Table twists during moving of the saddle and or pulling on table extremes.

I filed down the ridge and there is still some shimmy during pulling the outer edge of the table or moving the saddle in and out. It does "seem" that the table is square to the knee when bringing the saddle towards the operator. When it twists the other way the gib side of the saddle moves last...if that is the right way to say it. This is with the gib screw tightened all the way. So no more adjustment.

Ok it's .007 of movement right at the gib as I pull on the far right side of the table. This is relative to the saddle ways where the indicator was setup. As well to set it to zero I pushed on the far right of the table set the indicator then pulled. This appears to be a bit better. But it should be tight. Would a new gib take care of this? I maybe taking the table off this weekend to inspect.

Paul
 
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you may have a wear pattern deep in the table dovetail.
the gibs are tapered and if you have run out of gib adjustment, you have some wear present.
a new gib could be a temporary solution, i suppose some well placed shimstock could take up some clearance too.
unfortunately, you may find that there are other components in the table assembly and screws that may also need attention.
you'll need to decide whether you want to go down the rabbit hole (with me :bang head:) or let it ride with minimal restorative consideration.
i'd also suggest adjusting/tightening/locking all the gibs to reduce observed deflection, you can get false readings if there is clearance in the other gibs
 
Paul,

Since you are the new owner of a "rock", take that gib, worn side down, and lay it on top of your surface plate and see if it "spins like a top" I don't mean spin it but rotate it and see if it hinges in the middle. And I suspect it will. Next take some feeler gages and or some shim stock, and shim up until it stops rotating. This will give you an idea of how much wear there is with the gib. I believe you mentioned earlier that the gib was hollowed out in the middle? It may be worn so much that the middle is now the bearing surface of the way.
The key to this exercise is to identify what to rework first. Sounds like the gib could be a starting place. Don't waste money on buying a new gib, you won't gain nothing but a new gib that still needs scraping and fitting. We'll help you on shimming up the gib once you work on getting it running straight.
This will be a good time to start you learning on scraping on a gib to get you a better fit.
 
you may have a wear pattern deep in the table dovetail.
the gibs are tapered and if you have run out of gib adjustment, you have some wear present.
a new gib could be a temporary solution, i suppose some well placed shimstock could take up some clearance too.
unfortunately, you may find that there are other components in the table assembly and screws that may also need attention.
you'll need to decide whether you want to go down the rabbit hole (with me :bang head:) or let it ride with minimal restorative consideration.
i'd also suggest adjusting/tightening/locking all the gibs to reduce observed deflection, you can get false readings if there is clearance in the other gibs

Oh I'm headlong into the rabbit hole already! I had planned to replace the nuts and screws and bearings. The rabbit hole on the rebuild head was so deep I don't know how much I spent. Oh and DRO once everything is mechanically fit.




Paul,

Since you are the new owner of a "rock", take that gib, worn side down, and lay it on top of your surface plate and see if it "spins like a top" I don't mean spin it but rotate it and see if it hinges in the middle. And I suspect it will. Next take some feeler gages and or some shim stock, and shim up until it stops rotating. This will give you an idea of how much wear there is with the gib. I believe you mentioned earlier that the gib was hollowed out in the middle? It may be worn so much that the middle is now the bearing surface of the way.
The key to this exercise is to identify what to rework first. Sounds like the gib could be a starting place. Don't waste money on buying a new gib, you won't gain nothing but a new gib that still needs scraping and fitting. We'll help you on shimming up the gib once you work on getting it running straight.
This will be a good time to start you learning on scraping on a gib to get you a better fit.

The gib still had scraping marks on the center but not on either end. But I will check it out either way.
 
OK the gib pivots on both far ends if you have the side that faces the center of the machine down....so you turn the right side it pivots on the far left and vise versa.
If you flip the gib over it pivots 40% in from the thinnest end.
 
I had missed the shimming part of what I was supposed to do.

So with the side of the gib that normally faces the center of the ways...face down on the stone. The center is high and I can get a .003 shim under it with it barely catching. Once I put the .003 under it I can hinge it anywhere I move the shim.

If I flip the part over the most tapered end is high for about 30 to 40% of the length. I can get a .005 under it. That side hinges pretty much dead center.
 
I guess at this point I might be to where working on the gib may not help. Before I get some practice on some straight edge scraping first. I am however, thinking this week I'll get a solid cart built to move the table over on to and get to work on the screws/nuts and cleaning. No matter what I do I have to get those things fixed plus get the oiler ports cleaned on working again....and some new way wipers.
 
Since the adjustment screw would still bottom out. I used feeler gauges to test tightness with 1/2" of the gibe sticking out. Once I figured out the proper amount of thickness. I cut some .004 shim stock and fit it to the non-sliding side of the gib. I also drilled the proper hole in it for oil to pass through just as it is on the gib itself. Once I did all this and put it back on the mill the saddle has a nice feel to it without slop. The screw can now be tightened if adjustment is needed.

Next is chasing the threads on the screws to normalize the wear from end to end and then making feed nuts to match new thread depth etc. I've already ground the 5 tpi tool so this should be fun!

Paul
 
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