Lathe Care

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PaulDoug

Member
Joined
Mar 2, 2008
Messages
3,488
Location
Benton City, WA.
I am really trying hard to take good care of my lathe. Probably the last one I will ever have. Other than keeping it clean, what else can a person do. I live in dry country so the only rust I have to worry about is from wet sanding. I cover the rails with plastic when I do that and I wax them about every 2 weeks. I've been using Johnson's wax for that. One of the best for table saw tops. Any thing else I should be doing on a regular bases and not so regular also?
 
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A couple of other things is to watch your bearings and belts... they should last quite a while, but keeping an eye on the won't hurt. And if you are like me and use your tail stock a lot for drilling, watch the spindle bolt and the way it runs in and out... on my little lathe I've managed to "machine" the threads off the bolt a couple of times because I was actually misusing the tail stock... on my larger lathe the bolt is much heavier and not as prone to the "machining" problem. I do some pretty heavy drilling when I do lots of peppermills.
 
Make sure that you also clean out the headstock and tailstock where the mandrel mounts and the center mounts. They can get gummy. CraftUSA carries a tool called a taper mate. I bought one and the first time I used it I was amazed by the amount of debris that came out of both areas. I now also run a rag with some denatured alcohol on it and the area stays clean and tools mount much better and stay in round.
 
You are to be complimented for being so proactive with lathe care. My shop is in a high humidity environment. I wax the rails only about two times a year and that has proven sufficient. Ditto what others have said. But, I'll add: don't pound on head/tail stocks. Anything more than gentle tapping is abusive to the bearings.
 
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