Subject: | [Shop-talk] Identifying taper and threading attachments on a |
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From: | cavanadd at frontier.com (David C.) |
Date: | Wed, 19 Oct 2011 19:02:14 -0700 |
References: | <mailman.18.1318960808.11683.shop-talk@autox.team.net> <1B9FB4B4C85C43988CF6533A293A8F6D@EnergyKinetics.EKnet> <65884CFF6F01482B99CD50CD5947BC69@HP62011> <7520E99DCA554F72827DAE1E259B3768@EnergyKinetics.EKnet> <B8677E2507954B69BD9E4BD02B86E23F@HP62011> |
Not necessarily; chasing or "picking up" an existing thread on a lathe with a threading dial is (or at least was) a pretty straightforward task for the average machinist. You just get the cutting tool close to the threaded part, close the half nuts at the appropriate mark on the threading dial, stop the lathe, then very carefully use the cross and compound to seat the threading tool in the thread and proceed as normal. Dave Arvid Jedlicka wrote: > When they removed the pipe from the chuck after threading all bets were > off as to synchronizing the existing threads with the cutter when they > put it back in the chuck. Easier to just start over again. |
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