Kram
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I dont think Id want a 9" to be spinning much faster!other stuff like a 2000w angle grinder which only ran at 6000rpm
I dont think Id want a 9" to be spinning much faster!other stuff like a 2000w angle grinder which only ran at 6000rpm
That’s the third time I’ve seen those lathes. Mrs79 has been after a wood lathe for a while. All the feedback on turning forums and gaztube suggests that they are satanic contraptions ready to de limb the operator Not a single positive thing about them so I’ve left alone. She is not insured
Yep. Here's a confirmatory blog, who I only started following when I noticed his photos were hosted on Stochastic Geometry.
Lidl Parkside Lathe, part fin
So I was tidying up after the last bit of turning and was planning on starting into routing the lathe dust collection host across the ceiling and into the cyclone lid I’ll be making using a r…www.stochasticgeometry.ie
(Anybody else remember the Desmond Bagley book where our hero spews out the word "stochastic"? )
‘I invented an automatic decoder,’ said Denison. A barrier broke in his mind and a wave of panic and terror swept over him. He felt sweat trickle down his chest and then deliberately pushed the panic back where it had come from—but he retained the words that had come with it.
‘It’s a stochastic process,’ he said, not even knowing what the word meant. ‘A development of the Monte Carlo method. The Russian output is repeatedly sampled and put through a series of transformations at random. Each transformation is compared with a store held in a computer memory—if a match is made a tree branching takes place leading to a further set of transformations. There are a lot of dead ends and it needs a big, fast computer—very powerful.’
The sweat poured off him. He had not understood a word of what he had said.
Careful with the nuts/bolts - usually only grade 4.8 from such places - slightly better than a month old lump of mature cheddar in terms of strength.I also went in Lidl, they had the trim clips, inverter welder, a lathe (presumably for wood) and a load of other stuff like a 2000w angle grinder which only ran at 6000rpm, which seemed low. Came away with a box of mixed nuts, as I'm starting to use metric stuff a bit more now.
That's a lot in the boot of an MX5 and I'm sure it wont stop the rust
Reminds me of the TurboEncabulator.
Hmmm, never thought of using a boring head to offset a tailstock. But then I've never seen it difficult to set it back to wherever it needs to be to machine true in my very worn Triumph...... a bit of stuff that doesn't know yet that a lot of it will soon be turned into chips:
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And then there came an alu-case with some weight my way:
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containing this:
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Those who have been paying attention know that I have a very serious boring head with MT3 for my Arboga; this one - of far more moderate quality caliber - in MT2 fits on the small Myford and is there to help in the future in its very own way.
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I've learned that to intentionally turn a taper, you don't necessarily have to de-adjust the tailstock - getting that back in line I find quite annoying - you can also just use a boring head in the tailstock to make the lateral offset finely adjustable without disturbing the base-adjustment of the tailstock.
If one needs then also still flatter cones, more than between two tips are to be manufactured safely. one can turn also between balls, if one made itself some appropriate holding stumps - therefore also some steel balls:
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Happy Saturday night
Carsten
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It was a bugger on the mini-lathe, so I've always used the boring head trick. I've never adjusted the M250's tailstock (as I've just carried on using the boring head as it works & is easy to adjust), so I don't know how hard the tailstock adjustment is.Hmmm, never thought of using a boring head to offset a tailstock. But then I've never seen it difficult to set it back to wherever it needs to be to machine true in my very worn Triumph...
Make whip & tops for the kids , cord pull knobs , door wedge/stops , new matching knobs for every drawer in the house save the wife's , spindles for a spinners wheel , bobbins , new toilet roll hollder bar spring loaded insert , A finial for all well made bird tables , wooden plugs for rubber tubes . spells for chairs and chair legs , bungs for storage jars , square cubes for big 4 " x 4 " dice , split mouldings for clocks cases & cabinets drawing instruments , music rulers ., Skittles for the pub bowling team , chess sets , Bagatelle sets wooden bowl for rthe skittles guys . Hammer handles ....a bit more advanced by now ,Years ago (Before I got into metalwork and proper lathes ) I had a Sip wood lathe, totally identical to the Aldi ones, it was crap. I wouldn't say it was dangerous but it was awful to use, I don't have a nice thing to say about it, other than I sold it for more than I paid (And I bought it new ).
Wood lathes are rubbish anyway, one you've filled your house with fruit bowls, what do you do with it?
I seem to remember hearing that the Lidl (parkside) battery’s were the same but I tried one and it didn’t fit. Graham.That looks suspiciously like Milwaukee! I wonder if the batteries would fit?
Good haul there
This afternoon Liverpool police are looking for the person who recently acquired a set of red & black battery powered tools ...namely a reciprocating saw , an electric screwdriver , a variable torque drill , an angle grinder & a jigsaw all with matching chargers & batteries .Talking to my son in law today and I was telling him my impact driver was broken, half an hour later he turned up with this lot. I know he’s got all Milwaukee stuff but I was absolutely delighted with this some of it hasn’t even been used. Graham.
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Oh, I didn't realise it was anything other than a normal 4.5" grinder. It did seem quite a big box, now I think about it.I dont think Id want a 9" to be spinning much faster!