• THE MARKINGS ARE GONE!!! DANG-IT!

    From Bob La Londe@21:1/5 to All on Sat Apr 22 17:12:05 2023
    Ordinarily when I need to setup an accurate taper on the lathe I install
    a test bar and use an indicator and the rise over run method to bump in
    the compound. Sometimes that's way over kill. Plus or minus a degree
    is good enough. Okay half degree if single point threading, but
    still... Sometimes the protractor on the cross slide below the compound
    is plenty good enough.

    A few weeks ago I was hacking out something, and I went to set the angle
    only to find all the markings were gone. There was a nice aluminum
    insert glued into a slot on the cross slide, but instead of being
    engraved it was printed. When I wiped the gook off so I could read
    there weren't any. I eyeballed it with a hand held angle gage and
    finished my part, but I had to go get that angle gage. Its a tool I
    keep in my desk. Not one I keep at the lathe.

    In between other things i pulled the compound, measured up the various
    radii, and laid out a new scale.

    Image: http://www.yumabassman.com/gallery/index.php/Bob-s-Workshop/IMG_20230422_163637701

    There is 2-3 degrees of adjustment in the slot. I probably should have
    made the screw slots shorter. Who knows. I might not even put screws
    in. I might just glue it in place with something a little stronger than
    the rubber gook that help in the old one.


    --
    Bob La Londe
    CNC Molds N Stuff

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  • From Jim Wilkins@21:1/5 to All on Sun Apr 23 07:45:45 2023
    "Bob La Londe" wrote in message news:u21t4m$3fv9i$1@dont-email.me...

    In between other things i pulled the compound, measured up the various
    radii, and laid out a new scale.

    Image: http://www.yumabassman.com/gallery/index.php/Bob-s-Workshop/IMG_20230422_163637701

    ---------------------

    NICE!

    I assume you made it with CNC. My attempts to engrave angle scales manually
    did NOT look that good, especially the stamped numbers.

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  • From David Billington@21:1/5 to Bob La Londe on Sun Apr 23 14:03:50 2023
    On 23/04/2023 01:12, Bob La Londe wrote:
    Ordinarily when I need to setup an accurate taper on the lathe I
    install a test bar and use an indicator and the rise over run method
    to bump in the compound.  Sometimes that's way over kill.  Plus or
    minus a degree is good enough.  Okay half degree if single point
    threading, but still...  Sometimes the protractor on the cross slide
    below the compound is plenty good enough.

    A few weeks ago I was hacking out something, and I went to set the
    angle only to find all the markings were gone.  There was a nice
    aluminum insert glued into a slot on the cross slide, but instead of
    being engraved it was printed.  When I wiped the gook off so I could
    read there weren't any.  I eyeballed it with a hand held angle gage
    and finished my part, but I had to go get that angle gage.  Its a tool
    I keep in my desk.  Not one I keep at the lathe.

    In between other things i pulled the compound, measured up the various
    radii, and laid out a new scale.

    Image: http://www.yumabassman.com/gallery/index.php/Bob-s-Workshop/IMG_20230422_163637701


    There is 2-3 degrees of adjustment in the slot.  I probably should
    have made the screw slots shorter.  Who knows.  I might not even put
    screws in.  I might just glue it in place with something a little
    stronger than the rubber gook that help in the old one.


    Very nice, I wonder if you could add a vernier scale to the other part
    to aid accurate set-up in the future. I've done similar on a bender I
    made using a rotary table and a single point lathe tool held in the
    quill on my BP, for getting the numbers accurately aligned I used the
    DRO for the offsets and made a guide for my number stamps so the digits
    were where I wanted them and the results were really good, a mate asked
    if it was a bought tool. That guide I've mentioned before IIRC as one
    end was held by a collet and another rod went into the hole at the side
    of the BP quill housing so the guide was fixed.

