Good source of gear to make threading attachment for lathe

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Good source of gear to make threading attachment for lathe

Home Forums Materials Good source of gear to make threading attachment for lathe

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  • #347669
    John Aitken
    Participant
      @johnaitken84086

      I have an Emco Unimat 3 lathe that I’m trying to make a screw threading attachment for. Specifically for ever four turns the work piece does I want the lead screw to do one turn. 4 threads per mm.

      To do this I’d like a scours of high quality gears with a wide range of teeth numbers so can anyone recommend a good source?

      Thank you

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      #29805
      John Aitken
      Participant
        @johnaitken84086
        #347680
        Michael Cox 1
        Participant
          @michaelcox1

          Try here:

          https://www.technobotsonline.com/

          I have sourced gears/ timing belt pulleys etc from this company. Fast efficient service and good prices.

          Just a satisfied customer.

          Mike

          #347681
          Bazyle
          Participant
            @bazyle

            Get a set of gears for a mini lathe from one of the usual lathe suppliers. That way they will have the right range and values.

            #347689
            Jim Nic
            Participant
              @jimnic

              I'll be interested to see how you arrange the gears to drive your leadscrew on a Unimat 3.

              The U3 I have has no mechanical connection between headstock mandrel and leadscrew. The only drive I have seen is a mechanism which connects to the end of the leadscrew and takes it's drive via a rubber belt off the motor pulley as a means of feeding the crosslide, but that has a fixed ratio.

              Jim

              #347708
              Thor 🇳🇴
              Participant
                @thor
                Posted by Jim Nic on 26/03/2018 20:30:56:

                I'll be interested to see how you arrange the gears to drive your leadscrew on a Unimat 3.

                ……

                Jim

                May be something like this or this? The Taig is a bit different from the Unimat 3 of course.

                Thor

                Edited By Thor on 27/03/2018 04:55:47

                #347724
                Mark Rand
                Participant
                  @markrand96270

                  To answer Chris's original question. HPC gears are good quality and have a wide range.

                  Edited By Mark Rand on 27/03/2018 09:07:44

                  #347750
                  Cornish Jack
                  Participant
                    @cornishjack

                    I have 3 Unimats (don't ask!) one of which is set up solely for screw cutting with about 20 or so threading sets. It is a very good system in use and I think some sort of 'home-brew' copy would be preferable to a method relying on lead screw drive. The Unimat system does ensure exact repeatability.

                    rgds

                    Bill

                    #347769
                    John Aitken
                    Participant
                      @johnaitken84086
                      Posted by Mark Rand on 27/03/2018 09:07:27:

                      To answer Chris's original question. HPC gears are good quality and have a wide range.

                      Edited By Mark Rand on 27/03/2018 09:07:44

                      Thank. They seem to have a good suply of all the teeth numbers I could ever want. I'll go with them.

                      I’m not buying the original Unimat attachment because it is out of stock everywhere and it doesn’t do the threading I need. If I make my own I will have a larger selection of thread I can make, it will be cheaper and I will have gained some skill I would not otherwise of had.

                      #347821
                      Jim Nic
                      Participant
                        @jimnic

                        Good for you Chris. As I said, I would be interested to see how you do it (and I wasn;'t being facetious) so I hope you can enlighten us when you have completed it, perhaps by updating this thread.

                        Jim

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