When
I do threading on the lathe I'll just back out my bit and run the lathe
in reverse to rest the carriage, so I have no need for a threading dial
and had removed it a while ago. That left a great threaded hole to
mount the scale bracket to. I suppose if you still have the threading
deal there you could always just sandwich the bracket between the apron
and dial. The bracket was easily made from 1/8" 1" aluminum angle. It's a
bit overkill and I'll probably trim it down a little more later, but
it's not really in the way as is.The screws holding the read head in
place use crazy glue as a thread locker, since Loctite will attack
plastics.
The design I ended up with places the scale below the lead screw, so it's fairly well protected from swarf. The mounting for it is quite stiff, so I only have the scale attached at one end. That was particularly helpful since I didn't want to try drilling into the lathe' body at the head since it houses the motor right there.The end of the scale was wrapped in electrical tape to electrically isolate the scale from the lathe.
The cross slide digital scale sits to the right of the cross slide. The
read head is screwed directly to the carriage and the scale's bracket is
connected slide itself. The bracket was made from a non-conducting
composite to electrically isolate the scale. The read head needed 1.5mm
machined off the cover's mating surface to lower below the height of the
cross slide. The read head is secured by two screws to insure it can't
rotate.
The design I ended up with places the scale below the lead screw, so it's fairly well protected from swarf. The mounting for it is quite stiff, so I only have the scale attached at one end. That was particularly helpful since I didn't want to try drilling into the lathe' body at the head since it houses the motor right there.The end of the scale was wrapped in electrical tape to electrically isolate the scale from the lathe.
Carriage scale in place with stock readout connected. Carriage travel at the extreme right of the bed is limited slightly. |
New iGaging scale mounted to cross slide |
Spindle extension with magnet mounted. |
The tach's sensor was mounted to the outside of the lathe's gear cover. I
considered mounting on the inside but space would have been an issue
and it works perfectly well on the outside. I covered the top of the
sensor with epoxy putty to protect it and keep any swarf from shorting
it. If you look closely you can see I've bent the sensor itself up and
away from the spindle to provide a better orientation to the magnet. The
sensor's USB cable is run down the back of the lathe to the Arduino's
case.
Hall effect sensor mounted on gear cover. |
Unlike the mill's Arduino, I constructed this one using a prototype
board. It's much cleaner and easier and I highly recommend it, even
though it added $8 to the build. I used standard USB A connectors for
the scales' interface since both connectors and cables are much easier
to find. This forced me to change the cables on both scales, but that
didn't cost much. The tachometer's plug is also USB to avoid the issue I
had using a 3.5mm headphone jack for the tach on the mill. Everything
was mounted in an old Dell laptop power supply brick's case I had on
hand. Neodymium magnets were glued to the case's top for mounting on the
back of the lathe.
I'm
using a Motorola RAZR phone as the Android device running the TouchDRO
application. Since the lathe only has four readouts (X,Z, diameter, and
tach) the phone is adequate. It's currently mounted with magnets to the
top of the headstock using a bracket I fabricated.
All done. |
Like with the mill, setting up a TouchDRO system has made the lathe a lot easier and nicer to use, and I would hate to ever be without it.
I', getting ready to add X axis DRO and a Tach on my mini lathe. What was the OAL of your DRO? My lathe is a 7" x 14" and the DRO kit I bought is right at 17" end to end on the brackets.
ReplyDeleteMy mini lathe is a 7x12 and the X axis scale is 12".
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