railrider1920
Member
Hi everyone,
I still haven't gotten myself a decent lathe yet. I'm really hoping to get one when the tax return get here. Anyway, I have done a few things to the crappy HF lathe that I have to be able to turn a few pens. Just nothing that I want to show off, at least right now. The tailstock is a mess. Very sloppy side to side. I cut a piece of plastic to fit between the rails and bolted it to the tailstock. That, for the most part, took care of that. You can see it in the bottom right of the last picture.
I had a threaded rod coupler that fit the spindle. I cut a piece of bolt to fit in the coupler. Turned the lath on and used an angle grinder to flatten the face of it. I found the center of it and drilled a hole into the bolt. Then I tapped it to 1/4 20 threads.
For the tailstock, I glued up a couple of pieces of MDF and drilled some holes in it so that it would sit over the live center. I drilled a hole through the block so that a 1/4" bolt would go through it. I gave it a few coats of CA to strengthen it up some. I screwed it into the spindle, brought up the tailstock and turned it down to get rid of the corners. Then gave the outside a coat of CA as well.
For a mandrel, I got a piece of 1/4" threaded rod. Screwed one end into the cap that fits over the live center. Put a couple of nuts on it to stop it from coming out and one on the other side to lock it in place. The other end is screwed into the spindle and has a nut and lock washer to hold in in place.. The bad part about this is having to screw on nuts to hold the blanks in place and unscrewing it from the spindle
I did a couple of click pens on it. They came out ok. One side of the blank matched up with the bushing and the other side of that same end of the blank was proud by maybe 1/64" I'm guessing that it was like this because the tail stock was not inline with the spindle. I'm chalking this up to the play in the tailstock screw and the fact that it is a HF lathe. After that, I put the first one together wrong. Oh well.
I don't think I'll make any award winning pens with this rig, but I'm having fun. Right now, for me, that's all that counts.
Isn't there a saying: "Necessity is the mother of invention" ?
Thanks for checking this out.
I still haven't gotten myself a decent lathe yet. I'm really hoping to get one when the tax return get here. Anyway, I have done a few things to the crappy HF lathe that I have to be able to turn a few pens. Just nothing that I want to show off, at least right now. The tailstock is a mess. Very sloppy side to side. I cut a piece of plastic to fit between the rails and bolted it to the tailstock. That, for the most part, took care of that. You can see it in the bottom right of the last picture.
I had a threaded rod coupler that fit the spindle. I cut a piece of bolt to fit in the coupler. Turned the lath on and used an angle grinder to flatten the face of it. I found the center of it and drilled a hole into the bolt. Then I tapped it to 1/4 20 threads.


For the tailstock, I glued up a couple of pieces of MDF and drilled some holes in it so that it would sit over the live center. I drilled a hole through the block so that a 1/4" bolt would go through it. I gave it a few coats of CA to strengthen it up some. I screwed it into the spindle, brought up the tailstock and turned it down to get rid of the corners. Then gave the outside a coat of CA as well.


For a mandrel, I got a piece of 1/4" threaded rod. Screwed one end into the cap that fits over the live center. Put a couple of nuts on it to stop it from coming out and one on the other side to lock it in place. The other end is screwed into the spindle and has a nut and lock washer to hold in in place.. The bad part about this is having to screw on nuts to hold the blanks in place and unscrewing it from the spindle



I did a couple of click pens on it. They came out ok. One side of the blank matched up with the bushing and the other side of that same end of the blank was proud by maybe 1/64" I'm guessing that it was like this because the tail stock was not inline with the spindle. I'm chalking this up to the play in the tailstock screw and the fact that it is a HF lathe. After that, I put the first one together wrong. Oh well.
I don't think I'll make any award winning pens with this rig, but I'm having fun. Right now, for me, that's all that counts.
Isn't there a saying: "Necessity is the mother of invention" ?
Thanks for checking this out.