This page is a repository for all the links in Jacques Maurel's article on the Filengrène Gear Software.
Matt Shaw made a lathe spindle stop for his Boxford lathe, but like Topsy it just kept growing!
Andy Johnston explains how to get inside one of these top quality lathe chucks. This article first appeared in MEW Issue 315.
Download an STL file to print seals on your 3D printer, or the Alibre Atom3D files to modify the design to suit another machine:
This Drill Size Chart appeared in Issue 230 of Model Engineers Workshop. Thanks to Michael Belfer for supplying this scan.
By popular demand, here are downloadable versions of the MEW Drill Size Chart.
The following note and accompanying table appeared in Model Engineers' Workshop Issue 292, April 2020.
Peter Gabelish got in touch after reader Andre Rousseau told him about our Apollo cover last year, he passed on this remarkable story and photograph.
Richard Ganderton's article from Model Engineer, 1st November 1974 describing his own approach to the Myford Wide Guide conversion.
Look at almost any modern hobby lathe, and you will see that it is fitted with a square block toolpost, capable of holding four tools. In practice, you can usually tell anyone who has tried to run their lathe with four tools fitted by the plasters on their hands! Dave Lammas came up with a simple and elegant solution – the three way toolpost, a design that doesn’t leave you with a tool pointing straight out at the lathe operator. Dave Lammas was a prolific writer in Model Engineer and Model Engineers’ Workshop, covering subjects ranging from quirky models to an advanced hardness tester. The three-way toolpost originally appeared in ME in 1985, and the design was so effective it became really popular and universally known as the ‘Lammas Toolpost’, and can be made in a size to suit any lathe. In 1995 a posthumous article in MEW introduced the idea to MEW readers. It’s possible to carve one out of a solid block of steel or cast iron, but three sizes of casting are available from Blackgates Engineering that make machining a relatively straightforward exercise. -Neil Wyatt Subscribers Only
This reprint is of a series featured in Model Engineer from July 1976 to January 1981.
Chris Gill describes two phone apps he has created to help in the home workshop. The apps are designed to run on the phone operating systems (Android, Windows) or in a standard desktop browser. The apps are Geometry, which handles several calculations in plane geometry and MetalBender, which makes calculations for using a bending brake.
This free plan designed by Neil Wyatt first appeared in MEW 239, March 2016. It has been 3D modelled in Alibre Atom3D for us by Alibre.
This article by Chris Farnell first appeared in 'Maker World' magazine. Apologies for the radical header photo! Let's hope it's lead-free solder, eh?
This horizontal milling attachment by J. Neave is designed to overcome the shortcomings of running a milling arbour between centres. The design used two castings but these could be replaced by triangular blocks of suitable material.
This design by Bill Morris is an excellent test of your skill in working to tight tolerances.
Here is a very useful table of different wire gauge systems.
Featured in MEW 258 and following issues, this ingenious attachment allows both ordinary spur gears and helical gears to be made on a Myford lathe.
Download the Arduino Sketch for Silly Old Duffers's article on a Torsion Dynamometer in MEW 250 /255 using the link below.
Rhys Owen is a volunteer on this French preserved railway.
Duncan Webster and Paul Middlehurst co-operatively create a useful device.
A preview by Steve Eaton.
Keith Wraight weighs things up at Colchester.
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