Hi all
I'd like to draw upon the collective wisdom of the you all. I've just
bought a direct mouning (no back plate) 6" 4 jaw independent chuck for
my Super 7 and am far from happy with it. With a decent quality test
bar dialed in at the jaws, there is a good 1/8" run out at 12" from
the chuck. The chuck body does not sit parallel to the spindle axis -
the rim wobbles by about 15thou. Not much good really so obviously its
going back to the well known supplier. I won't identify them until
they've had plenty of oportunity to rectify the situation.
Given that I can't afford genuine Myford prices, what is everyone's
experience of recent purchases and suppliers? Perhaps a backplate
mounted chuck would be a better idea. At least then I can make sure
its machined carefully to get the chuck parallel and concentric to the
spindle. Any recommendations for a make and supplier?
cheers
Toby
mark@ems-fife.co.uk - 08 Feb 2009 23:15 GMT
> Hi all
>
[quoted text clipped - 16 lines]
>
> Toby
While the chuck body should run a lot truer than it currently does,do
not expect to true something up at the jaws and have it running true
12" out.That`s not how four jaws work.
petercolman45@hotmail.com - 09 Feb 2009 09:30 GMT
> Hi all
>
[quoted text clipped - 16 lines]
>
> Toby
Toby
Firstly, I assume the problem is lack of parrellism, ie the bar is
running truer at the jaws but the error increases as you go down the
bed. In this case I would check the register on the spindle.
Secondly, if the register is OK (you can check with a faceplate,) the
problem is with the chuck, make sure it is screwing home properly and
is snug against the register.
I am rather surprised at this as modern chucks are pretty good and in
my experience are better made than this.
Peter
Peter Neill - 09 Feb 2009 10:27 GMT
>Toby
>Firstly, I assume the problem is lack of parrellism, ie the bar is
[quoted text clipped - 8 lines]
>my experience are better made than this.
>Peter
To echo Peter Comans comments, take the chuck off and make sure you
haven't got a little piece of swarf trapped between the spindle &
chuck registers.
I turned up a *perfect* backplate last week, then got awful runout
after I took it off and mounted the collet chuck on it. Spent ages
trying to dial it in before I took it off again and noticed a bit of
swarf stuck as above.
Peter
Toby - 11 Feb 2009 08:53 GMT
Peter, Peter and others
thanks for you thoughts. I'm fairly sure its not a problem of swarf
etc causing the wobble. My 3 jaw and face plate clock in with only 1
and 2 thou wobble repeatedly and the new 4 jaw was cleaned and fitted
several times with identical results of 14 thou.
I've not checked the spindle nose given that the 3 jaw and plate are
pretty good.
We'll see what the replacement chuck is like before naming the
supplier, although their service has been friendly and courteous so
far,
cheers
Toby
> On Mon, 9 Feb 2009 01:30:58 -0800 (PST), petercolma...@hotmail.com
> wrote:
[quoted text clipped - 21 lines]
>
> Peter
Toby - 25 Feb 2009 12:54 GMT
> We'll see what the replacement chuck is like before naming the
> supplier, although their service has been friendly and courteous so
> far,
Hi again
just an update.on the new body mounted chuck with 14 thou runout......
the replacement chuck has now arrived and is better. The body runout
is now only 7 thou at the outer diameter. Is this still too much? I'm
not sure. I'm wondering about very carefully trying a bit of scraping
(of the chuck not the spindle of course) to improve the fit.
I'd be interested in people's opinions on this - do I just return it
again or have a go at it with the scraper? Will the body be able to
rotate enough or will the parallel section of the spindle nose prevent
the rotation?
cheers
Toby
Austin Shackles - 25 Feb 2009 14:17 GMT
>> We'll see what the replacement chuck is like before naming the
>> supplier, although their service has been friendly and courteous so
[quoted text clipped - 17 lines]
>
>Toby
2 points:
1) how much runout do you have on a workpiece held in the chuck?
2) does it cause excess vibration at full speed.
If it holds true and doesn't vibe, then it's probably OK. Any imbalance
will however put extra strain on the spindle and bearings.
I'd be inclined to thing that 7 thou still sounds too much, but bear in mind
what you're doing with it. Was this a 4-jaw independent?

