Hi Guys,
Sometime ago I bought an Axminster woodscrew chuck. I have only used it occasionally, generally preferring faceplates. I used it today to mount a bowl blank. As well as the the centre screw, I also used 4 short screws to secure the blank. Having turned the outside of the bowl, I came to take the chuck off the headstock spindle. I locked the spindle, grasped the bowl and tried to turn it off. I couldn’t budge it. The chuck comes with a 6mm x 6 inch steel rod that can be inserted into a hole on the edge of the chuck. Usually inserting this rod and giving it a sharp tap will begin to unscrew the chuck from the spindle. It didn’t happen today. I gave the rod increasingly hard hits with a rubber mallet, all without any effect other than bending the rod. I became increasingly desperate, imagining the cost of sending the headstock away. Eventually I used a large pipe wrench. This did it, but at the cost of seriously marking the outside of the chuck body. I was relieved to find headstock spindle was undamaged, the thought that somehow a cross threading had happened had crossed my mind.
A long story, I know, but does anyone know why this happened, or have had the same problem with this Axminster product?
D.
Sometime ago I bought an Axminster woodscrew chuck. I have only used it occasionally, generally preferring faceplates. I used it today to mount a bowl blank. As well as the the centre screw, I also used 4 short screws to secure the blank. Having turned the outside of the bowl, I came to take the chuck off the headstock spindle. I locked the spindle, grasped the bowl and tried to turn it off. I couldn’t budge it. The chuck comes with a 6mm x 6 inch steel rod that can be inserted into a hole on the edge of the chuck. Usually inserting this rod and giving it a sharp tap will begin to unscrew the chuck from the spindle. It didn’t happen today. I gave the rod increasingly hard hits with a rubber mallet, all without any effect other than bending the rod. I became increasingly desperate, imagining the cost of sending the headstock away. Eventually I used a large pipe wrench. This did it, but at the cost of seriously marking the outside of the chuck body. I was relieved to find headstock spindle was undamaged, the thought that somehow a cross threading had happened had crossed my mind.
A long story, I know, but does anyone know why this happened, or have had the same problem with this Axminster product?
D.