On the nose the primary fruit aromas are typical of Moss Wood Cabernet Sauvignon, showing mulberries, red currants and lifted violets. It could serve for virtually any benchtop lathe, or for that matter for just about anything else. The lathe I took this off of was a 6" Craftsman 101 lathe. $225 (Dansville ) pic hide this posting restore restore this posting. CNC 1440 Lathe Benchtop Turning Center Catalogue. At a Glance W1704 1/3-Horsepower Benchtop Lathe Suitable for pen turning or other small cutting or shaping jobs 1/3-horsepower. 69 13" x 40" CNC Lathe with Tool Changer and GSK980TBc Controller CBT1340-6-GSK Replacement Parts Central Machinery 10 in. Metal Lathe Parts JWL-1440VS 14" x 40" Benchtop Wood Lathe JWL-1440VSK 14" x 40" Wood Lathe with Legs JWL-1640EVS 16" x 40" Wood Lathe JWL-1840EVS 18" x 40" Wood Lathe Miter Saws. The CNC Lathe Models 12 are well proven CNC turning machines that have established themselves for 10+ years to be of unprecedented value in prototyping, tool making, tensile test parts sampling, and small to medium production.In addition to our own HiTorque lathes, SIEG provides lathes to companies like Grizzly, Harbor Freight, and Micro-Mark. 200 RPM Product Description Ideal for pen turning and small project turning. 49 Parts, prices and availability are subject to change without notice Please ensure the item number matches the item you purchased Rev 2021.
DEALER LOCATOR SERVICE MANUAL INSTRUCTION MANUAL PRINT SPEC SHEET DOWNLOAD A HIGH RESOLUTION IMAGE. The bed has to handle the whole operation, and so it is made of semi-steel and steel crap. favorite this post Sep 24 Logan small wood lathes, lathe. 0XA is too small, and BXA is too large.Benchtop lathe parts MILLS. I agree with others who have said that the correct size of QCTP for a 10" swing lathe is an AXA. But whenever I see the term, I automatically assume that it is smaller than 6". I don't know that there is any book with a hard definition of "minilathe". Buying a plain-back chuck and then having to buy and machine a backing plate is false economy. A chuck that is already made to fit your spindle will cost more than a plain-back but it arrives ready to go to work. The problems with buying a plain back chuck and buying a separate backing plate and having to then fit the backing plate to the chuck are (1) time and effort and the chance of ending up with a chuck that won't run true, and (2) the resultant will be a chuck that hangs out farther from the headstock than it has to, which wastes space, and is inherently less accurate because it will magnify any angular runout. You are probably better off buying a chuck that is made to fit your spindle already. On chucks, you probably want no larger than about 5" diameter for a 3-jaw chuck on a 10" swing lathe. The other commonly found face plate has 6 radial slots and none of them usually include one slot cut all of the way to the OD. The one that you have can also be used for mounting some odd shaped parts that will not fit into any standard chuck. The design of the one visible in your photograph is primarily for driving lathe dogs which are used to drive mostly long rods up to about1" or 1.5" diameter that are mounted between centers. The face plate that you have is NOT for attaching a plain-back chuck to. There are a few on the site that know these lathes very well.
There is an Atlas specific forum here where you may get more specific information. I have their OXA size QCTP on the Sherline and have been happy with it. I've bought stuff from the Little Machine Shop for both my very small 3.5" Sherline and my 10" Logan. Many sellers who cater to mini-lathes do carry tooling and supplies suitable for use on 10" lathes. OXA tool posts are usually found on the smallest mini-lathes, I think you are probably looking at an AXA on yours.Īs far as if it is a mini-lathe? 10" seems to be the cut off, some people consider some 10" lathes to be the big end of mini-lathes, others the small end of "real" lathes. At roughly 1/2 the nominal diameter (10" in your case) you should be safe. If you go bigger you have to worry about the jaws sticking out too far at maximum capacity and hitting parts of the lathe. I would guess a 1-1/2x8 thread, but just a guess as that is what is on my 10" Logan. I believe Atlas lathes have a threaded spindle, so you would want a chuck with the right threading.
These days it would mostly be used with odd shaped pieces that won't fit in a chuck or collets. That is not for a chuck, a faceplate is used in place of a chuck to hold your work. It looks like it has a faceplace attached.
I don't know a lot about Atlases specifically, but I think I can answer some of your questions.