Another old ME article required please

Another old ME article required please

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  • #23538
    Ken Weeks
    Participant
      @kenweeks58536

      62,1517,545 Workshop Topics Metalling Lead-screw Nut of Old Type Drummond Lathe Chas F.Clifton

      #166307
      Ken Weeks
      Participant
        @kenweeks58536

        I am after another old ME article as I cannot find a copy of the magazine on E-bay

        62,1517,545 Workshop Topics Metalling Lead-screw Nut of Old Type Drummond Lathe Chas F.Clifton

        If anybody can help thank you in advance.

        Ken

        #166350
        Ady1
        Participant
          @ady1

          Sounds like a pre-1930 issue. Not many people have the 1900 to 1940 stuff and unless you get lucky on ebay only the dealers (and I presume the ME clubs) tend to have the earlier issues/volumes

          I skimmed out the old knackered one on my Drummond M and cut a new nut in aluminium which I slotted into the skimmed out clasp mechanism

          I burned through two original LS nuts in about a year using my M series lathe regularly, they are very soft to protect the leadscrew so you will need to develop a reliable replacement system

          I got a spare lead screw nut clasp lever from ebay so now I can rotate my LS nuts as they fail

          #166355
          Ady1
          Participant
            @ady1

            As far as "metalling" is concerned in the ME index the 2nd last article was in 1947 (2412) and the last 40 years later in 1985 (3758)

            White metal appears to be not much harder than lead and the leadscrew itself could be used as a mould

            The final result is unlikely to last you more than a few months of regular use and even Delrin will last 1-2 months

            #166408
            Ady1
            Participant
              @ady1

              Well I had a wee read of the last ME metalling article for myself and it looks like babbit etc could be a lost artform well worth preserving

              Metallurgy is almost a form of alchemy and some of these low temperature mixtures seem to have a very high resistance to wear and were used extensively in locomotives

              The downside appears to be the price of the tin rich base metal which was very expensive even in the 1980s

              Well worth a read:

              metalling1.jpg

              metalling2.jpg

              metalling3.jpg

              #166417
              Ken Weeks
              Participant
                @kenweeks58536

                Hi Ady

                Thanks for taking the time to research and post the article.

                I will read it with interest

                Ken

                #166454
                colin hawes
                Participant
                  @colinhawes85982

                  Usually the thing you have to check is that the lead screw has the same thread thickness all along its length or the nut is going to seize somewhere. I have done this job once on a mill cross slide screw. The original nut was bronze and I degreased it, tinned it , brushed Bakers Fluid on the tinned surface , heated the nut on its degreased screw to run the metal in and kept the screw working a little until the metal set hard to avoid the screw bonding to the nut. It was a very good result and was still good for the two more years that I owned it. I did keep it well oiled though! Colin

                  #579540
                  Ady1
                  Participant
                    @ady1

                    Well I found that I had the 1930s article today

                    drummond leadscrew nut1.jpg

                    drummond leadscrew nut2.jpg

                    smiley

                    #579557
                    Nicholas Farr
                    Participant
                      @nicholasfarr14254

                      Hi Ken, while I was scanning I see Ady 1 has posted the two pages, but I've put them on a single sheet that you might like to save or print out onto an A4.

                      chas. f. clifton..jpg

                      Regards Nick.

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