Converting wood lathe to metal

UKworkshop.co.uk

Help Support UKworkshop.co.uk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Ian

Established Member
Joined
5 Apr 2007
Messages
522
Reaction score
0
Location
Northern Ireland
Hi

Has anyone converted their wood lathe for metal turning?

I have a axminster 900 lathe and was looking to hopefully use it for accurate metal turning.

Any advice would be great.

Cheers Ian

PS and a happy new year to all
 
I think you would be wasting your time, the bearings and tailstock alighnment are not accurate enough for starters.

You would then need to find a way of accuratly advancing a cutting tool along, accross and diagonally to the lathe axis. And ideally have powered feed along the lathe and preferably across as well.

The slowest speed of 500rpm is also a bit on the high side if you intend workinh on anything over 1" dia.

Jason
 
As Jason has said, forget it, totally unsuitable for anything other than finishing off the odd brass ferule on a handle or the like.
 
Absolutely and definitely not. I have a small engineering lathe and apart from having a lead screw and cross slide, variable speeds down to about 50 rpm or less.
Accuracy of 001 of an inch (old money) no hand held cutting tips,,,,,etc,etc. need I go on.
If you want to work in metal, get a small model engineering lathe. you will find it very useful for making things for your wood lathe.
 
If you <really> want to use your lathe for very basic metal turning, you might be able to pick up the cross/top slides that Myford made for the ML8 and for the Mystro. (I think there was also a similar thing for the Graduate/Jubilee) You won't be able to screw cut with these, except with a chaser, and like the others have said, why bother? As well as the precision issues, wood dust in the close fitting bits of a metal-turning lathe won't do it any good!
Having said that, I did succumb to a secondhand Myford cross/top slide that was going cheap for my Mystro, thinking there might occasionally be things for which it was useful, where it would save the Super 7 for higher precision jobs. But haven't used it yet...
 
Ok thanks guys

I think I might try to sell of the lathe and go for a small metal one.

Cheers

Ian
 

Latest posts

Back
Top