Posted by Hopper on 12/08/2020 23:23:52:
Backlash is nothing to worry about. As long as you approach from the right direction. Sometimes this means winding the dial out past the backlash and re approaching from the right direction.
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The 7 is all oil lube but I've a vague idea yours might be grease. A search of past threads on here for ml10 should help.
You should also buy a copy of the book The Amateurs Lathe by LH Sparey. It is the bible for old British lathes.
+1 for Sparey, and not just for old British Lathes! The book's only flaw is it was written in 1948, so it knows nothing of Carbide Inserts, VFDs, and DROs etc. Apart from that, it's rock-solid on lathe basics.
I think Hopper is right about the ML10s being greased rather than oiled. Although sold as Myford's cheap alternative, it's a later design and benefits from some modernisations, like roller bearings. Myford 7's have plain bearings and a total loss oil lubricating system. Ie the owner has to top the oil up very frequently. A famous Myford booby trap was using Grease Nipples as oiling points, causing endless trouble due to hapless owners blocking the oil-ways with grease! Alas poor bearings!
I expect a 10 owner will be along to confirm, but I believe your machine is occasionally greased. It's low maintenance, like the older cars needing to be topped up with a grease-gun every 6 months. An easy way of checking is to run the lathe off-load from cold and feel how hot the bearings get by touching them at 5 minute intervals. The danger sign is rapid heating to uncomfortable to touch temperatures. Hot bearings usually mean trouble.
Agree about backlash too. Lathe backlash doesn't matter much because all the operator has to do is turn the handle back far enough to take up all the backlash before going back in for another cut. As tightening up to eliminate backlash causes lots of wear and tear on most lathes it's kinder to work them with moderate backlash than to remove it obsessively. Backlash is less acceptable oh high-end lathes because it reduces the productivity of paid operators. Better anti-backlash arrangements are available, but the owner pays ££££ for them. Hobbyists generally tolerate backlash until the cause is severe wear.
Dave