BW | 03/02/2019 07:56:18 |
249 forum posts 40 photos | What would you use this for please ? Am puzzled. https://www.chronos.ltd.uk/cgi-bin/sh000001.pl?WD=rotary%20table&PN=SCT-Rotary-Tables%2ehtml#a40314002A Bill Edited By JasonB on 03/02/2019 08:04:49 |
Brian G | 03/02/2019 08:37:34 |
912 forum posts 40 photos | A cross slide on top of a rotary table would simplify milling a rectangular object with rounded corners or perhaps a flycrank as a single operation (rotate around one centre, traverse, rotate around the other centre, traverse). I had been considering making a slide to fit my rotary table for this very reason. You could also make a slot with rounded ends whose radius didn't match any of your cutters. On the other hand I have no idea what you could do with the other version that has a rotary table on top of a cross slide that you couldn't do with a rotary table on a milling machine. It might be useful as as a vertical slide on a lathe, or at some other angle on a sine bar? Brian |
Jeff Dayman | 03/02/2019 08:38:15 |
2356 forum posts 47 photos | Quite handy for connecting rods and other linkage parts, for rounding ends and transitioning to side profiling without setting up again. Also deals with any setups where people make top sub-plates for work holding on their rotary tables. Will take up a lot of Z height though, if the mill is on the small side in Z already. A bit beyond my budget though. |
Michael Gilligan | 03/02/2019 08:48:20 |
![]() 23121 forum posts 1360 photos | Bill Have a look at the BCA pages on lathes.co.uk ... or the description of any horological style mill/jig-borer It should soon become apparent what this contraption is attempting to emulate. MichaelG. . https://www.chronos.ltd.uk/wp-content/uploads/taspecs.jpg Edited By Michael Gilligan on 03/02/2019 08:59:13 |
IanT | 03/02/2019 09:35:38 |
2147 forum posts 222 photos | This is about the best explanation I've seen - covers the essential details... https://rick.sparber.org/rtcs.pdf Regards, IanT |
John Haine | 03/02/2019 09:48:35 |
5563 forum posts 322 photos | Looks good on a shelf? Funny that the dimensioned drawing seems to show a machine vice rather than a coordinate table, but 6 inches height? and by the time you've added some clamps on the table you've run out of space for any but small parts, or you add a vice and lose more height!! Silly idea IMHO - most parts are dimensioned relative to orthogonal XY coordinates, but with this the coordinates rotate! |
JasonB | 03/02/2019 10:16:03 |
![]() 25215 forum posts 3105 photos 1 articles | Posted by Michael Gilligan on 03/02/2019 08:48:20:
It should soon become apparent what this contraption is attempting to emulate. MichaelG. . The one in question is the opposite way round to the BCA substitute - RT under the cross slides |
Michael Gilligan | 03/02/2019 10:16:40 |
![]() 23121 forum posts 1360 photos | Posted by John Haine on 03/02/2019 09:48:35:
Funny that the dimensioned drawing seems to show a machine vice .
MichaelG. |
Michael Gilligan | 03/02/2019 10:18:00 |
![]() 23121 forum posts 1360 photos | Posted by JasonB on 03/02/2019 10:16:03:
Posted by Michael Gilligan on 03/02/2019 08:48:20:
It should soon become apparent what this contraption is attempting to emulate. MichaelG. . The one in question is the opposite way round to the BCA substitute - RT under the cross slides . But the one I linked [previously mentioned in Brian G's post] isn't !! MichaelG. . P.S. ... for the reason of understanding the usage; does it really matter in what order the axes are stacked ? Edited By Michael Gilligan on 03/02/2019 10:36:34 |
not done it yet | 03/02/2019 10:34:38 |
7517 forum posts 20 photos | All it needs is a tilting vice under, or on, it and most angles could be covered! As well as using up even more vertical work space. |
Brian G | 03/02/2019 10:41:24 |
912 forum posts 40 photos | To be fair to the device, I had only considered milling. Used with a rigid pillar drill (i.e. not my one), the second type could be a useful substitute for a jig borer. A tiny version would go nicely with our recently acquired Proxxon drill - the one in the link appears to be bigger than either the drill or my budget Brian |
Michael Gilligan | 03/02/2019 10:50:27 |
![]() 23121 forum posts 1360 photos | Posted by IanT on 03/02/2019 09:35:38:
This is about the best explanation I've seen - covers the essential details... https://rick.sparber.org/rtcs.pdf . Nice find, Ian **LINK** for convenience. MichaelG. |
John MC | 03/02/2019 11:47:31 |
![]() 464 forum posts 72 photos | I have a Pollard Corona drill that has an X-Y table with an old Ortec DRO fitted, bolted permanently to the work table. Extremely useful, with a trued up vice and an edge finder I rarely mark out before drilling now. If the X -Y+rotary table had more travel I think I would buy one to extend the versitality of the set up I have described. John |
Chris Trice | 03/02/2019 11:50:35 |
![]() 1376 forum posts 10 photos | The SCT version lower down on the same Chronos page has an embarrassingly off centre tee slot for an advertising photo. |
Paul H 1 | 03/02/2019 13:47:46 |
37 forum posts | Thank you for the link. Taking a look at the https://rick.sparber.org site reveals lots of other interesting stuff to look at. He has a lot on building the Gingery Shaper for instance. |
IanT | 03/02/2019 14:34:18 |
2147 forum posts 222 photos | Yes Paul - there is a ton of stuff on Ricks' site (which might not be too obvious on first sight) - and it's very well worth a browse. I first "found" him when looking for a 'Shaper' vice - he has some interesting ideas in this area - and many other topics. Regards, IanT |
Mike E. | 03/02/2019 15:01:25 |
![]() 217 forum posts 24 photos | I have a Palmgren rotary table with the x & y cross slides. When I was young, all I had was a drill press, and paired with the x/y rotary table served me admirably for light milling and making custom spool hubs for the chopped bikes I worked on back in the early 1970's. Would have loved to have had a mill back then. |
BW | 04/02/2019 09:39:16 |
249 forum posts 40 photos | Thanks for all the info.
Bill |
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