Looking at your photo it looks like you have heated the morse taper judging by the blue tinge , Surly that would make the MT expand making it tighter , I think you need to heat up thr part it goes into ?
I suspect that is mostly the robomoderator, some of the substitutions used do raise an eyebrow - "turnip" files is the usual one. In this case probably preceded by a typo. Perhaps L->F, that doesn't result in the usual spelling but it's a common enough variant it may be recognised in its own right.How on earth does my auto correct get Pilkington from Looking ??
Would welcome any ideas, hints or suggestions.
Well, we have an MT2 arbour stuck in a shaft and will not budge. I’m running out of ideas on how to get the two apart. It does not have a slot for a drift, so no chance of getting at it from the rear unfortunately. It’s a high speed shaft, part of the pin router we are renovating: we have a thread about it.
So far tried dunking it in penetrating oil, percussion encouragement, heating up the outer, and applying a lot of pressure to pull it out. It’s being stubborn and not shifting. This is the arrangement we came up with to pull it, it’s very difficult to get anything to pull. However, there are a couple of bolts pushing the two clams apart.
View attachment 143236
depends on the weight of the hammerIf you can release it, the taper will probably still be good - unless you try to twist it out ( which is unlikely to work ), even then a touch with a morse reamer would fix that.
A slide hammer will not give sufficient shock.
Used to have one which had the head of a 14lb sledgehammer drilled through lengthwise to slide on the shaft. Nothing resisted it for long!Is it possible that the tapers are rusted together?
It may help to firstly hit the flange as though to tighten it to loosen the grip, then hit the flange on both sides to release it. I also think a heavy duty slide hammer attached to the flange is the answer.
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