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Thank you. At first I thought right was exact as left. But turned upside down. I was wrong.. Thanks in advanceI'll get right on it.
Thank you. At first I thought right was exact as left. But turned upside down. I was wrong.. Thanks in advance
Not sure but diagram shows to be different shape for right side one.Are you certain? Seems seriously odd that it is the only part on that drawing to NOT have an EE part number callout of its own.
Unless, of course EE-3880 is listed in the repair parts for that page as a two-piece 'set'?
Thank you. At first I thought right was exact as left. But turned upside down. I was wrong.. Thanks in advance
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Not sure but diagram shows to be different shape for right side one.
Yeah I read there is another option to control return rate..Larry can probably confirm or deny far better than I can.
One of my 10EE has LSR, but no electrical switches associated.
Been too lazy so far to dig out the threads on PM to confirm whether it was the earlier MECHANICAL attempted-LSR or wot. Those ones could actually reverse the LS, not just stop for the operator to do that. OTOH, it was a tad stressful to the dog-clutches.
Yeah I read there is another option to control return rate..
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That's what I thought. But look at shapes slightly differentLooks like part is the same. Doesn't the L rotate 180 degrees to match R ? Or the other way by rotating R to match L. Maybe I'm wrong, as that seems too simple...
That's what I thought. But look at shapes slightly different
I tried mirror version. Didn't work when it goes from forward to neutral. Works from reverse to neutral.Small part. Thin section. Low enough stress to try it, manually 'few cycles'.
If no confirmation/denial forthcoming, I'd have one whipped up out of Lexan or Micarta sheet stock I keep around fast enough to try it and see whether a mirror-image functioned as expected, adjust from the trial fit if need be, go to steel only once satisfied.
Monarch didn't build the first one out of someone else's 'book', so they, too, may have had to adjust the drawing once testing showed a need.
Also sometimes reinventing a wheel is not needed..I tried mirror version. Didn't work when it goes from forward to neutral. Works from reverse to neutral.
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Also sometimes reinventing a wheel is not needed..
Ok i winged it.. Works. Now. Top has to be more steep ramp and lower has to be able to clear the nipple when it's forced down... Works.One does have to wonder why they 'did that' as to them not being identical.
FWIW-not-much department, as it isn't easily 'portable', either direction...
Monarch's ELSR gets compliments as useful enough. But Hendey's T&G and Cazeneuve's HBX series both had even better systems to get the same task done when threading.
Patents, perceived durability, incompatibility with something else, or even just unit cost to implement may have been a greater barrier than "NIH" syndrome.
Ok i winged it.. Works. Now. Top has to be more steep ramp and lower has to be able to clear the nipple when it's forced down... Works.
Ok threading works also. Nice. Only thing left is to make some damm t nuts for the AXA and bxa tool post. Changed out the cross-feed nut. Whoa. Went from around 200 thou backlash to about 3 thou. After installed new brass cross feed nut. Changed the cross and compound on my 12x36 atlas lathe also. Whoa... Just like new...Good on Yah! Now you ARE - fergawds-ache - gonna clean it up?
It's a Monarch lathe, not an Appalachian susbsistance-farmer's band-aid-patched hayrake.
And nooooo DAMHIK the differecne!
Ok threading works also. Nice. Only thing left is to make some damm t nuts for the AXA and bxa tool post. Changed out the cross-feed nut. Whoa. Went from around 200 thou backlash to about 3 thou. After installed new brass cross feed nut. Changed the cross and compound on my 12x36 atlas lathe also. Whoa... Just like new...
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All the hours I put into 'accurizing' a bought-new-1968 or so <redacted> 6" x 18", I sure as Hell hope it don't EVER go back to "just like new" 'til it hits the smelter!Changed the cross and compound on my 12x36 <redacted> lathe also. Whoa... Just like new...
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