Clive figures that the number of slots matters not as a grid of tapped holes sub plate is much more appropriate than slots on small rotary tables given the size of the machines and workpieces they are appropriately used with. M5 or M6 in five spot dice pattern on 25 mmm or 20 mm centres works well enough with suitably small clamp bars et al.
I consider conventional clamping gear, such as the import kits of stout bars,Tee nuts, studs and step blocks, frustratingly cumbersome on tables below 10" / 250 mm diameter. 8" / 200 mm is marginal. I've not made a sub plate for my 8" (yet!) but my go to table is a 10" one and I also have a 12" in reserve if need be. Pretty sure that if the 8" was the one and only it would be wearing a grid of holes plate.
On model engineering size jobs its not the holding power against cutter forces of a beefy clamp that matters. Its more the ability of the job to withstand the cut and also not distort under clamping loads that is important. Not to mention the distressing common issue of clamps needing to go where you want to cut.
Far quicker to drop 5 or 6 small, less sturdy clamps where they fall using a grid of holes plate and temporarily remove the one thats in the way of the next cut than to spend ages plotting the exact positions where a bigger clamp affixed via aTee slot won't be in the way. In the days when I had my little BCA, which did have a grid of holes plate, I'd sometimes cut straight into a shop made clamp that was a bit in the way rather than bother to remove it.
Not as if I was going to be lovingly attached to a bit of 3/16 steel hammered into an L shape with strategically placed hole for the screw or a simple strip of 1/4 alloy wearing a similar screw hole with the non business end propped up on a pile of offcuts.
Model Engineers as breed seem reluctant to accept the value of sacrificial tooling et al. We are far too protective of our ever growing boxes of oddments. But this pot admits he is just as bad as any kettles. Buying a new piece of hefty alloy bar because the same size bit in stock purchased for a job that never happened was "too nice to use" may lead to legitimate concerns over sanity. Especially as the second job was also abandoned when the customer pulled out so I now have two pieces "too nice to use".
YMMD
Clive
Edited By Clive Foster on 18/09/2020 18:04:07
Edited By Clive Foster on 18/09/2020 18:04:32
Edited By Clive Foster on 18/09/2020 18:05:18