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Choosing & Using the Right Metal Shop Lathe

Choosing & Using the Right Metal Shop Lathe

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  • Condition: Brand new
  • UK Delivery times: Usually arrives within 2 - 3 working days
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Investing in a new metalworking lathe is a big step for any shop, but it's important to know what else you'll need to get useful work from the machine. Choosing & Using the Right Metal Shop Lathe is an essential source of information for lathe buyers and users, covering topics such as standard equipment, cutting oils, cutting speeds, and easier-to-machine materials. It also includes chapters on building a tailstock drill press, a special toolpost for easy screw cutting, and a precision grinder for lathe tools.

Format: Paperback / softback
Length: 336 pages
Publication date: 28 June 2022
Publisher: Industrial Press Inc.,U.S.


Investing in a new metalworking lathe is a significant step for any shop, especially home shops, where there is usually no one around to help. Once the lathe is up and running, you should theoretically be able to make the special items you previously did without (or paid through the nose for), such as shafts, plain, tapered, or threaded discs, bearings, and so on. But if you are new to this, you will want to know a lot more than you can learn from the salesman or the manual. Does the lathe really match your needs, and if so, how much? Choosing & Using the Right Metal Shop Lathe is an essential source of information for lathe buyers and users at every level, from mini-size tabletops up to industrial machines weighing half a ton or more. It answers the question of what else you will need to get useful work from the machine. For instance, what comes as "standard equipment" with the lathe? Most include a chuck (usually a 4-jaw independent, not the self-centering 3-jaw you will want to use most of the time), maybe a faceplate (rarely used), and a 4-way toolholder you will probably swap right away for a more sensible design. Never included is a tailstock drill chuck, an essential accessory you will need from day one—and the same goes for actual cutting tools. Almost certainly, there won't be a digital readout (DRO), which used to be regarded as a "maybe-someday" luxury—but not anymore. The work talks about cutting oils, cutting speeds, and easier-to-machine materials, and it cautions against buying sets of anything, vs. buying the one accessory you will truly need. Finally, there are chapters on building a tailstock drill press, a special toolpost for easy screw cutting, and a precision grinder for lathe tools that can be made from oddments of material in a couple of days or less.


Key Features:


  • Investing in a new metalworking lathe is a significant step for any shop, especially home shops, where there is usually no one around to help.

  • Once the lathe is up and running, you should theoretically be able to make the special items you previously did without (or paid through the nose for), such as shafts, plain, tapered, or threaded discs, bearings, and so on.

  • But if you are new to this, you will want to know a lot more than you can learn from the salesman or the manual.

  • Does the lathe really match your needs, and if so, how much?

  • Choosing & Using the Right Metal Shop Lathe is an essential source of information for lathe buyers and users at every level, from mini-size tabletops up to industrial machines weighing half a ton or more.

  • It answers the question of what else you will need to get useful work from the machine.

  • For instance, what comes as "standard equipment" with the lathe? Most include a chuck (usually a 4-jaw independent, not the self-centering 3-jaw you will want to use most of the time), maybe a faceplate (rarely used), and a 4-way toolholder you will probably swap right away for a more sensible design.

  • Never included is a tailstock drill chuck, an essential accessory you will need from day one—and the same goes for actual cutting tools.

  • Almost certainly, there won't be a digital readout (DRO), which used to be regarded as a "maybe-someday" luxury—but not anymore.

  • The work talks about cutting oils, cutting speeds, and easier-to-machine materials, and it cautions against buying sets of anything, vs. buying the one accessory you will truly need.

  • Finally, there are chapters on building a tailstock drill press, a special toolpost for easy screw cutting, and a precision grinder for lathe tools that can be made from oddments of material in a couple of days or less.



Dimension: 229 x 152 (mm)
ISBN-13: 9780831136819

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