On Friday 08 March 2013 00:21:15 Igor Chudov did opine:

> I had a disagreement with my employee today. I said that a retrofitted
> CNC milling machine, like my Bridgeport Interact, is supremely useful
> as a shop tool, but a CNC lathe has very little usefulness. I felt that
> there is not really much that one can do with a CNC lathe. He
> disagreed, but could not offer specifics.
> 
> I want to see what you think, is a CNC lathe all that useful for someone
> who is nota job shop or a manufacturing operation.

Absolutely Igor.  I did do some work on my little toy from time to time, 
but I could never correlate the turn of the dial with what the micrometer 
said I had when I did turn the dial.  None of the screws in it were usable 
or repeatable.  

But one of the things I needed to do was cut threads occasionally, and 
without 10x more motor and an encoder on the mill, that wasn't going to 
happen.

So I made an encoder disk and an A-B-I opto kit, for the spindle, and put a 
425 oz motor on the OEM lead screw.  And a 50 oz on the back of the oem 
cross feed.

With that, I cut my first few threads, and after calibration it was nice to 
be able to move it 0.003" and have it cut a fine sliver of steel off.  But 
backlash was still a huge problem.

Steve gave me a small ball screw suitable for the crossfeed.  It took me a 
couple months to figure out how to do it since the 7x12 has very limited 
room for the nut, but this one was small so I did eventually get a mounting 
cage made, along with a double bearing thrust setup that I married to the 
end of the screw, turned the other end of it down for a 6.35mm coupling to 
a motor, first trying the 50 oz motor because that wasn't all that big or 
heavy hanging off the rear of the carriage, but wound up putting a triple 
stack 425 on it.  The 50 could be pushed.

Then the backlash in that half nut just had to go, so $135 later I was 
looking at a chinese 16x5mm C7 grade screw and trying to figure out how to 
fit it.  Its now in and working fine, and my Z accuracy is now about a thou 
instead of 25 thou.

Simply put, even for the onsies and maybe 3sies I might make as I play 
around at my own pace in my dotage, I can do them in 5% (including time to 
write the code) of the time that it would have taken me to do it by hand 
twisting the dials 5 years ago.  It is a pleasure to use now, not a 
headache.  And as long as my single tooth tool is properly sharpened, my 
cut threads are better than ever.  I should have done it 12 or 13 years 
ago, but I hadn't heard of linuxcnc then.  Because of the repeatable 
precision linuxcnc brings to the table, a thread it took me about a week to 
cut in each end (2 weeks total) of the nut carrier for the new z drive on 
my mill, could probably be done in 15 minutes if I had to do that again and 
I could keep that modified boring bar turned into an internal single tooth 
sharp.  Chatter ate its edge dozens of times. 4340 steel is a bitch.

So if the question is, is a cnc lathe worth it? Yes, yes, and yes.
IMO, usefulness comparable to bottled beer, sliced bread, a pint of 
chocolate chip ice cream and a willing woman.

Cheers, Gene
-- 
"There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty:
 soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order."
-Ed Howdershelt (Author)
My web page: <http://coyoteden.dyndns-free.com:85/gene> is up!
My views 
<http://www.armchairpatriot.com/What%20Has%20America%20Become.shtml>
Only a fool has no doubts.
I was taught to respect my elders, but its getting 
harder and harder to find any...

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