- Joined
- Apr 6, 2011
- Messages
- 2,082
That is pretty similar to what I was thinking. Like that approach. That is sure way to center rotatable to the mill spindle. Now continuing from there, 4 jaw chuck has to be affixed to the rotatable and object's radius center trued to the center of the rotating table. This is the part I am difficulties with. Having 4 jaw chuck, that holds the part, between rotating table and part itself you just lost your reference point. Cant see it, can't access it. But you have one in the spindle of the mill if you didn't move mill table at all.
I suppose you could use the same method I talked about with one little caveat, make the 1" (or whatever is appropriate) steel shaft long enough so that when it sits down in the rotab hole it is long enough to stick out of the chuck when the chuck is placed on the rotab.
So what you do is to set up the rotab just like my first post. Get it dialed in perfectly.
Now, lower the mill table and place the longer shaft back in the rotab. You can get the chuck close to center on the rotab and then once again use the indicol/dti to fine tune/center the chuck on the rotab.
Once that is done you can center the "part" you are working on using the indicol/dti setup. If the whole mess, rotab/chuck/part, gets off center because you accidently turned your X or Y (been there, done that :banghead: Hey, I was grabbing for the Z and the Y was real close...) you can always re-center everything by going off the outside of the chuck body.
Hopefully that makes some sense
-Ron