Carriage Drilling Adapter
#1
A friend of mine made one of these a few months ago. I thought he meant something you attach to the carriage so you could drill sideways through the work held in the headstock. Turns out, it is intended to hold a chuck or tapered-shank drill bit on the carriage so you can drill longitudinally into the work spinning on the headstock. Confused yet?

I started with a block of steel 3" x 2 1/2" x 2" and notched it to mount in the four-way toolpost. Then I drilled and bored it to hold an R8-to-MT3 adapter I had on hand.
   
   
   

Two comments at this point. First, if you don't have a boring head, consider getting one. Normally used on a mill, they can be useful on a lathe. Second, if you are boring into a piece on the carriage, or using the drilling adapter, you will need a crossfeed lock. If you don't already have one, add one. It can be as simple as replacing one gib screw with a setscrew that can easily be tightened and loosened.
   

Once the block was bored to a snug slip fit for the MT3 adapter, it was drilled and tapped to take two 3/8" SHCSs. Then on to the horizontal mill to slit in to the bored hole.
   

The drilling adapter is used as shown to hold a tapered-shank bit ...
   

Or a chuck - anything on an MT3 shank, including the boring head.
   

Now, if you're wondering why bother, when I'm drilling a really deep hole through stock held in the spindle, it takes a lot of cranking to move the bit in and out of the work to clear chips and add oil. The crank on the carriage is a lot faster, plus, I can now use power feed when it's appropriate.
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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#2
A great idea for those with indexing tool posts of that type.

No need for someone like me who has a sturdy QCTP and several different size No.4 style (straight hole) boring bar holders. There's also a Morse Taper holder available, though I can't justify the expense. For the rare times I need to use taper shank drills, I just revert to using the tailstock.
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#3
Hi Mike, A good idea and very well posted too, I havea quick change tool post but its only got a MT1 holder of this type a bigger one would be handy now you have pointed out the advantage of how the carriage is easier to use than the tailstock for deep holes etc..
Cheers Mick
Micktoon, proud to be a member of MetalworkingFun since Sep 2012.
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#4
The main reason I used the four-way instead of the QCTP is that this way I only have to true up the crossfeed to centre the tool. It will always be true vertically.
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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#5
(03-31-2014, 08:42 PM)PixMan Wrote: A great idea for those with indexing tool posts of that type.

No need for someone like me who has a sturdy QCTP and several different size No.4 style (straight hole) boring bar holders. There's also a Morse Taper holder available, though I can't justify the expense. For the rare times I need to use taper shank drills, I just revert to using the tailstock.

I have AXA blocks, with MT#2 and MT#3 tapers, they work okay, but I'd rather use the tailstock
jack
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#6
Likewise, Jack.

I find that once you get much beyond a certain size drill (about 1" in my case), the straight-on orientation of the tailstock mass behind the tool seems much more effective.
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#7
Looking good Mike. Like you said would be great for deep pilot holes, save a lot of cranking.
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Greg
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#8
I can see this being really useful for some of the smaller lathes where the tailstock has minimal capacity in terms of drilling depth. This is one issue I face when using my friend's lathe, and I frequently have to reposition the tailstock to drill deeper.

Less useful on my lathe, where I have sufficient capacity
Hunting American dentists since 2015.
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