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General Chat (Vincent Related)
Jig to Hold Head in Lathe
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<blockquote data-quote="oexing" data-source="post: 153409" data-attributes="member: 1493"><p>Thanks for the photo, - but thanks, not my idea of machining two bearing seats. As you have to take care of wear on stones in the active section within the two bores you got the problem that you cannot possibly use all of the stone length like in your photo or they would get out of at least one bore. The hone would have to be the length of three stones for a longer stroke and so you could better take care for even wear of stones and hopefully not bellmouthed bores. </p><p> Only two opposing stones in one hone - unacceptable for me at this size, mistrust in roundness from bad examples. As for surface finish, a quality piloted reamer with good blades , uneven spaced, does the job perfectly well and a lot quicker. For real roller bearing quality I´d take the lapping tools , unbeatable. </p><p> Anyway, not my business, no Girdraulics in my home . . .</p><p></p><p> Vic</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="oexing, post: 153409, member: 1493"] Thanks for the photo, - but thanks, not my idea of machining two bearing seats. As you have to take care of wear on stones in the active section within the two bores you got the problem that you cannot possibly use all of the stone length like in your photo or they would get out of at least one bore. The hone would have to be the length of three stones for a longer stroke and so you could better take care for even wear of stones and hopefully not bellmouthed bores. Only two opposing stones in one hone - unacceptable for me at this size, mistrust in roundness from bad examples. As for surface finish, a quality piloted reamer with good blades , uneven spaced, does the job perfectly well and a lot quicker. For real roller bearing quality I´d take the lapping tools , unbeatable. Anyway, not my business, no Girdraulics in my home . . . Vic [/QUOTE]
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Jig to Hold Head in Lathe
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