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  • From Jim Wilkins@21:1/5 to All on Sun Apr 23 10:48:51 2023
    "David Billington" wrote in message news:u23abm$3qc89$1@dont-email.me...
    ...
    made a guide for my number stamps so the digits were where I wanted them

    -------------------

    How? The shanks of my set are too large to give proper spacing between the numbers.

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  • From David Billington@21:1/5 to Jim Wilkins on Sun Apr 23 16:14:41 2023
    On 23/04/2023 15:48, Jim Wilkins wrote:
    "David Billington"  wrote in message news:u23abm$3qc89$1@dont-email.me... ...
    made a guide for my number stamps so the digits were where I wanted them

    -------------------

    How? The shanks of my set are too large to give proper spacing between
    the numbers.

    The digits were done one at a time as the guide was intended for a
    single punch and the position changed for the next digit so I could get
    the digits centred around the line. I have subsequently acquired a set
    of Prior alphanumeric punches intended for making up multi letter/digit combinations as the punch widths vary with the letter/digit width so
    next time I do to do that sort of operation I'll use those.

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  • From Bob La Londe@21:1/5 to Jim Wilkins on Sun Apr 23 09:40:25 2023
    On 4/23/2023 4:45 AM, Jim Wilkins wrote:
    "Bob La Londe"  wrote in message news:u21t4m$3fv9i$1@dont-email.me...

    In between other things i pulled the compound, measured up the various
    radii, and laid out a new scale.

    Image: http://www.yumabassman.com/gallery/index.php/Bob-s-Workshop/IMG_20230422_163637701

    ---------------------

    NICE!

    I assume you made it with CNC. My attempts to engrave angle scales
    manually did NOT look that good, especially the stamped numbers.


    Yep. CNC. I created the whole part in my CAM (not CAD) software which
    has decent 2D CAD capabilities. I used the XY plane origin for
    reference as an easy arc center for everything. When the Y coordinate
    was about right for the text, I aligned to center on the Y axis. Then
    it was a matter of copy, paste, change text, align, rotate ten degrees.
    50 and 60 were moved a few degrees to leave more room for the screw
    slots. All of the markings were laid out much the same way, except I
    used a polar array copy function.

    --
    Bob La Londe
    Proffessional Hack, Hobbyist, Wannabe, Shade Tree, Button Pushing, Not a
    real machinist


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  • From Jim Wilkins@21:1/5 to Jim Wilkins on Sun Apr 23 12:25:57 2023
    "David Billington" wrote in message news:u23i11$3rrg1$1@dont-email.me...

    On 23/04/2023 15:48, Jim Wilkins wrote:
    "David Billington" wrote in message news:u23abm$3qc89$1@dont-email.me...
    ...
    made a guide for my number stamps so the digits were where I wanted them

    -------------------

    How? The shanks of my set are too large to give proper spacing between the numbers.

    The digits were done one at a time as the guide was intended for a
    single punch and the position changed for the next digit so I could get
    the digits centred around the line. I have subsequently acquired a set
    of Prior alphanumeric punches intended for making up multi letter/digit combinations as the punch widths vary with the letter/digit width so
    next time I do to do that sort of operation I'll use those.

    -------------------------

    My Enco punches worked well enough on flat sheet stainless to make tags
    giving the working load of chain, but often the workpiece is rounded such as
    a dial and aligning the bottoms against a thin strip still leaves the text wobbly and unevenly spaced. I'm not skilled enough to engrave neatly, maybe
    I should practice.

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  • From Bob La Londe@21:1/5 to Jim Wilkins on Sun Apr 23 10:58:05 2023
    On 4/23/2023 9:25 AM, Jim Wilkins wrote:
    "David Billington"  wrote in message news:u23i11$3rrg1$1@dont-email.me...

    On 23/04/2023 15:48, Jim Wilkins wrote:
    "David Billington"  wrote in message news:u23abm$3qc89$1@dont-email.me... >> ...
    made a guide for my number stamps so the digits were where I wanted them

    -------------------

    How? The shanks of my set are too large to give proper spacing between
    the numbers.

