bill ellis | 02/05/2019 16:00:46 |
71 forum posts 2 photos |
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David George 1 | 02/05/2019 16:30:48 |
![]() 2110 forum posts 565 photos | Nice looking mill looks like you have worked well on it. It just needs some work to do. Hope it keeps going and keeps producing parts for a long time. David |
Colin Heseltine | 02/05/2019 18:27:04 |
744 forum posts 375 photos | Very Nice. I have just installed a Gate PBM-2000 which is a Bridgeport copy. Perhaps I had better make some covers for the table. Neat idea for the drill chucks etc on the side of the knee. My main power panel is located in that spot. Colin |
Ian Skeldon 2 | 02/05/2019 18:35:01 |
543 forum posts 54 photos | Nice mill well done, I hope it serves you well. Ian |
Mick B1 | 02/05/2019 19:48:07 |
2444 forum posts 139 photos | Nice job, but I can still see the bottom of the suds tray. That's wrong. Please fill it with swarf directly... |
Mark Gould 1 | 09/06/2019 08:55:59 |
231 forum posts 131 photos | I am green with envy. That Bridgeport looks fantastic. I would love to own one, one day. Enjoy! |
Clive Foster | 09/06/2019 12:08:28 |
3630 forum posts 128 photos | Nice job. Done quickly too. Way covers are great but one piece ones can be restrictive. I made mine as 4" (approximately) fold up sections from offcuts of the plastic shower wall / ceiling panels sold by the likes of IPSL et at. Simple tape hinges. Loads of stock so throwaway when they get tatty (must do some more!). But I have two vices and often work direct off the table so a bit of flexibility in the cover system saves a lot of cleaning down. Re the shower wall / ceiling panels. Ace in the kitchen as they are wipe clean, I like them everywhere else in the house but the finish and patterns might not be to everyones taste. Great cover-uppers for a "getting old, needs to come down ceiling". Saw to length, hook the tongue in the groove and bang-bang-bang with the staple gun beats the heck out of mega-mess from pulling a 70 year old ceiling down! Stained wood moulding glued round the edge finishes the joint to the wall nicely. Clive |
bill ellis | 09/06/2019 13:54:35 |
71 forum posts 2 photos | Hi all, Many thanks for the nice comments. The way cover is made from a sheet of rubber tread material (off cut from the well deck on my boat) and is fixed at the top by a T shaped bracket made from 3mm alloy plate. This plate is fixed using the existing bolt which acts as a stop for the Z axis upward travel. The bottom end is fixed using the existing rear saddle wiper cover. So no new drillings required to fit and it allows the Y axis to travel back as far as the vice allows. I'm happy with the amount of travel as I'm just in the process of fitting a 3 axis DRO and would have needed to limit rearward travel to stop the scale on the back of the table getting squashed. I will use a wider piece of material to shield the Z axis scale allowing the reader head to mount on the knee and thus leaving clearance for the oil port. Most people seem to turn the scale with the head to the rear and use convoluted bracketry to move the head, or mount the scale on the knee, all to ensure that swarf does not enter the scale (i.e. have the gap facing to the rear). I think preventing swarf getting anywhere near the scale is a better option. I've experimented with fly cutters, face mills, drills and mills on steel, alloy, brass and cast and I'm certain I can stop unwanted bits getting where they are not wanted. Clive, If you meant the table cover (which I'm sure you did |
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