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made a set of training wheels for a friends plasma torch
dallen, proud to be a member of MetalworkingFun Forum since Apr 2012.
If life seems normal, your not going fast enough!
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In firefighting, a Higbee Notch is a notch in one of the wrench tabs on each hose fitting. When you line up the two notched tabs and turn the fittings, the threads engage immediately. I had assumed that was the whole history, but I can see it originating with breech-loading artillery.
Mike
If you can't get one, make one.
Hawkeye, proud to be a member of MetalworkingFun Forum since Jan 2013.
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(01-20-2014, 11:28 AM)PixMan Wrote: ...someone may have tried to do just as I did. Why, I have no clue...
I've given up trying to figure out why (or how) someone abused this machine prior to me acquiring it. Either it was an machinist who didn't give a rats arse about his equipment, or someone who fancied themselves as a machinist but suffered from delusions of adequacy.
I think it is just more abuse but if I remember, I'll take a photo.
Hunting American dentists since 2015.
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Hunting American dentists since 2015.
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Good grief, that's mangled. It looks like the thread had only about 50% engagement for the time it was working. The thread form on the left hand screw doesn't look too good, and of course that last thread would need to be cleaned up.
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What would cause the undercutting on the thread? I'm at a loss to understand how this happened. I noticed that Y-axis screw was the same. I forgot to check the X-axis. I wouldn't have left the factory like that would it???
How would you go about cleaning off the end? Should I grind it so there is a full profile on the end or taper it?
Hunting American dentists since 2015.
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Probably just excessive wear combined with a low rate of thread percentage for engagement. Looks like it was poorly lubricated.
The end of the thread appears to have been torn off. I don't know if the weight of the knee is hanging on it (doubtful) but perhaps when someone tried lifting the knee off the screw before it was fully disengaged from the nut that would have done it. You could just grind it clean to give it a good start without mashing a new nut. Truthfully I'd be looking for a new screw as those thread look beat to crap.
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Thanks Ken - After I clean up the last thread, would the rest of the thread damage the new nut? If so, I may put it together with the current nut (of which the bottom 50% of the thread is OK). I could then make up a new screw (I would need the mill to cut the key slot).
Hunting American dentists since 2015.