By continuing to use this site, you agree to our use of cookies. Find out more
Forum sponsored by:
Forum sponsored by Forum House Ad Zone

boxford bud milling table

what tables would work on a boxford bud?

All Topics | Latest Posts

Search for:  in Thread Title in  
james huxstep06/01/2017 12:17:29
avatar
91 forum posts
24 photos

hi there

Recently bought a boxford bud to build a 2" minnie.Can you get hold of the original boxford milling table? or is too rare nowadays.What new milling table would fit the boxford?

thanks

james

Nigel McBurney 106/01/2017 13:59:52
avatar
1101 forum posts
3 photos

Lathes.co.uk the machine tool website lists new copy Boxford T slotted cross slides under for sale,, accessories.

Speedy Builder506/01/2017 14:02:05
2878 forum posts
248 photos

I think you mean a slotted cross slide. Keep an eye on E-bay for one, also possible to buy 'new' ones from various suppliers. Type Boxford lathe spares in a Google search.
BobH

mgnbuk06/01/2017 14:19:00
1394 forum posts
103 photos

Boxford used to do a "boring table" about 8 or 10" square working area with tee slots that directly replaced the cross slide. I bought one when I had a CUD & paid (IIRC) around £80 for it from a local supplier (Mercers at Cleckheaton) over 20 years ago. Sometime after I sold the CUD, a couple of years later, I sold the table on Ebay (the buyer of the lathe didn't want to pay extra for it) & it fetched £120. The lathe, with 3 & 4 jaw chucks, faceplate & catchplate, travelling steady, 4 way toolpost & full set of changewheels (including the 100/127 metric converter) sold for £700, so pro-rata the boring table was an expensive accessory !

The boring table does occasionally appear on Ebay, but they are rare & fetch strong money as a result. It is shown part way down the page on this link **LINK**

Nigel B

Edited By Nigel B on 06/01/2017 14:19:49

Saxalby06/01/2017 14:32:44
avatar
187 forum posts
33 photos

James, This link (www.raynerd.co.uk/cross-slide-toolingmounting-plate-for-boxford) shows how to make a plate to go on the cross slide.

Regards Barry

Martin 10006/01/2017 15:06:20
287 forum posts
6 photos

As the bloke on the Irish roadside says I wouldn't start from here: ) Milling on the lathe is always a bodge. The vertical slide is clumsy, the capacity is rubbish, the travel nowhere near enough, the overhangs and resultant rigidity rubbish, the visibility of the cutting edge often non existent. Holding cutters needs an effective collet chuck and they are quite expensive. Horizontal boring is a little easier but still a huge compromise.

For the money the original attachments cost you could probably pick up an import milling machine and do the job properly.

My Boxford had essentially just the chucks and a single 'american' toolpost when acquired, now some 40 years later It's now relatively fully tooled with taper attachment, 3C collets, ER collets, vertical slide, slotted crosslide and a boring table. The 4 way toolpost foolishly bought in the late 1980's now replaced by a model 100 interchangeable one from arceurotrade and insert tooling more or less entirely replacing HSS and brazed carbide.

Without workshop space for a milling machine I never bought one until about a decade ago and so milling on the lathe became a necessity.

But, for other than a very small handful of jobs over the years the task of milling is so much easier on a machine actually designed for the task. The vertical slide was iirc last used in the 20th century and the last time I recall using the boring table was about 2010 ish for a one off horizontal boring job that I recall well as it took a couple of weeks to set up as it required extensive jig and clamp manufacture and just half a saturday morning to machine a couple of mm from a 30mm bore for 70mm length in aluminium.

I'll never part with the boxford attachments because a job might come up that actually needs them, but for most of my milling work I would never even contemplate using the lathe as even a cheapy import milling machine like my Sieg X3 does a far better job.

John Bromley06/01/2017 21:07:59
84 forum posts

I have to agree with Martin100. I have a Boxford CUD, after pricing up the bits and bobs to do some very light milling, which is all you are likely to achieve on a lathe set up. I opted to purchase a Warco WM16. The outlay for the mill was more than the lathe attachments but not as much as you'd think. At the time, the bits for the lathe were going to cost in the region of £600 and the WM16 I got at a Warco open day for £850.

In all no contest really, ok yes, there's a whole new bunch of tooling to buy for milling, but that goes for both a dedicated mill and a converted lathe.

Single best thing about having a dedicated mill is no need to break down the lathe every time you want to do some turning.

All Topics | Latest Posts

Please login to post a reply.

Magazine Locator

Want the latest issue of Model Engineer or Model Engineers' Workshop? Use our magazine locator links to find your nearest stockist!

Find Model Engineer & Model Engineers' Workshop

Sign up to our Newsletter

Sign up to our newsletter and get a free digital issue.

You can unsubscribe at anytime. View our privacy policy at www.mortons.co.uk/privacy

Latest Forum Posts
Support Our Partners
cowells
Sarik
MERIDIENNE EXHIBITIONS LTD
Subscription Offer

Latest "For Sale" Ads
Latest "Wanted" Ads
Get In Touch!

Do you want to contact the Model Engineer and Model Engineers' Workshop team?

You can contact us by phone, mail or email about the magazines including becoming a contributor, submitting reader's letters or making queries about articles. You can also get in touch about this website, advertising or other general issues.

Click THIS LINK for full contact details.

For subscription issues please see THIS LINK.

Digital Back Issues

Social Media online

'Like' us on Facebook
Follow us on Facebook

Follow us on Twitter
 Twitter Logo

Pin us on Pinterest

 

Donate

donate