Myford Industrial Stand

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Myford Industrial Stand

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  • #169512
    William Hulme
    Participant
      @williamhulme24010

      I am in New Zealand where freight costs often are more than the item being purchased, then tax at 15% is imposed on the total. I own a late model Myford Super 7 that needs a stand. With the help of a local sheetmetal workshop I would like to get made something resembling the latest Industrial stand as in the Myford Manual on page 40. Could I get a reply giving me the size overall of the swarf tray, and the dimensions and gauge of the main cupboard construction then I can scale the rest from that from the illustration. Thanks

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      #12377
      William Hulme
      Participant
        @williamhulme24010
        #169531
        Ian S C
        Participant
          @iansc

          Can't help with dimensions, but I would recommend building a bench from reasonably heavy angle iron say 50 x 50 x 5 mm, or 40 x 40 x 5 square (preferred). I built mine for my Taiwanese 1324 BH lathe. In the sketch, it shows a wide base for stability, the section beneath the head stock is covered in with sheet metal, and has a door on it. All the steel was cut by hand with a hacksaw. lathe bench.jpgIan S C

          Edited By Ian S C on 14/11/2014 10:02:51

          #169540
          Bazyle
          Participant
            @bazyle

            No sense in making a flimsy stand even for a lightweight lathe. As Ian said make a decent angle iron one but without the sloping back which just wastes space, instead size it to carry a 4'x2' x3/8 plate top which is what I have for my Boxford. That is 60 years old and will last another 200.
            If it looks to be too expensive you could consider a heavy duty timber frame with a 3 in concrete slab top.

            #169543
            Ian S C
            Participant
              @iansc

              The wide base for me spaces the lathe away from the wall, and I stack some of my steel behind , between the wall and bench. It proved it's self as earthquake proof, a narrower base may have tipped over.  William, roughly in which part of the country do you live, I'm in Canterbury, about 40 k west of Christchurch.

              Ian S C

              Edited By Ian S C on 14/11/2014 11:04:23

              #169565
              JohnF
              Participant
                @johnf59703

                William, Please look at your messages.

                #169583
                JA
                Participant
                  @ja

                  William

                  Measurements taken from stand for big-bore Myford lathe (in inches and fractions – sorry).

                  Tray – 44 3/4" x 19 1/2" x 1 1/4" deep, 10 gauge, 3" high face (front and sides)

                  Cabinet – 42 1/2" x 15 3/4" x 34 1/4" height to base of tray, gauge 13 or 14, 19" wide opening, height to bottom 4", height to top shelf 16".

                  The tray and rising blocks (and thus the lathe) sit on steel channel 2" x 4" (not measure).

                  The structure is well thought out and made without any sharp edges etc. It is surprisingly rigid. The potential disadvantage is that the motor and clutch overhangs the back of the tray. Myford offered a back structure that stopped anything from falling behind the cabinet. This is a necessity.

                  I don't think you should even consider making a similar cabinet, the tray yes but not the cabinet. A well build bench from steel angle/tube, as already suggested, would be at least just as good and much easier to build. With such a project it is easy to loose sight of the objective – that is to use the lathe!

                  If you wish I can provide photographs and further dimensions.

                  JA

                   

                  Edited By JA on 14/11/2014 17:49:39

                  #169738
                  William Hulme
                  Participant
                    @williamhulme24010

                    Thank you for the prompt replies, the consensus appears to be to make a rigid stand more so than that

                    shown in the Myford Series 7 manual. I am an Auckland resident Ian, my email is PLEASE PM THE AUTHOR I will be pleased to read of any further ideas-thanks again-William

                    Edited By Neil Wyatt on 16/11/2014 11:47:11

                    #169755
                    Ian S C
                    Participant
                      @iansc

                      Thank William, I don't recommend putting up your E mail on the open forum, it leaves you open to invasion by antone who comes across it, if you need to give it to someone, it's best to send a PM/ personal message.

                      I'v always thought that a lot of lathe stands, both Myford, and the few Chinese ones I'v seen are a bit tinny. I would not build it from wood, it will be like my saw bench, adjust the blade angle dayly, as the humidity changes so does the angle of the saw blade. I'll rebuild it in steel if I live long enough, or if I need a new motor for my lathe, or mill I know where a 1.5hp 1450 rpm motor is.

                      Ian S C

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