bertterbo
Established Member
I'll try this.Interestingly one of the reviews for the axminster chuck you have claims runout as 0.04mm, although not clear what they are referring to exactly. Axminster dont appear to give figures, or not that I could see. Before you go throwin more money at the problem i would confirm your existing meaasurements. So make sure the arbour and spindle bore are spotlessly clean and install the arbour in the spindle. Mark the realtive positions of arbour and spindle with a sharpie or similar. Use your dti to take a runout figure at the top of the projecting arbour taper, and repeat at the bottom. Make sure your dti is at right angles to the surface being measured. Ideally the figure should be the same for both readings. If there is a big variation then either the bore in the spindle is at an angle or the arbour is not straight. Mark the high spot on the arbour with a sharpie, ie where it is closest to the dti. Now take the arbour out and re install it 180 degrees from the previous position relative to the spindle. Repeat your measurements, and note where the high point is, relative to where it was before. If the readings are the same but the high point has shifted 180 degrees then your arbour is straight, and the error is in the spindle. If the readings have changed appreciably then there is an issue with the arbour. To check the arbour properly you really need to mount it between centres. If you cant do this then roll it on a flat surface. Even very small errors can be quite apparent. Hope this is helpful.
I do actually have a lathe, but its MT2 not MT3. How would testing between centers help? as aren't you then introducing error from the tail stock?