I was having a go at a spur gear last night where the workpiece was held in the lathe between centres and the milling unit was doing the work with a cutter at right angles, coming down from above while mounted on a milling slide to cut the slots.
While the job was o-kay it wasn’t exactly what I would call precision stuff, having to line things up from above purely by eyeball seemed a bit hit and miss.
If you had to do say a more precise/complicated gear for a critical job and you needed it as spot on as you could, like with parallel turning between centres for example.
I’ve read a few books now…becoming a bit of a lathe anorak now actually lol…but I’ve read nothing on lining up externally mounted cutters to any degree of precision.
I’ll be mulling it over myself over the next few days because a simple system would be pretty darned handy.
Anybody got any pointers?
I suppose it could be a watchmakers question…but engineers need precision as well
Edited By ady on 19/01/2011 09:42:04