    The digits were done one at a time as the guide was intended for a
    single punch and the position changed for the next digit so I could get
    the digits centred around the line. I have subsequently acquired a set
    of Prior alphanumeric punches intended for making up multi letter/digit combinations as the punch widths vary with the letter/digit width so
    next time I do to do that sort of operation I'll use those.

    -------------------------

    My Enco punches worked well enough on flat sheet stainless to make tags giving the working load of chain, but often the workpiece is rounded
    such as a dial and aligning the bottoms against a thin strip still
    leaves the text wobbly and unevenly spaced. I'm not skilled enough to
    engrave neatly, maybe I should practice.



    There are a couple videos on making letter number punch guides, but the
    basic concept is not dissimilar to a drill guide block or tap guide
    block. I am 100% certain you can make something adequate in an
    afternoon if you want to. I don't think that is all of the problem
    people experience though. As you noted a curved surface can be an
    issue, but if you made a guide with enough thickness to hold the punch
    straight up well enough, at the least your lettering would be uniformly
    stamped from one to the next even if it will be non uniform on an
    individual basis due to the curved work piece material. Often I think
    people actually do a fair job of positioning, but because its a non
    uniform width font on your standard block letter punch sets it looks off
    even when it is not. This is where CAD/CAM and CNC can shine. You can
    center your markings regardless of the size of the individual
    characters. Of course you can also map a curved surface, or if drag
    engraving use a spring loaded engraver.
    --
    Bob La Londe
    CNC Molds N Stuff


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  • From Jim Wilkins@21:1/5 to Jim Wilkins on Sun Apr 23 14:57:41 2023
    "Bob La Londe" wrote in message news:u23n1r$3sleq$1@dont-email.me...

    On 4/23/2023 4:45 AM, Jim Wilkins wrote:
    "Bob La Londe" wrote in message news:u21t4m$3fv9i$1@dont-email.me...

    NICE!

    I assume you made it with CNC. My attempts to engrave angle scales
    manually did NOT look that good, especially the stamped numbers.


    Yep. CNC. I created the whole part in my CAM (not CAD) software which
    has decent 2D CAD capabilities. I used the XY plane origin for
    reference as an easy arc center for everything. When the Y coordinate
    was about right for the text, I aligned to center on the Y axis. Then
    it was a matter of copy, paste, change text, align, rotate ten degrees.
    50 and 60 were moved a few degrees to leave more room for the screw
    slots. All of the markings were laid out much the same way, except I
    used a polar array copy function.

    Bob La Londe

    -------------------

    I spent nearly a decade using CAD to design circuit boards and their milled RF-tight housings so I understand the concepts. I can't justify CNC for
    hobby use since most of what I do is cut-and-try fitting to existing parts,
    for example fabricating a new heat shield for a catalytic converter. I do
    draw new parts such as the gantry track splice with a trial version of the
    PCB program, whose line drawing functions cover every shape I can manually machine, or in that 16 foot long instance lay out, center punch and drill in the driveway.

    The flange at the rear of my 2000 CRV's original catcon rusted away enough
    to loosen the joint to the muffler pipe, which then rattled although I
    couldn't detect the play, only the metallic clank when I hit that area with
    my hand. Suspecting internal breakage I bought and installed a new catcon
    and oxygen sensor, then saw that nothing was loose inside the original, although the flange holes had reduced to less than half circles and were
    barely holding the bolt heads. Originally they were studs, lost long ago to road salt. I suppose that at 80,000 miles it didn't owe me anything and may
    be partly clogged.

    The new Magnaflow catcon didn't have a heat shield while the OEM one did.
    The apparently knowledgeable parts clerk said rotted-off heat shields
    haven't caused problems and many come without them. At idle after a trip my thermal imager shows 185F on the catcon body, and a max of 626F upstream of
    it where there never was a shield. I previously made a stainless louvered
    heat shield for the original which wasn't an ideal fit though it's better on the Magnaflow.

    Do y'all think I should install the shield or only the top half if one
    wasn't provided?

