing produces shards of spring steel .
These shards mix with oil/water to produce a "lovely" grinding fluid !
A modern problem is the stanchion internal surface finish , with cheaper tubes.
I have compressed a spring onto a 12mm rod and then pushed the "snake" into a stanchion , placed onto a bath scale the spring required 1 kg to get it to move..this force is greatly increased with the rougher finished Ebay stanchions . Its surprising how worn some springs become.
So change that oil yearly or sooner, remember "that" grinding fluid is also grinding away damper internals ,bushs and seals ..as well that micro chrome plating! It's not only the external dust that wears the chrome..but the beast that is out of sight :!:
The reamer is a David Brown floating type , Not really suitable in a tail stock, i am making a special holder for mounting on the tool post and power feed , and a bespoke kerosene feed through the lathe spindle , to wash out the chippings and lube the cutters.