Hello
I ended up with a Taylor chuck in very good condition with three sets of jaws. A rare find.
The history of the Taylor chuck can be found here: https://www.lathes.co.uk/taylor/page6.html .
The back plate wouldn't fit the Denford, so I made one.
Mounting Taylor Chuck
Moderators: Martin, Steve, Mr Magoo
- dazz
- CNC Expert
- Posts: 246
- Joined: Sat 19 Aug , 2006 11:31 am
- Hardware/Software: Viceroy TDS 1/1GB lathe, Imperial, stripped down and rebuilt.
Viceroy Taper/Tracer attachment, Shop made cross slide tracer attachment, VSD. - Location: New Zealand
Mounting Taylor Chuck
- Attachments
-
- Bevel gears drive the scroll plate.
- IMG_0874.JPG (125.99 KiB) Viewed 5724 times
-
- The back plate mounts on the back half of the chuck. The chuck is split along the centre line of the bevel gears. The join line is practically invisible (accurate machining)
- IMG_0873.JPG (125.59 KiB) Viewed 5724 times
-
- The scroll is a dished spiral.
- IMG_0877.JPG (104.74 KiB) Viewed 5724 times
-
- The scroll fits within a reasonably complex casting.
- IMG_0875.JPG (121.55 KiB) Viewed 5724 times
-
- The Taylor chuck is bigger than the standard one, but not too big.
- IMG_0853.JPG (122.87 KiB) Viewed 5724 times
Last edited by dazz on Tue 06 Jul , 2010 11:12 am, edited 2 times in total.
Regards
Dazz
Dazz
- dazz
- CNC Expert
- Posts: 246
- Joined: Sat 19 Aug , 2006 11:31 am
- Hardware/Software: Viceroy TDS 1/1GB lathe, Imperial, stripped down and rebuilt.
Viceroy Taper/Tracer attachment, Shop made cross slide tracer attachment, VSD. - Location: New Zealand
Re: Mounting Taylor Chuck
The back plate was made of cast iron.
I found that slow speed (60rpm) worked best. I found an almost flat HSS tool with very small angle of approach worked very well.
The dust gets into everything. I placed a magnet near the tool cutting edge to trap a lot of dust. I partially stripped the lathe down to clean the dust off (it is very abrasive when mixed with oil.
When I machined the spigot that aligns the back plate to the chuck, I heated the chuck in the oven to about 50 deg C. I machined the spigot on the cold back plate to a close sliding fit. When the chuck cooled, it clamped onto the spigot with just the right amount of grip.
Measured runout of the finished chuck was less than 1/2 thou inch.
I found that slow speed (60rpm) worked best. I found an almost flat HSS tool with very small angle of approach worked very well.
The dust gets into everything. I placed a magnet near the tool cutting edge to trap a lot of dust. I partially stripped the lathe down to clean the dust off (it is very abrasive when mixed with oil.
When I machined the spigot that aligns the back plate to the chuck, I heated the chuck in the oven to about 50 deg C. I machined the spigot on the cold back plate to a close sliding fit. When the chuck cooled, it clamped onto the spigot with just the right amount of grip.
Measured runout of the finished chuck was less than 1/2 thou inch.
- Attachments
-
- I stripped the lathe down to clean of the cast iron dust.
- IMG_0978.JPG (84.71 KiB) Viewed 5723 times
-
- Back plate made and mounted.
- IMG_0979.JPG (84.62 KiB) Viewed 5723 times
-
- The finished work.
- IMG_0977.JPG (123.57 KiB) Viewed 5723 times
Regards
Dazz
Dazz