Jerry,
I am sorry for the delay in returning to this thread. I have been in and out of the Hospital for the last 3 months or so with medical problems.
I have since purchased 2 brand new bearings with expanders from Joe at Plaza that he had.
I have installed on the spindle and now see how worn out my bearings really were. Now without opening the expanders the spindle will not move at all.
Before it had no effect at all on the larger front bearing it was so worn out.
My next project is to fabricate and install new bearing shims that I purchased for the lathe. It has become a time consuming job to try and find the right amount of shim stock for the spindle.
Any input on cutting new brass shim stock would be appreciated. I seem to keep messing the brass up with scissors.
Also does anyone know what is the correct amount of shim spacers that South Bend originally installed on their lathes.
John
John, from what I gather in the shim adjustment instructions and looking at an exploded drawing of the headstock there would be 0.003" of shim under the end of each cap. One shim is 0.001", the other is 0.002".
The 0.002" is called a laminated shim (why-dunno). Anyhow, instructions say to remove the 0.001" for first the wear adjustment but to save the 0.001" to use later when additional wear requires another adjustment.
The second adjustment would be to remove the 0.002" shims and replace it with the 0.001" that was saved. Then I guess the final adjustment that would be available would be to again remove the 0.001" shims.
Mine has the first adjustment made, i.e. the 0.001" shims are removed. My spindle is still in great condition as to free-play. Since mine was made in 1944 and it has only required removal of one shim, I assume there would be thousands of hours of use between spindle adjustments.
We have some 3-step 13" South Bend lathes at Northeast State College that have been there for at least 25 years that have never had a shim removed according to maintenance records. But, they don't get used 24/7 either. These 13" SBL's look just like a Heavy 10 except slightly larger.
As to adjustment, and since you are using an old spindle and new bearings, keep adding shims, equally on each cap end, till the spindle turns freely. Then run the spindle at high RPM for a few minutes to make sure you don't get any heat buildup. Make sure you have oil in the bearing reservoirs and the wicks are clean. I use Mobil DTE light with 50% kerosene