I'm surprised we don't see lathes with electronic lead screw automation as a standard feature. There are some but $20K+. These kinds of mechanical setups with different gear trains, levers, etc. are not really needed. Reminds me I need to finish my Rocketronics ELS install. I've been distracted with projects 1 through 41.
My South Bend has gear levers for all the common threads. It's the older single lever version. I while back (8 years maybe?) I needed to cut some pipe threads for my vacuum tank (for degassing epoxy) and interestingly there was no lever position for that pipe size. Now with the mechanical taper attachment it was easy enough to set the taper for the pipe thread. And then key the pitch into the ELS and cut a pipe thread. No messing with gears. No questions to South Bend group on what gears to buy and then wait for them to arrive. No running to Princess Auto to buy a pipe threading kit.We are in polar opposite camps John. I'd much rather a solid 127 gear transposition, a variety of gears to cover the vast majority of threads, and the ability to cut any gear set I might need to get the exact pitch I want that might not come standard. Nothing about this problem reduces the pure love I feel for my good old fashioned purely mechanical lathe.
Or someone who has an gas stove with Piezo ignition but prefers to light the burner each time with a match because the Piezo ignition method is new technology and an old fashioned stove is just so much more satisfying to light with a match.
Penmanship penmanship! And cursive writing! Everyone should know how to trim a feather into a good quill! Just yanking your chain Susquatch. After a long career of programming I stopped. Could not stand it. Did other work. After about 15 years I finally feel like I could do some programming again. I can see not wanting to even think about automation after a career in it!We can have lots and lots of fun with this. And I have no doubt that the vast majority will be in your camp. But I am not.
For me, it's sorta like dancing with a robot, or driving an auto transmission, or washing dishes in the dishwasher, or cooking in the microwave, or a gas fire on the patio, or a gas fireplace instead of wood, or a blow up mistress, or or or
After a career of electronics, and automation, I prefer manual. Remember, it's not about saving time for me. It's about enjoying every second of what time I have left. How much I get done simply doesn't matter.
I'd never be in a hurry to fix something at this point in my life. If it took a little longer, it would just be that much more enjoyable. In fact, it's about finding something else to fix so I can spend more time doing it. In many ways, it's not about wishing the storm would end, it's about enjoying the dance in the rain.
I measured a selection of threads that are divisible by 8TPI and here are the results of what I measured
I have wondered this before while reading other threading pages that if it isnt simply a gear engagement setting that produces the small differences in cut threads. Even a slight difference in gear to gear meshing should make the change in tool speed per rev. and if your gear changes arent exacting , could that not account for the small discrepancies.I measured a selection of threads that are divisible by 8TPI and here are the results of what I measured
8TPI- 1.035"
16TPI- 1.022 "
24TPI- .966"
32TPI- 1.054"
40TPI- .994"
48TPI- .902"
56TPI- 1.024"
the process I went through was to set the levers to the thread pitch, engage the threading lever, rotated the chuck by hand to a set of wirness marks (to take out any backlash) zero the indicator, then rotate the number of threads and measure the travel of the carriage.
I also noticed the inconsistencies with the measurements.