View Full Version : pic: Newbie learning to operate a lathe
Rosiebotboss
26-01-2010, 13:11
[cdm-description=photo]34581[/cdm-description]
fordchrist675
26-01-2010, 13:13
What sort of tutorial do you have him running?
to my eye it looks like you just have him running a few passes and I would assume at different set depths every time on a piece of scrap?
Nice lathe!
Rosiebotboss
26-01-2010, 13:41
Tutorial is "on the job" training.
Actually that is "flight hardware." One of the spacers for our drive train. There is a digital readout behind his head.
And that's the small lathe at our sponsors shop.
fordchrist675
26-01-2010, 13:46
Oh alright. I like what i hear. Who is your sponsor? If that's there small lathe, their larger ones must be quite something.
Rosiebotboss
26-01-2010, 13:55
G & L Tool.
That's the smaller of the two manual lathes. The 2 CNC lathes are quite a bit larger. It's great to have generous sponsors that "get it". :D
Jones571
26-01-2010, 13:59
G & L Tool.
That's the smaller of the two manual lathes. The 2 CNC lathes are quite a bit larger. It's great to have generous sponsors that "get it". :D
Not only do they get it they aren't scared to teach the kids how to use the machines and all the liability involved :)
I have 3 hardinge lathes at my shop just like that one perfect to teach on
fordchrist675
26-01-2010, 14:03
Not only do they get it they aren't scared to teach the kids how to use the machines and all the liability involved :)
I have 3 hardinge lathes at my shop just like that one perfect to teach on
Thats what really counts. WE just have one small lathe and small mill in our shop. IN the process of getting a couple bridgeports and a full scale manual lathe. Hears hoping knock on wood. It's always good when a majority of the students are competent with these machines.
Rosiebotboss
26-01-2010, 14:16
Not that I am bragging...but here goes anyway.
I cannot thank G & L Tool enough for their participation on Rosie. We have access to their entire shop, they donated a 3 axis cnc milling machine 2 years ago to Agawam HS, have arranged outside resources to help us make Rosie pretty (a local plating shop), provided raw material, (can you say titanium axles?), and kick in a few bucks every time we do a World Famous Ziti Dinner.
G & L co-owners Bob and Dave --you are the best!:D
fordchrist675
26-01-2010, 14:26
Not that I am bragging...but here goes anyway.
I cannot thank G & L Tool enough for their participation on Rosie. We have access to their entire shop, they donated a 3 axis cnc milling machine 2 years ago to Agawam HS, have arranged outside resources to help us make Rosie pretty (a local plating shop), provided raw material, (can you say titanium axles?), and kick in a few bucks every time we do a World Famous Ziti Dinner.
G & L co-owners Bob and Dave --you are the best!:D
Ok I'm officially jealous. you had me at titanium . :
acidrain2012
26-01-2010, 16:08
Thats what really counts. WE just have one small lathe and small mill in our shop. IN the process of getting a couple bridgeports and a full scale manual lathe. Hears hoping knock on wood. It's always good when a majority of the students are competent with these machines.
Pretty much the same with us, but we were lucky enough to get our hands on a nice Bridgeport mill two years back. Still runs like a top. The lathe, on the other hand, needs some work... Its about half the size of the one in the picture and wobbles like crazy. Needless to say, we do what we can on the mill.
Not that I am bragging...but here goes anyway.
I cannot thank G & L Tool enough for their participation on Rosie. We have access to their entire shop, they donated a 3 axis cnc milling machine 2 years ago to Agawam HS, have arranged outside resources to help us make Rosie pretty (a local plating shop), provided raw material, (can you say titanium axles?), and kick in a few bucks every time we do a World Famous Ziti Dinner.
G & L co-owners Bob and Dave --you are the best!:D
Ok I'm officially jealous. you had me at titanium . :
He had me at "ziti dinner" :D
-dave
-
fordchrist675
26-01-2010, 20:38
Yes dinner is always appreciated.
mikelowry
26-01-2010, 21:06
1771 was lucky enough this summer for Gwinnett County schools to buy us a 12 by 36 grizzly lathe. I just learned how to use it the other day and i've made 8 of our 32 drivetrain spacers so far.
Akash Rastogi
26-01-2010, 21:21
What lathe is that in the picture?
Not that I am bragging...but here goes anyway.
I cannot thank G & L Tool enough for their participation on Rosie. We have access to their entire shop, they donated a 3 axis cnc milling machine 2 years ago to Agawam HS, have arranged outside resources to help us make Rosie pretty (a local plating shop), provided raw material, (can you say titanium axles?), and kick in a few bucks every time we do a World Famous Ziti Dinner.
G & L co-owners Bob and Dave --you are the best!:D
Thanking your sponsors is never bragging [:
I got my lathe training as an on-the-spot-as-needed thing too. Just be sure that he knows to ask questions if something seems wobbly or just wrong, because lathes are rather picky, and it's often hard to diagnose a problem when you're just starting out.
I'd list off the machinery that we're lucky enough to have, but I'm not sure about proper types and terminology and everything. We have one small mill, two giant ones, and we currently have two lathes (but are getting rid of the smaller one), among various other bandsaws and drill presses and sanders.
Rosiebotboss
26-01-2010, 22:08
What lathe is that in the picture?
I believe that one on the picture is the Hardinge. The rest of the machines at G & L we have available are here-http://www.gltool.com/facilities/
Shameless plug coming up-- G & L Tool is a relatively small machine shop. (about 15 employees) They can handle just about anything that anyone can throw at them in quantities of 1 to whatever.
MadeinRussia
27-01-2010, 11:55
SAFETY????? where are those gloves ???::safety::
MrForbes
27-01-2010, 12:09
On the shelf where they belong?
Chris is me
27-01-2010, 12:16
SAFETY????? where are those gloves ???::safety::
Gloves could get snagged in that lathe pretty easily (and pull large parts of your body around and around) while not really protecting your hands from anything.
Gloves could get snagged in that lathe pretty easily (and pull large parts of your body around and around) while not really protecting your hands from anything.
True story: I could have lost much more than part of my fingernail freshman year if I had been wearing gloves while using the lathe (we're still not too sure how that happened, actually). You shouldn't even have to protect your hands from hot metal chips flying anywhere, because if you're using the lathe properly, you should get nice, even, cool-looking spiral chips that don't fly unless they get extremely long and snag on something.
Boys and girls, gloves and moving parts do not mix very well.
Rosiebotboss
27-01-2010, 12:28
SAFETY????? where are those gloves ???::safety::
NO! Absolutely not! Do NOT wear gloves when working around rotating machinery. Roll your sleeves up, tie your hair back, take the string out of your hoodie, no lanyards holding your glasses or company ID badge. ::safety::
Jones571
27-01-2010, 12:40
Also don't forget no jewelry. Being around a machine shop my entire life I have seen way to many avoidable accidents.
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