Dear Guest,
Please register or login. Content don't create itself!
Thank you
-
Re: Lathe Question

Originally Posted by
mattypichu
This is all nice to know, I was a little bummed at first by some of the responses, but it looks like the little lathe in the right hands can do at least what I was hoping. Anyone ever make a hub? That seems like a neat project, maybe not practical...but that's not always fun.
I've never made a shell but I regularly make axles, endcaps, preload spacers and modify freehub bodies with my ML7. It's a great sized machine for this type of work, although I wish it were metric.
-
Re: Lathe Question

Originally Posted by
Clockwork
WTF? Are you trying to kill yourself?
-
Re: Lathe Question
My 97 year old friend Russel says you can do little things on a big lathe but you can't do big things on a little lathe.
I tend to agree.
5 minutes ago I installed an oil lite bushing I turned from imperial into metric 10 minutes ago on my south bend.........
-
Re: Lathe Question

Originally Posted by
Jacques
WTF? Are you trying to kill yourself?
The fork was surprisingly balanced and at fairly low RPM.
-
Re: Lathe Question
what RPM do you use for fork crowns ?
NBC
-
Re: Lathe Question

Originally Posted by
Clockwork
The fork was surprisingly balanced and at fairly low RPM.
You're an adult and you can make your own decisions about the risks you're willing to take, but it's worth mentioning that this kind of setup would have a person fired imediately at any of the machine shops I've ever set foot in. Maybe nothing will go wrong a hundred times, or even a thousand, but when it does people might die. It happens all the time, guy has two feet of bar stock sticking through the bore unsupported but "don't worry about it", he does it all the time. Start the spindle in the wrong gear and that unsupported bar bends 90* and gets thrown through a cinder block wall.
-
Re: Lathe Question
Equally worth mentioning this is a standard practice in many frame shops that I've been in including some rather largish manufacturers.
-
Re: Lathe Question

Originally Posted by
Jacques
You're an adult and you can make your own decisions about the risks you're willing to take, but it's worth mentioning that this kind of setup would have a person fired imediately at any of the machine shops I've ever set foot in. Maybe nothing will go wrong a hundred times, or even a thousand, but when it does people might die. It happens all the time, guy has two feet of bar stock sticking through the bore unsupported but "don't worry about it", he does it all the time. Start the spindle in the wrong gear and that unsupported bar bends 90* and gets thrown through a cinder block wall.
This is a 1956 lathe. I can't throw a lever and accidentally turn it at 5,000 RPM. It's at 300 RPM and if it were to spin faster I would have to turn a knob many times to even get it twice that. I'm also the only person that uses my shop.
I normally do this before the legs go in but this fork didn't allow for that.
-
Re: Lathe Question
jaques...
stop being a **** and just accept it's common and pretty safe practice doing it this way, people have been doing that for certainly 40 years if not longer
you'd have to be an idiot to stick anything near anything your turning in a lathe ! just use your head.....
NBC
-
Re: Lathe Question
I don't doubt that plenty of people have done it.
But, I'm unfortunately too familiar with the Google image results for "lathe accident" to ever consider doing this myself.
-
Re: Lathe Question

Originally Posted by
NBC
jaques...
stop being a **** and just accept it's common and pretty safe practice doing it this way, people have been doing that for certainly 40 years if not longer
you'd have to be an idiot to stick anything near anything your turning in a lathe ! just use your head.....
NBC
I don't know why you'd think I'm being an ****. For showing concern for someone's safety?
I could tell you a lot of stories of people who've died in industrial accidents, none of whom were idiots, doing things the same way they'd always been done. If you want to take risks, that's your choice.
-
Re: Lathe Question
RPM is critical here - what would be lethal at one speed can be perfectly safe at another. If anyone's bored, they can work it out - get the offset mass of the fork, work out the bending moment on the crown, compare that to the force required to break the steerer.
-
Re: Lathe Question
Keep in mind, past a couple hundred rpm the shutter speed of most phones and digital point and shoots will make it look like it's spinning 10,000.
The slickest lathe/crown race setup I've seen is Curtis Inglis using an expanding collet inside a fork crown before anything is brazed to it.
-
Re: Lathe Question
If you make your own fork crown race seats you don't have to worry about spinning a whole fork in the lathe...
crown race seat small.jpg
crown race seat small parted.jpg
viva la lathe!
-
Re: Lathe Question

