JohnArs said:I need also one and tried several times to write emails to Adam at SK Grimes but the mails came back.
I need urgent a adapter lensboard for my Burke & James to Sinar boards any ideay whats going on with the Grimes company?
claytume said:Can you guys with lathes cut 25tpi?
I don't have a job for you but many years ago I was asked to make adaptors for lens cells into a shutter, 25tpi.........couldn't do it and never seen a lathe that had that pitch on it.
Clayton
claytume said:Can you guys with lathes cut 25tpi?
I don't have a job for you but many years ago I was asked to make adaptors for lens cells into a shutter, 25tpi.........couldn't do it and never seen a lathe that had that pitch on it.
Donald Qualls said:The most modern of the small lathes have "electronic lead screws" using shaft encoders on the spindle, counter/divider systems, and stepper motors driving the lead screw, to cut any thread, either metric or inch, that you can specify -- right or left hand, front or rear tool post, inside or outside. Need to cut a 28.6 tpi to match some bizarre non-metric thread found on something? No problem...
Donald Qualls said:It's very common, however, to find lathes with quick-change gearboxes for which there either doesn't exist a manual change train, or more likely the manual gears were put away years ago and no one now in the shop has ever seen them. Since 25 TPI isn't a standard thread, it's not found in most QC boxes.
I can't ever remember coming across a 25 T.P.I. thread. I wonder,claytume said:Can you guys with lathes cut 25tpi?
I don't have a job for you but many years ago I was asked to make adaptors for lens cells into a shutter, 25tpi.........couldn't do it and never seen a lathe that had that pitch on it.
Yes I thought of that one, would work like you say if the thread was cut loose and was very short.S.K. Grimes said:In a pinch, one could probably get away with using a 1.0 thread to fit a 25 TPI. As long as the length of the threaded section is short enough to avoid jamming and the thread was cut loose.
If you take the decimal equivilent of 25TPI (1/25 = .04), it is nearly the same as a 1.0M pitch (1.0/25.4 = .0394"). Granted, it is best to use the right thread. And as Donald pointed out, there are lathes today which use the "electronic lead screws" which make machining the right threads a dream.
Adam Dau
Ed Sukach said:I can't ever remember coming across a 25 T.P.I. thread. I wonder,
1) How was the pitch determined? ... by measurement or ? If someone used the folding "Thread Pitch Gages", they might well mistake a 1 millimeter pitch for ...? Then again, I can't ever remember seeing a folding thread pitch gauge (National Thread Form) with a 25 T.P.I leaf.
claytume said:Donald..........never seen or heard of these.........anywhere on the net I can see one?
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