Turn Table or Positioning Vise?

Turn table or Positioning Vise?

  • I use a vise on a turn table

    Votes: 89 59.7%
  • I use a positioning type vise

    Votes: 31 20.8%
  • My vise is stationary

    Votes: 20 13.4%
  • Other

    Votes: 9 6.0%

  • Total voters
    149

glstrcowboy

Elite Cafe Member
Joined
Apr 5, 2013
Messages
148
Location
VA
I selected other. My setup uses a four jaw lathe chuck mounted on a lazy susan. A section of pipe connects it to the brake disc and plywood assembly that serves as a foot wheel.
 

dlilazteca

~ Elite 1000 Member ~
Joined
May 10, 2013
Messages
2,659
Location
Laredo, Texas
ARM, This is one of those situations where if you could see how someone is using the turntable it would make perfect sense, but trying to explain it is difficult.

When you look through the scope you see a very small field of view somewhere between 1-3 inches (2.5 - 7.5 cm.) depending on your scope and how much magnification you use. Imagine you want to engrave an object that was a bit larger like a knife. Let's say it's 5 inches long (13 cm.) so you mount it in a holder (thermolock, knife vise, etc.) and then clamp that into the vise. Assume the center of the vise is already directly in the center of your field of view. Now, if you mounted the knife in the vise so that it was perfectly centered from left to right it would hang out of the field of view in your scope by 1 inch (2.5 cm.) on each side. This wouldn't be so bad if you wanted to work on the direct center of the knife which at this point would be in the center of the vise in the center of the field of the microscope's view.

Now, what happens when you want to actually engrave the bolster by the blade? It's hanging out of the field of view. The next logical thing is to move the vise so that the part you want to engrave is under the field of view. The only problem with this is that when you go to spin the vise (to move the part into your graver as you spoke about earlier) the entire bolster will move out of view. The farther away from the center of the vise the larger the swing area will be. Imagine concentric circles like when you throw a pebble into a pond. Each circle away from the original point of entry is larger. In this case the direct center of the vise rotation is our epicenter.

Moving the vise and the scope to compensate for this becomes old very quickly. To compensate for this by the turntable you do this:

1) Put turntable under scope
2) Use centering peg (this comes with GRS turntable) or mark direct center of rotation on turntable (can be with tape, etc.)
3) Look through scope and put center of rotation of turntable directly in the middle of your scope's field of view.
4) Lock the rotation on the vise so it is stationary.
5) Put vise on turntable under the scope.
6) As best as you can line up the part you want to engrave on - in this case the bolster near the blade - directly over the mark on the turntable.
7) Look through the scope and fine tune the bolster into the field of view.
8) To check that it is right rotate the part while looking through scope. If it is correct you will see the part rotate, but it will stay in the view. If it is still drifting slightly take notice of which part of the object (in this case the bolster) seems to be staying still. That area is over the direct center the "epicenter" of the entire set up. Move the bolster closer to that point.

At this point you will only turn the turntable for the rotation. The vise top is locked. If you look at the setup the center of the vise will be about 2 inches (5 cm.) off of the center of the turntable center and will rotate with the turntable, but will travel around one of the concentric circles. The bolster should be in the center and should be relatively stable.

Now as you start to work, the tilt of the vise may have to be adjusted slightly - maybe you have a slightly curved bolster, or perhaps there is a clip or something to work around. With this set up you can "nudge" the bolster into the field of view with your left hand as you change tilt, etc. You will get very good at moving the entire vise into the field of view so you can keep working and not be chasing the part.

This movement on the fly is one of the reasons I'm considering a slightly lighter vise. The magna block can be heavy after a couple of hours of movement. On the other hand, it works with this set up and is very stable.

Now, when you have a very small part that is able to be centered in the vise, stop the rotation of the turntable (tape, pin, GRS sells a clamp, etc.), allow the vise top to rotate and just work off of the vise rotation. I leave the turntable on my drill press stand almost all the time. Sometimes I work with the vise locked and sometimes I work with the turntable locked. Either way it's ready to go.

My drill press table also rotates, but I keep it locked with only slight movement. I only use it to position the entire set up under the scope. When I'm not using the above set up, I use a the small vise (I call it the baby vise) in the bottom of my lowest pull out drawer on my bench. The drill press stand is off to the side and I can swing it in or out depending on what I need or how large the part is. If I'm doing large motorcycle exhaust parts I swing it out in front of the bench and work there so the rotating parts don't hit the bench.

Hope that helps. :)

Thank you this really helped

Carlos De La O III
 

Ed Westerly

~ Elite 1000 Member ~
Joined
Mar 16, 2011
Messages
1,224
Location
southern California
I came in late, but wanted to throw in my 1.5 cents. I chose "other", because I use a turntable with a positioning vise. I find that setup gives me much more range of motion than anything else I've tried. Hope this disturbs you slightly!
 

barney

Member
Joined
Apr 15, 2007
Messages
13
I use a hands free foot operated positioning platform I never have to set the tool down to move the vise. a lot of the time I can just give it a nudge to keep things centered while making a cut. my own invention from the 90s Barney
 

barney

Member
Joined
Apr 15, 2007
Messages
13
I forgot to add that you can use any engravers vise on this platform . Barney
 

percman48

Member
Joined
Jan 5, 2015
Messages
10
I am a novice at this and have yet to really do any commission work. I don't really feel that I am good enough - at least after looking at some of the projects that the regulars are posting. Therefor my budget is limited. I fabricated my own turn-table. It is half a bowling ball, situated on a hard rubber wheelbarrow tire. The tire is fastened to a ball bearing bar stool swivel. Atop the ball is a self centering machinist vise. It is heavy enough. It tilts where I need it to and holds the work securely. The rotation portion is just a little bit sticky. Some more engineering probably looms on my horizon but I am invested into this contraption for less than $200.
 

dlilazteca

~ Elite 1000 Member ~
Joined
May 10, 2013
Messages
2,659
Location
Laredo, Texas
I have moved away from my grs vise, it also tends to hickup and I clean it and its back to its ways so only use it when I need to lower my work the height is perfect but the hickups are frustrating, ive moved over to the shimpo, hope I got that right and it spinns better than the grs vise, the movement is so fluent it feels like it's riding on air, the cons are that its 10 inches in diameter and higher than the grs vise, but I love it, others here use it they might chime in, and you can find a link on Lindsay website, he does not sell them but has a link I believe it was under 100 dollars, I recomment it.

Just remember the grs is 12 inches in diameter so if you work with large items it should serve you better, I own both, use my shimpo 90% and my grs vise 20 percent, I do wish they would upgrade there bearings.

my 2 cents worth

here is the info from the sight.

Engraver Ray Cover discovered more cost effective solution: a Shimpo turntable that can be found on pottery making craft sites. *At the bottom of the page of*this link, is the "Shimpo" turntables list of banding wheels. The one to get is model BW-25L.* It is 9.875" in diameter x 2.25" high and at $68.88 (at the time of writing) it's hard not to recommend it for beginners or anyone with a tight budget.* I noticed a little wobble in the one I tested, but it wasn't bad.

Clay-King.com offers Banding Wheels at discount prices!
http://www.clay-king.com/turntables.htm

Saludos,
Carlos
 
Last edited:

Sponsors

Top