E um talento com torno e servisos agente cria solusao orincipalmente quem twm sivida para pagareu me viro assim como ele ou compro um freza ferramenteira e por ai ; eu tambem soy torneiro
Salam khoya elarroussi kif rak bikhir khoya ana jit db 20 jr cdi o bghit natlab carte vitale kif ndir liha lah irham lwalidin wash naftah compte fchi haja wala namchi 3andhom wra9ia wala achno lah ihfdak
I hope the housing for boring the barings was done by the lathe chuck itself. With no shims under the shaft holder. Mine was and a boring head used to optimise bearing outerr tolerance. That gives perfect centraliry crossing axees of lathe . I also did an axial one mounted on cross slide for holes around center. So with an indexer on the main lathe shafy a circle of holes (up to 24) can be made around a flange etc. A Cowboy revolver for example. Anyway, thanks for going to the troubld of showing people how. My comment might help too.
I need to know what kind of drill chuck that is ? As soon as I saw it I immediately started searching Amazon and Google looking but I don't know exactly what it's called. The 3 jaws on that drill chuck are unlike any I've ever seen, and now I must have one. Any info would be greatly appreciated 🙏🏼
@@madmodder123 But you see what I mean though right? How the jaws don't just pinch the tool like every other chuck I've seen. This one has maximum surface area contact. I realize there's no real substitute for dedicated tools like collet chucks but something like this for my tailstock I think would be awesome. Maybe for holding annular cutters and end mills.
@@madmodder123 yeah I think you're right. If it was what I thought, I am confident I would've seen more than just the one in all these years. The tool I had in my head doesn't exist. An adjustable 3 jaw collet chuck basically. Unless it was only for one particular size shank and no others.