Tim Oltersdorf
Active member
I want to check the leveling on my lathe. I have been looking at the starret machinist's levels on e-bay. I have a 14 x 40 inch lathe. What degree of accuracy and length level do you recommend? Thanks Tim
I want to check the leveling on my lathe. I have been looking at the starret machinist's levels on e-bay. I have a 14 x 40 inch lathe. What degree of accuracy and length level do you recommend? Thanks Tim
Well they all but give those babies away don't they...You should get the Starrett #199 master precision level which reads to .0005" per foot.
It would be better to have two for both sides of the bed, but it's not necessary.
Leveling a lathe is just a starting point for getting it tuned up. It is more important to put the bed in the same degree of twist that it was in when it was ground at the factory and that isn't necessarily level on both ends. This document explains how to get the spindle alinged with the bed without a level. http://igor.chudov.com/manuals/Rollies-Dads-Method-of-Lathe-Alignment.pdf
RWO
Jerry, Actually I am a radiologist. If the rumor got out that I was a dentist people would be coming up to me and showing me their teeth. Most people don't carry their x-rays around with them. Most do carry around their teeth. Some like Arnold Jewell do so in their pocket. Tim
X-rays can be emailed, however, a machinst level cannot...that said, there may be a level app for the I-phone by now.
Ben
I want to check the leveling on my lathe. I have been looking at the starret machinist's levels on e-bay. I have a 14 x 40 inch lathe. What degree of accuracy and length level do you recommend? Thanks Tim
I have been in several lathe builders (American, Leblond, Monarch. Cincinnati_Milacron, Giddings & Lewis and a few others, (back when the US did stuff like that) and several rebuilders. I have never seen or even heard of a situation where the way-grinder was set up to grind a bed out of level. Someone is pulling your leg!!
Before the days of hardened-ground ways hand scraping after the lathe was set was how bedways were finished.