Esqy
Established Member
- Joined
- 28 May 2023
- Messages
- 69
- Reaction score
- 41
My lathe was making a clicking sound once per revolution, so I popped the brushes out and re-seated them, which solved the issue.
Turned a couple of pens, and all was good in the land.
I decided to try my hand at turning a bowl. I only have 1 bowl gouge I got from a car boot sale, and not sharpened it yet, so I went with the carbide tools.
The blank was a circular bit of Ash from Yandles - Not brave enough to try turning a square one yet - and from the outset I was having trouble. I'd taken a solid few mm off the outside to true it, but was still getting chatter, and when I stopped it, I found a still-waxed section that it appeared my chisel was jumping over. I sanded it a bit, thinking that the wax was somehow causing the skip, but nothing changed. I managed to remove that bit by coming in from the side. but still, there was chatter.
I then found that if I pushed through with any force above a light touch, the bowl would slow down. I put this down to the fairly slow speed I was running it at, however this was just below where it started vibrating.
Because I didn't want to fry the motor (The machine is only a few months old), I stopped and checked through all the bits, and then hit up google. Looks like my belt is slipping.
Is there a rule-of-thumb when it comes to setting the correct belt tension? I understand that it needs to be loose enough that the motor can cruise through it, but tight enough to stop slippage. Is it a 'trial and error' deal?
Turned a couple of pens, and all was good in the land.
I decided to try my hand at turning a bowl. I only have 1 bowl gouge I got from a car boot sale, and not sharpened it yet, so I went with the carbide tools.
The blank was a circular bit of Ash from Yandles - Not brave enough to try turning a square one yet - and from the outset I was having trouble. I'd taken a solid few mm off the outside to true it, but was still getting chatter, and when I stopped it, I found a still-waxed section that it appeared my chisel was jumping over. I sanded it a bit, thinking that the wax was somehow causing the skip, but nothing changed. I managed to remove that bit by coming in from the side. but still, there was chatter.
I then found that if I pushed through with any force above a light touch, the bowl would slow down. I put this down to the fairly slow speed I was running it at, however this was just below where it started vibrating.
Because I didn't want to fry the motor (The machine is only a few months old), I stopped and checked through all the bits, and then hit up google. Looks like my belt is slipping.
Is there a rule-of-thumb when it comes to setting the correct belt tension? I understand that it needs to be loose enough that the motor can cruise through it, but tight enough to stop slippage. Is it a 'trial and error' deal?