Dave and other machinist friends, you out there?
I bought an old Delta wood lathe compund sliding tool rest off ebay and have a few questions. The reason for buying it is I am going to use it to turn the tenons on duck call inserts to 5/8". Doing it by hand and calipers is slooooooooow and undershooting results in a wasted insert. So my thoughts are to use the compound slide and with accuracy and repeatability turn the stock to 5/8".
Pics 1-5 are of the one I bought. Pics 6-9 are of another one that recently sold on ebay. Pics 10-12 are of a restored one from owwm.com.
I have a few questions concerning the one I bought and getting it mounted on my lathe for making cuts.
Question group 1. The tool post on mine is missing the rocker (little skinny radiused wedge seen in pic 9). Any idea where to get one or come up with a substitute? I guess I could buy a whole new tool post, assuming I can find one that will fit, but is that necessary? Should I look for another type of tool post for my application?
Question group 2. The compound slide I bought came off an 11" lathe. There is a 1/2" sub base spacer (casting cbl 405 in pics 9-12) that is needed for a 12" lathe. Without the spacer I suspect the cutter will be too low. On the 12" lathe the sub base spacer is machined so that it fits in the lathe gap so that the whole works will slide along the lathe and stay aligned. My 11" lathe has a metal bar (see pic 5) that bolts to the bottom to keep the slide aligned by riding up against the front side of the lathe bed. I need to come up with a replacement for the base and I think the way they keep the slide aligned with the sub base spacer is superior to the metal bar on the 11" lathe. Any ideas on how I might make a replacement sub base? One thought is to take a piece of 3/4" steel, have it gound flat, and then mill all but the part that fits in the gap to 1/2". That might be expensive route. Any suggestions?
Question group 3. The arm that holds the cutter is for 1/4" cutters. It looks to be bent for a left hand cut. Any suggestion for a cutter that would work well with wood? Maybe one of the ones in Pic 13?
Any other thoughts or observations? Thanks for entertaining these somewhat technical questions.
Pic 1
Pic 2
Pic 3
Pic 4
Pic 5
These are pictures from a similar one that sold on ebay recently.
Pic 6
Pic 7
Pic 8
Pic 9
The pics below are of a restored on from owwm.com.
Pic 10
Pic 11
Pic 12
Pic 13
I bought an old Delta wood lathe compund sliding tool rest off ebay and have a few questions. The reason for buying it is I am going to use it to turn the tenons on duck call inserts to 5/8". Doing it by hand and calipers is slooooooooow and undershooting results in a wasted insert. So my thoughts are to use the compound slide and with accuracy and repeatability turn the stock to 5/8".
Pics 1-5 are of the one I bought. Pics 6-9 are of another one that recently sold on ebay. Pics 10-12 are of a restored one from owwm.com.
I have a few questions concerning the one I bought and getting it mounted on my lathe for making cuts.
Question group 1. The tool post on mine is missing the rocker (little skinny radiused wedge seen in pic 9). Any idea where to get one or come up with a substitute? I guess I could buy a whole new tool post, assuming I can find one that will fit, but is that necessary? Should I look for another type of tool post for my application?
Question group 2. The compound slide I bought came off an 11" lathe. There is a 1/2" sub base spacer (casting cbl 405 in pics 9-12) that is needed for a 12" lathe. Without the spacer I suspect the cutter will be too low. On the 12" lathe the sub base spacer is machined so that it fits in the lathe gap so that the whole works will slide along the lathe and stay aligned. My 11" lathe has a metal bar (see pic 5) that bolts to the bottom to keep the slide aligned by riding up against the front side of the lathe bed. I need to come up with a replacement for the base and I think the way they keep the slide aligned with the sub base spacer is superior to the metal bar on the 11" lathe. Any ideas on how I might make a replacement sub base? One thought is to take a piece of 3/4" steel, have it gound flat, and then mill all but the part that fits in the gap to 1/2". That might be expensive route. Any suggestions?
Question group 3. The arm that holds the cutter is for 1/4" cutters. It looks to be bent for a left hand cut. Any suggestion for a cutter that would work well with wood? Maybe one of the ones in Pic 13?
Any other thoughts or observations? Thanks for entertaining these somewhat technical questions.

Pic 1

Pic 2

Pic 3

Pic 4

Pic 5
These are pictures from a similar one that sold on ebay recently.

Pic 6

Pic 7

Pic 8

Pic 9
The pics below are of a restored on from owwm.com.

Pic 10

Pic 11

Pic 12

Pic 13
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