North Idaho Wolfman
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Equipment
L3450DT-GST, Woods FEL, B7100 HSD, FEL, 60" SB, 743 Bobcat with V2203, and more
I actually have three. A 12 x 36 Craftsman/Atlas bench lathe, a 15 x 60 Enco, and a 27 x 120 Lehmann. I was thinking maybe we should start a thread, something like 'Show us your shop and equipment', and I'll post some pictures when I get it looking respectable. Go ahead and start it, Lil Foot, I know you have a lathe too!Very nice. Out of curiosity, what lathe do you have?
Yooper, that is fine work! I really like the five dowels. Makes me think of the time I popped all the heads off the flywheel bolts of a race engine (over rev) and the dowels held everything in place long enough to shut down. Flywheel and crank were toast but, I walked away.
With this design the bolts provide load/friction between the flange and flywheel that will transfer torque and the dowels will also lock the flange and flywheel together providing a redundant system. Again great work! Jeff
Thanks fellas for the compliments! At the risk of sounding arrogant, I like what I see too!That looks excellent!
Thanks coach! You could say my life is in balance right now!There is a time to build.. and a time to destroy
Looks great.
Excellent idea, been thinking the same thing myself- but give me a few days. I'm in the middle of moving equipment/wiring/re-arranging my shop to make room for my latest acquisition- I'm replacing the 9x20 lathe with a 12x36.I was thinking maybe we should start a thread, something like 'Show us your shop and equipment
The fellow I stared my build with on this bike; beside being an Adventure Motorcylist, is very heavy into 4x4 stuff. His stuff (eventually settling into mostly Isuzu based rigs) is amazing. On Expedition Portal he's got a thread going on a steerable trailer for intricate offroading he built.Great job, looks fantastic.
I've only got one lathe, a 17x60. I do 4x4 off road truck (rock crawler) stuff...
Russ, please post pictures when Lil Foot gets the thread started. I would love to see them!Great job, looks fantastic.
I've only got one lathe, a 17x60. I do 4x4 off road truck (rock crawler) stuff, and wanted to be able to do everything I need with one lathe, so I made sure it supported a broad range. Over 2k rpm max, 7.5 HP, full range of metric and imperial threading at the flip of a lever, 5" of both compound and tail stock travel (something I routinely ran out of on my old lathe), collets up to 15" 4 jaw work holding range, and almost finished fitting a hydraulic tracer if I can ever get back to working in the shop after finally giving in and having both knees replaced this summer. Other than that, typical Bridgeport 2J, surface grinder, a range of drill presses, a range of belt grinders from a 1" Rockwell up to Porter Cable G8, Blue welders from MM175 up to Syncro 350, plasma cutter, full range of benders, and so on. Also about half way through putting together a medium sized forge. And decent wood capability as well.
Thanks Skeets!I havent got a clue about what you did or how you did it, but by GAWD it looks pruttery,,
It a pleasure to see something a man that knows what he is doing, has made something from nothing so to speak, and to be that detailed and perfect. I have nothing but respect for all you guys that can do things like that!!!
After all I've seen you machine, I can't believe that anything would be a challenge for you. Your machining skills are incredible.Test fitting all the parts. Only thing left is to cut the keyway on the output shaft. This will be a challenge!
Well, I appreciate your confidence in me. The challenge is the long carbide end mill that I have to use to mill the keyway up to the flange. Not a lot of rigidity with a 1/4" end mill sticking out approximately 3". My depth of cut will probably be only .010" per pass, and I will feed it by hand. Looking forward to the challenge!After all I've seen you machine, I can't believe that anything would be a challenge for you. Your machining skills are incredible.
Can you do it with a woodruff cutter held in a nice solid extension?The challenge is the long carbide end mill that I have to use to mill the keyway
That was my first thought because I do have a cutter. A machinist friend of mine talked me into the end mill way instead. Guarantees it will work if the end mill is sharp.Can you do it with a woodruff cutter held in a nice solid extension?
Like this: (except on the mill instead of lathe)
Unfortunately, I don't have one. If one comes along at the right price, I will have one.Good job for a slotter. An E head has up to 4" stroke, and you have essentially unlimited stroke if you do it with a boring bar on the lathe.