Adding dial indicator to lathe tailstock

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Brian Rupnow

Design Engineer
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A few months ago, I started a thread about using a long stroke dial indicator to indicate carriage travel on my lathe. I bought a 2" stroke dial indicator, but as I got deeper and deeper into it, I came to realize that nothing actually beats a DRO set-up. So, I spent some of the Rupnow fortune on a nice DRO set-up and installed it on my lathe. It's wonderful!!! If you have the money to do so, then by all means buy one. They are worth whatever you have to pay.--However, that left me with a 2" stroke dial indicator and still no way to accurately monitor the travel of my tailstock quill. Today was one of those rare days when I had absolutely nothing else to do, so I made up a bracket and installed the dial indicator on my tailstock. I even got real fancy, and made a video of it working. It wasn't until I replayed the video that I realized I had said "2" DRO" instead of "2" dial indicator". Ah well, bad on me. I'm not going to make a new video just to get the wording right.


 
And yes, here is my fumble mouthed video.
[ame]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Z7DK79dNxs&feature=youtu.be[/ame]
 
Brian

Does your tailstock have a self ejecting feature? If so, when you fully retract the barrel does the retract feature still work with the bracket fitted?

The reason I ask is that I fitted a digital scale to my tailstock but had to counterbore the bracket by 50% to permit the barrel to retract sufficiently for the self-eject to work.

Installed.jpg

Going this route still allowed a good clamping on the barrel. The ball/socket joints permit the barrel to rotate (in case of any wear on the key - there isn't any at the moment) without straining the scale.


Dave
The Emerald Isle
 
My tailstock does have a self ejecting feature. I can still eject my tooling with it set up as shown.--Brian
 
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