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  • From Bob La Londe@21:1/5 to Jim Wilkins on Sun Apr 23 13:29:32 2023
    On 4/23/2023 11:57 AM, Jim Wilkins wrote:
    "Bob La Londe"  wrote in message news:u23n1r$3sleq$1@dont-email.me...

    On 4/23/2023 4:45 AM, Jim Wilkins wrote:
    "Bob La Londe"  wrote in message news:u21t4m$3fv9i$1@dont-email.me...

    NICE!

    I assume you made it with CNC. My attempts to engrave angle scales
    manually did NOT look that good, especially the stamped numbers.


    Yep.  CNC.  I created the whole part in my CAM (not CAD) software which
    has decent 2D CAD capabilities.  I used the XY plane origin for
    reference as an easy arc center for everything.  When the Y coordinate
    was about right for the text, I aligned to center on the Y axis.  Then
    it was a matter of copy, paste, change text, align, rotate ten degrees.
    50 and 60 were moved a few degrees to leave more room for the screw
    slots.  All of the markings were laid out much the same way, except I
    used a polar array copy function.

    Bob La Londe

    -------------------

    I spent nearly a decade using CAD to design circuit boards and their
    milled RF-tight housings so I understand the concepts. I can't justify
    CNC for hobby use

    Maybe you just can't justify those high dollar machines you were spoiled
    on in industry... I can do pretty good work with a lot less machine
    than that, and some of those old industrial machines weren't really as
    good as some people's memories of them are.


    since most of what I do is cut-and-try fitting to > Do y'all think I
    should install the shield or only the top half if one
    wasn't provided?

    The floor of the vehicle cabin is an amazing heat shield, but getting it
    hot makes it more reactive chemically. You decide. Maybe think of an
    actual heat shield as a sacrificial anode.


    --
    Bob La Londe
    CNC Molds N Stuff


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  • From Jim Wilkins@21:1/5 to Jim Wilkins on Sun Apr 23 17:36:47 2023
    "Bob La Londe" wrote in message news:u244fd$3uqee$1@dont-email.me...

    On 4/23/2023 11:57 AM, Jim Wilkins wrote:
    I spent nearly a decade using CAD to design circuit boards and their
    milled RF-tight housings so I understand the concepts. I can't justify CNC for hobby use

    Maybe you just can't justify those high dollar machines you were spoiled
    on in industry... I can do pretty good work with a lot less machine
    than that, and some of those old industrial machines weren't really as
    good as some people's memories of them are.


    since most of what I do is cut-and-try fitting to > Do y'all think I
    should install the shield or only the top half if one
    wasn't provided?

    The floor of the vehicle cabin is an amazing heat shield, but getting it
    hot makes it more reactive chemically. You decide. Maybe think of an
    actual heat shield as a sacrificial anode.

    ---------------------
    "Maybe you just can't justify those high dollar machines you were spoiled
    on in industry"

    I wasn't exactly spoiled by a ProtoTRAK Bridgeport that I used mostly in jog mode, since the Segway chassis castings I was modifying or imitating weren't all that well specified on the print, some features were "see the pattern", notably the tapered battery pack locating posts. I got the jobs that needed old-fashioned scribe and punch layout experience.

    At Mitre I designed parts to be milled on a Hurco though I never was allowed
    to run it. My only formal CNC training was writing G code for the Emco
    Compact 5 lathe.

    "some of those old industrial machines weren't really as
    good as some people's memories of them are."

    What do you think I'm using now? Instead of a '65 Mustang my Old American
    Iron is a '65 South Bend Heavy 10, much more use to me.

    The conflicting consideration for the catcon is if it might run hotter than designed with airflow restricted. If I start smelling hot plastic I can
    stuff a thermocouple under the carpet to monitor the temperature. Since retirement I've timed my errands to avoid traffic jams.

    https://www.amazon.com/K-Type-Digital-Thermometer-TM-902C-Thermocouple/dp/B016EILWBM
    "Age Range: Adult"

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