Why THANK YOU Shooter71 for taking my post in exactly the spirit in which it was intended.
I hesitated to post at all......I perty much only post on old threads in which I'm already a part these days........ but I did.
Oddly enough I posted because of Boyd Allen......
Boyd is a much nicer fellow than me in that he feels he can "say things in a less confrontational way" than is my wont.....and I was just having a liddle rollick over Boyd on another forum (on which I DO NOT post
) Seems Boyd nicely asked a fellow "with all due respect, why don't you do a little experiment....?" upon which one of the perennial haters jumped with both footies, howling "cuz then he couldn't have this conversation with know-alls like you....etc, etc"
Sad, really....
Ohhh welll......."haters gonna' hate" and all that. I'm learning to just crawl back under my rock cuz mos' folks have no use for facts as they tend to kill the typical conversation. And someone always "feels bad" when facts and tests and long-term evidence chains take the mystery out of stuff....
Maybe now that the political climate is changing someone will start a shooting board where people are still allowed to be passionate about truth
Ohhh, and BTW, I haven't found the toolpost to be adequate for driving a reamer even if it's been swept, flycut or machined square for a number of reasons all having to do with flexure and movement due to necessary clearances. In short the driving forces tend to tip, lift and upset the carriage precluding alignment under pressure.....whereas when pushing with a locked-down tailstock assembly with it's wide footprinnt clamped to and using a fairly short section of the ways it's relatively easy to maintain alignment under the pressures involved. Just look at the two assemblies while pushing with your finger and imagining in your mind the load transfer path and you will easily see the difference. Driving with the tailstock is like spreading your stance and blocking your feet to PUSH a large object with a pole....whereas pushing with the toolholder is like doing the same thing...... in a boat.
anotherspateofopinionby
al