Signature
Austin Shackles. www.ddol-las.net my opinions are just that
Travel The Galaxy! Meet Fascinating Life Forms...
------------------------------------------------\
>> http://www.schlockmercenary.com/ << \ ...and Kill them.
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Richard Edwards - 25 Feb 2009 16:09 GMT
>> We'll see what the replacement chuck is like before naming the
>> supplier, although their service has been friendly and courteous so
[quoted text clipped - 17 lines]
>
>Toby
Based on the fact that you said on 11/2/09 that....
"After a brief and friendly chat the retailer was very
willing to say that 14 thou runout is far too much on the body of a
chuck. The claim is that most items being dispatched are clocked on a
test spindle but in all the snow and bother of last week mine was
forgotten."
We must assume therefore that 7 thou is acceptable to the vendor.<G>
Personally I would NOT do any scraping of the register of the chuck.
If this is currently a "nice" fit on the the nose then that is the way
it should stay. Assuming you machined something then took the chuck
off, say for a mill op on the part, then put it back on, you would
want the component to still be true. Scrape the register and you have
lost that!.
I would expect that 7 thou TIR would not affect balance overly at your
max speed. However if you are concerned then remove all jaws, or clamp
and clock a piece of "round bar" and spin it up to your max speed and
see!
Richard
Austin Shackles - 09 Feb 2009 20:31 GMT
>Hi all
>
[quoted text clipped - 12 lines]
>its machined carefully to get the chuck parallel and concentric to the
>spindle. Any recommendations for a make and supplier?
bought a TOS (I think - or equivalent) from J&L for the stuident, with a
part-finished backlplate for the Student's L-zero nose. Mount the backplate
and machine it **very** carefully to fit, fut chuck and job's been a good'un
so far.
8" chuck, total price came in at about £350 I think.

Signature
Austin Shackles. www.ddol-las.net my opinions are just that
Travel The Galaxy! Meet Fascinating Life Forms...
------------------------------------------------\
>> http://www.schlockmercenary.com/ << \ ...and Kill them.
a webcartoon by Howard Tayler; I like it, maybe you will too!
John S - 09 Feb 2009 20:50 GMT
I took delivery of a supply of Indian made 4 jaw chucks originally
bought by a well know Northern England supplier of Indian goods.
These had been machined with the body slightly tilted when the jaw
slots were milled in with the result that they rotated drunkenly and
were basically scrap.
I did recover one by gripping the chuck jaws onto a freshly turned bar
in a 3 jaw and refacing the back and register.
Even though afterwards it turned true the body revolved out of kilter,
to machine the chuck all over would have been too expensive given time
and the base cost of the chuck.
Most were fastened onto a piece of hefty angle iron so they could be
held in a vise as a 4 jaw vise for holding odd shaped castings etc and
given away
John S.
Boo - 09 Feb 2009 21:54 GMT
> Not much good really so obviously its
> going back to the well known supplier. I won't identify them until
> they've had plenty of oportunity to rectify the situation.
You might saave a few people some postage and bother if you did name them.

Signature
Boo
Toby - 11 Feb 2009 08:46 GMT
Hi all again,
just an update. After a brief and friendly chat the retailer was very
willing to say that 14 thou runout is far too much on the body of a
chuck. The claim is that most items being dispatched are clocked on a
test spindle but in all the snow and bother of last week mine was
forgotten. I'm happy to accept this as a checked replacement is
promised by return of post.
I'll see what the replacement is like and let you all know of the
outcome, but its looking like good service so far.
cheers
Toby
> Hi all
>
[quoted text clipped - 16 lines]
>
> Toby
ned ludd - 25 Feb 2009 19:23 GMT
Toby Wrote:
> Hi all
>
[quoted text clipped - 16 lines]
>
> Toby
Hi Tony,
Firstr are you sure the chuck is screwing on all the way, check with
black marking pen that it is not binding before both the axial and th
radial faces contact.
Second, if you ae worried about being out at twelve inches, why not us
a toolpost grinder to "bore" the jaws parallel, but do remember to d
this under tension.
Ned Lud
--
ned lud