Santa brought a mini lathe to the La Londe household. Unfortunately the fat
bastidge didn't bring any tooling. Wanting desperately to play with the new
toy I cleaned all the grease off today and then began to think about
different things I might use as a cutter. I can tell you definitively and
with authority that a stainless steel bolt is harder than a cheap cold
chisel. LOL.
HOWEVER, a broken 3/8 HSS end mill can be turned into a crude mill bit by
liberal free hand application of a bench grinder and quenching periodically
in oil as it takes shape. I then proceeded to turn a perfectly good 2
dollar bolt into 10� worth of scrap stainless. I managed to turn the head
into a nice cylinder, and even face the end square to the sides before my
home made cutter got too dull because I pushed it too fast. OOooh! AAaaah!
So what was the first thing you ever turned on a metal lathe?
I have used a wood lathe to duplicate spindles and made dowels in my drill
press in a pinch, but that was a whole different experience. I am entirely
too satisfied with myself.
Congratulations, Bob! A useful thing turned into a little useless thing is
the first project most of us make. d8-)
Have fun. Make a bushing now that the useless cylinder fits into. Then
you'll have two useless things that fit together. That's when it really gets
satisfying.
--
Ed Huntress
>I am entirely
>too satisfied with myself.
I don't think so. <G>
> Ok, I am ridiculously satisfied with myself at the moment. I took a
> perfectly good stainless steel bolt and turned it into a worthless example
> of Vise Grip activity.
Fun ain't it? :)
>
> Santa brought a mini lathe to the La Londe household. Unfortunately the fat
> bastidge didn't bring any tooling. Wanting desperately to play with the new
> toy I cleaned all the grease off today and then began to think about
> different things I might use as a cutter. I can tell you definitively and
> with authority that a stainless steel bolt is harder than a cheap cold
> chisel. LOL.
>
> HOWEVER, a broken 3/8 HSS end mill can be turned into a crude mill bit by
> liberal free hand application of a bench grinder and quenching periodically
> in oil as it takes shape. I then proceeded to turn a perfectly good 2
> dollar bolt into 10� worth of scrap stainless. I managed to turn the head
> into a nice cylinder, and even face the end square to the sides before my
> home made cutter got too dull because I pushed it too fast. OOooh! AAaaah!
>
> So what was the first thing you ever turned on a metal lathe?
A solid bronze .30 caliber boat tail spire point bullet, for no good
reason, no good reason at all.
> Ok, I am ridiculously satisfied with myself at the moment. I took a
> perfectly good stainless steel bolt and turned it into a worthless
> example of Vise Grip activity.
>
> Santa brought a mini lathe to the La Londe household. Unfortunately the
> fat bastidge didn't bring any tooling. Wanting desperately to play with
> the new toy I cleaned all the grease off today and then began to think
> about different things I might use as a cutter. I can tell you
> definitively and with authority that a stainless steel bolt is harder
> than a cheap cold chisel. LOL.
>
> HOWEVER, a broken 3/8 HSS end mill can be turned into a crude mill bit
> by liberal free hand application of a bench grinder and quenching
> periodically in oil as it takes shape. I then proceeded to turn a
> perfectly good 2 dollar bolt into 10� worth of scrap stainless. I
> managed to turn the head into a nice cylinder, and even face the end
> square to the sides before my home made cutter got too dull because I
> pushed it too fast. OOooh! AAaaah!
>
> So what was the first thing you ever turned on a metal lathe?
I'm pretty certain it was the turned and knurled handle of this little
hammer which I made in my Junior High School metal shop class. That must
have been about 60 years ago.
http://home.comcast.net/~jwisnia18/temp/hammer1.jpg
I've still got it...
That was about the same time I learned (the hard way) not to wear a shop
coat with sleeves when working around a lathe, particularly when using a
lathe dog to drive the work and using a file to smooth it. Fortunately,
the sleeve tore off without taking my arm with it.
And that's why this "Bull Of The Woods" cartoon remains my favorite:
http://home.comcast.net/~jwisnia18/temp/BW001.jpg
Jeff
--
Jeffry Wisnia
(W1BSV + Brass Rat '57 EE)
The speed of light is 1.8*10e12 furlongs per fortnight.
> So what was the first thing you ever turned on a metal lathe?
