Licking my Wounds Lathe Rebuild Project - Printable Version +- MetalworkingFun Forum (http://www.metalworkingfun.com) +-- Forum: Machining (http://www.metalworkingfun.com/forum-5.html) +--- Forum: Projects (http://www.metalworkingfun.com/forum-7.html) +--- Thread: Licking my Wounds Lathe Rebuild Project (/thread-2159.html) |
RE: Licking my Wounds Lathe Rebuild Project - BillyT - 06-27-2014 All very good points, thankyou gentleman. I have no real comparison on used machinery value, as I am not amongst any machinist friends neither hobbyist nor journeyman. Please chime in here with reference to value: $1700 lathe purchase (absolutely no accessories or tooling) $500 gear repair $300 chuck purchase $250 motor purchase Total: 2750 Canadian 2700 AUD 2600 USD 1900 EUR 1500 GBP RE: Licking my Wounds Lathe Rebuild Project - awemawson - 06-27-2014 Well broadly it's roughly equivalent to my Colchester Master 2500. http://www.lathes.co.uk/colchester/page17.html These lathes in fair condition command over £3000 in the uk - an example: http://www.traceymachinery.co.uk/lathes.htm So money wise you are well in the lead RE: Licking my Wounds Lathe Rebuild Project - awemawson - 06-27-2014 Bily, As per your PM here is a picture of my Colchester Master 2500 levelling screw arrangement [attachment=8748] RE: Licking my Wounds Lathe Rebuild Project - BillyT - 06-27-2014 (06-27-2014, 06:03 AM)awemawson Wrote: Bily, thanks for the picture, you mentioned that the screw went onto/into a 6mm plate. is there just one large plate or just small "beer coaster" sized ones under each leg? RE: Licking my Wounds Lathe Rebuild Project - awemawson - 06-27-2014 Just a 100 mm square of about 6 mm plate to spread the load. I've seen many in factories where the screw bears directly on concrete, but I cannot believe they'll stay accurately level for long ! RE: Licking my Wounds Lathe Rebuild Project - stevec - 06-27-2014 (06-27-2014, 07:29 AM)awemawson Wrote: I cannot believe they'll stay accurately level for long !I agree, any vibration, for whatever cause, would cause "boring" into the weakest concrete at whatever point. RE: Licking my Wounds Lathe Rebuild Project - Mayhem - 06-27-2014 I have four bolts that have a chemical anchor fix them into the concrete on each of the 2 pedestals on my lathe. I shimmed the lathe at each point, so that the pedestal bares down on a solid footing. RE: Licking my Wounds Lathe Rebuild Project - Arbalest - 06-28-2014 I'm not at work now to check but I think one of the Lathes there may have been sat on anti vibration mounts. RE: Licking my Wounds Lathe Rebuild Project - Mayhem - 06-28-2014 Following on from my previous post, I took some pics that show the system I used. All pretty self explanatory and I'm sure that given the info you can use Google to get more info than I can provide. Basically, you use the hex driver to spin the thread and bust the capsule (mixing the epoxy). Once the epoxy is set, you can torque up the nut. [attachment=8756] [attachment=8757] [attachment=8758] [attachment=8759] [attachment=8760] RE: Licking my Wounds Lathe Rebuild Project - ETC57 - 06-28-2014 Hay Mayhem, How dose the epoxy compare to say red head anchor bolts? I have been considering anchoring a bench down in my carport, it's asphalt and red heads won't stay put in asphalt. |