OK, I'm stumped.
This morning I'm drilling holes in the cylinder blocks for the Elmer's Comber engine. I need the hole exactly centered in the back side of the block for the bearing shaft. The shaft is to be silver soldered into the block.
I have the end mill holder mounted and find the edges of the block and move to my mark and lock the axes. I also have a habit of double checking using my tapping center and a 6 inch scale. It looks fine.
I change out the end mill holder for the drill chuck, mount the drill bit and proceed to drill the hole a bit undersize for reaming. By visual inspection the hole looks off center. I measure from the edge of the block to the edge of the hole on both sides the axis with a caliper and find them different by almost .040
I remount the end mill holder and edge finder to recheck my edge measurements. It's spot on. So I double check the measurements of my parts. Yep, they're OK too.
I remount the drill chuck and drill another hole. Same thing, it's off by .040 WTF??
A light bulb goes off. I chuck the edge finder in the drill chuck and recheck my edges. Y axis is spot on, X is off by .010; should have been .100 but was .090. OK, so the problem seems to be the drill chuck.
I finished drilling the holes using the drill chuck to find the edges. When I went to ream the holes, the reamer wasn't centered over the holes either. Since the reamer is longer my intuition suggests I may be out of tram, or am I all wrong about that?
It's the first of the month, so I had just checked and trammed the mill and squared the vise last weekend. I'll recheck those in a few minutes just because I want to be anal. I'm using a Starrett edge finder, so I doubt that's part of the problem. The end mill holder is a Bison and I'm using the crappy drill chuck that came with the mill. The mill has an R8 taper. I'm using a 3-axis DRO, and I've been intentionally trying to find errors with it but so far have come up empty handed there. It doesn't "feel" right to me, but so far all I've been able to prove is that it's on the money.
Why would there be a difference of .010 between the end mill holder and drill chuck? And why only in one axis?
And why would a .010 error result in .040 difference? I would also expect any runout in the chuck to make a circle around the mark, not translate to one side.
Any ideas? Anyone?
This morning I'm drilling holes in the cylinder blocks for the Elmer's Comber engine. I need the hole exactly centered in the back side of the block for the bearing shaft. The shaft is to be silver soldered into the block.
I have the end mill holder mounted and find the edges of the block and move to my mark and lock the axes. I also have a habit of double checking using my tapping center and a 6 inch scale. It looks fine.
I change out the end mill holder for the drill chuck, mount the drill bit and proceed to drill the hole a bit undersize for reaming. By visual inspection the hole looks off center. I measure from the edge of the block to the edge of the hole on both sides the axis with a caliper and find them different by almost .040
I remount the end mill holder and edge finder to recheck my edge measurements. It's spot on. So I double check the measurements of my parts. Yep, they're OK too.
I remount the drill chuck and drill another hole. Same thing, it's off by .040 WTF??
A light bulb goes off. I chuck the edge finder in the drill chuck and recheck my edges. Y axis is spot on, X is off by .010; should have been .100 but was .090. OK, so the problem seems to be the drill chuck.
I finished drilling the holes using the drill chuck to find the edges. When I went to ream the holes, the reamer wasn't centered over the holes either. Since the reamer is longer my intuition suggests I may be out of tram, or am I all wrong about that?
It's the first of the month, so I had just checked and trammed the mill and squared the vise last weekend. I'll recheck those in a few minutes just because I want to be anal. I'm using a Starrett edge finder, so I doubt that's part of the problem. The end mill holder is a Bison and I'm using the crappy drill chuck that came with the mill. The mill has an R8 taper. I'm using a 3-axis DRO, and I've been intentionally trying to find errors with it but so far have come up empty handed there. It doesn't "feel" right to me, but so far all I've been able to prove is that it's on the money.
Why would there be a difference of .010 between the end mill holder and drill chuck? And why only in one axis?
And why would a .010 error result in .040 difference? I would also expect any runout in the chuck to make a circle around the mark, not translate to one side.
Any ideas? Anyone?