>
I remember very well the first thing I turned. After 25+ years, it
still sits on my desk. My first lathe was a very used SB9, with a 3
jaw, tail stock drill chuck, latern tool post and several 1/4" tool
bits. I had little to no stock at the time, so I cut off a 4in. piece
of 1 1/2 inch very rusty, very pitted round stock. I chucked it and
got the first inch turned down to shiny steel. Then faced it and
drilled it out some.
Was it useful? Well, it sits there and reminds me of my humble
beginings in the metal hobby. It also holds a couple of pens or
pencils. And it is sometimes a conversation piece. A non-machinist,
after being told what it is, will usually say: oh. A machinist-type
guy will say: OH!!!!!! Do you mind if I look at it. Yea, it has some
use.
I went on to make many enjoyable projects and repairs from there.
Bill.
Bill.
Since I started using a lathe when about 8 years old and am 66 now, can not
remember the first thing I turned, but I do remember turning a bunch of
cannons. Using 1.5" Round stock, making them look like a cannon, boring out
to 5/16" so the 5/16 Ball bearings we had would work, and making a breech
lock out of a large bolt. The bolt would take a firecracker, or gunpowder
and a JetX fuse for propellent. Worked very well. Wonder what happened to
them.
The first thing I tried turning on a lathe got confiscated by my high
school shop teacher. He didn't buy my explaination that I was just
trying to see what all a lathe could do. All I had left was a little
bit more turning and the addition of a screen. ;-) I sure am glad I
survived the 70's.
My dad owned a major machine shop. And he liked guns also.
> So what was the first thing you ever turned on a metal lathe?
In my case -- I took a 1/4-28 slotted head machine screw, and
turned it to serve as an anvil for supporting a certain style of turret
terminal while it was being crimped into a PC board. (This after first
using a rather frightening (to a newbie) solenoid operated one with
commercial anvil and punch. I had never used a lathe before, and this
was a small South Bend in the electronics shop where I worked, so I took
advantage of its presence and the absence of anyone else to try my hand
at it.
Enjoy,
DoN.
--
Email: <dnic...@d-and-d.com> | Voice (all times): (703) 938-4564
(too) near Washington D.C. | http://www.d-and-d.com/dnichols/DoN.html
--- Black Holes are where God is dividing by zero ---
Where do you put the screen in a gun?
Oh!
In my high school people kept trying to make those in art class during the
section on ceramics. LOL.
<snip>
>> I have used a wood lathe to duplicate spindles and made dowels in my
>> drill press in a pinch, but that was a whole different experience. I am
>> entirely too satisfied with myself.
>
> Congratulations, Bob! A useful thing turned into a little useless thing is
> the first project most of us make. d8-)
>
> Have fun. Make a bushing now that the useless cylinder fits into. Then
> you'll have two useless things that fit together. That's when it really
> gets satisfying.
>
I started with the bushings - to fit the knobs on the tailstock of the said
lathe...
--
Michael Koblic
Campbell River, BC
>
>So what was the first thing you ever turned on a metal lathe?
If memory serves I drilled a piece of 1/8" plastic for a bolt, mounted
it in the physics prof's Unimat, and turned a disk that was then used
to make an eyepiece (I was really big into telescopes at the time.)
Later I got brave and tried the South Bend that was in the corner of
that basement room. Never understood why it stopped so easily when
cutting, at first. Then I learned about the relationship between the
little pin, the bull gear, and the pulley. Worked a LOT better with
the pin engaged... :-)
Terry
--
Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
www.lds.org
.
"Jesse" <jr...@rochester.rr.com> wrote in message
news:3411ca4b-f0db-460b...@m25g2000yqc.googlegroups.com...
The first thing I tried turning on a lathe got confiscated
--
Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
www.lds.org
.
"Bob La Londe" <nos...@nospam.no> wrote in message
news:hhbv9s$913$1...@news.eternal-september.org...
--
Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
www.lds.org
.
"Bill McKee" <bmckee...@ix.netcom.com> wrote in message
news:WOOdnZZt_M1jO6fW...@earthlink.com...
In the mid 1950's when my brother was in high school, a kid made all of a
revolver except the cylinder. Teacher asked about it, and said you can not
do that here. Called in the kids dad and gave him all the parts and
instructions on how to finish it.
Could be. Maxi zip gun.
>So what was the first thing you ever turned on a metal lathe?
Likely pins for a copy of a kant twist clamp I made.
http://www.garage-machinist.com/projects/Kant_twist.jpg
Wes
--
"Additionally as a security officer, I carry a gun to protect
government officials but my life isn't worth protecting at home
in their eyes." Dick Anthony Heller