Glad that you can now get back to turning. Sure ate up those threads.
It is early in the morning (well for a retired person it is early), breakfast (oatmeal) finished, coffee is brewing, dishes after checking in with IAP and then out to the workshop with my new tail stock. Yesterday I tried to drill 1/4" and it would not move. I had glued the wrong tubes into .30/-6 bullets and now need to drill them back out. Had to quit.
I am wondering if using the lathe as a drill into brass is too much for it? That may be what tore up the threads.
thanks Cindy, you're a bud.
Yeah Jgrden, I think you got the answer to the problem.
I don't recall what lathe you have but, wood-lathes tails stocks are not made for drilling, particularly into hard materials. A few a the better quality wood-lathes would probably accept that type of work better. not because they were made for it but because the quality of the materials and the tolerance in threads and similar are of superior quality and people get away with it.
Something has to wear and in your case the tailstock shaft is (was) softer than the housing and I bet the first few threads of the housing will have some signs of wear, after all it did "grind" completely the old shaft...!
Any metal lathe would be more suitable for that sort of work and you may have to consider a small one of those for your penturning, it would also open a few other opportunities to you...!
Anyway, one thing is for sure, you certainly do a lot of drilling of that lathe...!!!:wink::biggrin:
I reckon, if you got the shaft replace under warranty, you are a lucky chap...!:wink:
Cheers
George