Originally Posted by
Jacques
I don't doubt that plenty of people have done it.
But, I'm unfortunately too familiar with the Google image results for "lathe accident" to ever consider doing this myself.
Holy crap! I just did what Jacques suggested and typed "lathe accident" into Google and checked out the images. Horrific! I agree that safe practices should take precedence over traditional work methods. You can be safe for 99 times, but that one time that something goes wrong and you die. That's 1 out of 100 that can and should be prevented.
Here is the problem. It's far easier to use hand tools for facing, chasing threads, etc. Yes, it isn't as good and as precise as doing it on a lathe, but you have to take a machining course just to be able to use a lathe safely. So, you either wing it and do it on your own, or you just do it with hand tools.
-
Re: Lathe Question
It's always a little surprising to me (although it shouldn't be, I guess), that pretty much every time someone posts a technique or something on this or other forums that's been standard practice in the bike industry for a half a century or more, there's always folks that pipe up and tell us how terrible of an idea or practice it is. Sometimes I think that we should all keep this stuff to ourselves and let others figure it out on their own. I am not trying to be a smart aleck or argumentative or etc. I am just being pragmatic. Should every post have a disclaimer, or "don't try this at home" statement, or a dissertation explaining all of the nuances involved that make the practice practical, effective, and not all that dangerous if done properly? IDK...I am starting to think that for many of us its a whole lot easier, and less of a headache, to just go to work, build frames, and keep quiet.
Dave
Last edited by Dave Anderson; 02-24-2014 at 03:12 PM.
-
Re: Lathe Question

Originally Posted by
Dave Anderson
.I am starting to think that for many of us its a whole lot easier, and less of a headache, to just go to work, build frames, and keep quiet.
Dave
i think a lot of folks are on this wavelength too
-
Re: Lathe Question

Originally Posted by
Dave Anderson
I am starting to think that for many of us its a whole lot easier, and less of a headache, to just go to work, build frames, and keep quiet.
This is the double-edged sward of the VSalon....look back to the early threads and see how much information builders / businessmen were willing to talk about but as the audience has grown these discussions have either stopped or been taken offline.
I generally stay out of the wheelbuilding threads because some guy that's built 3 wheels will tell me I'm wrong about something.
-
Re: Lathe Question
I do find myself double-guessing whether to post on here sometimes, for that reason. Though people telling me my way of mitring tubes wouldn't work, when it's been working for years, was funny.
-
Re: Lathe Question

Originally Posted by
Dave Anderson
It's always a little surprising to me (although it shouldn't be, I guess), that pretty much every time someone posts a technique or something on this or other forums that's been standard practice in the bike industry for a half a century or more, there's always folks that pipe up and tell us how terrible of an idea or practice it is. Sometimes I think that we should all keep this stuff to ourselves and let others figure it out on their own. I am not trying to be a smart aleck or argumentative or etc. I am just being pragmatic. Should every post have a disclaimer, or "don't try this at home" statement, or a dissertation explaining all of the nuances involved that make the practice practical, effective, and not all that dangerous if done properly? IDK...I am starting to think that for many of us its a whole lot easier, and less of a headache, to just go to work, build frames, and keep quiet.
Dave
See what happened talking about a steerer replacement 
Back to the forks on the lathe, I assume they weren't put to any high RPM, is it?
"Caron, non ti crucciare:
vuolsi così colà dove si puote
ciò che si vuole, e più non dimandare"
Similar Threads
-
By ericpmoss in forum VSalon HandMade Gallery (non-cycling)
Replies: 10
Last Post: 09-02-2013, 09:13 AM
-
By Coldharbour Bikes in forum The Frame Forum@VSalon
Replies: 8
Last Post: 01-26-2013, 04:29 PM
-
By mjbabcock in forum The Frame Forum@VSalon
Replies: 0
Last Post: 03-08-2011, 10:17 PM
-
By suspectdevice in forum The Frame Forum@VSalon
Replies: 2
Last Post: 02-19-2011, 02:46 PM
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
Bookmarks