If you plan to switch heads on a fairly regular basis you will also need some simple way of supporting the head when off the machine. If that is indeed the case consider killing two birds with one stone by making a suitably sized foot plate having a vertical arbor matching the machine taper. Effectively the turbocharged with nitrous injection version of Garys idea.
When in store the head sits on the taper held nice and stable by the drawbar.
To fit on the machine lift the whole kit and kaboodle up onto the table and adjust until it lines up. Slide to get it roughly in place then use the table feeds for final alignment. Release taper, drop table so it clears the spindle then remove foot. Job done. Simples and no heavy lifting if you have a suitable hoist.
A neat side benefit is that you can fit appropriate lifting points to the foot for the hoist to hook to so it goes up nice and straight.
Rule one of the vertical head designers union appears to be " make it sufficiently unbalnced that it won'y hang straight".
Rule 2 seems to be "make the shape such that its impossible to get a stable arrangment of lifting straps without obscuring the bolting flange".
I have such a plate and arbor combo in the slowspeed "as and when workshop lane" as the varispeed head on my Bridgeport needs to come off for servicing in the not too far distant future. Needs an extra support at the motor end but thats no great issue as its only off for servicing.
Clive.
Edited By Clive Foster on 04/06/2019 14:01:02