I just received a Marshall Peerless lathe I won on ebay, and it looks to be in really good shape. I can see that it has been really cared for. It's pristine, with all the parts working and centered, except it is missing it's index pin.
I haven't worked with a lathe yet, and am new to all of this, so I'm guessing that the pin seems to be integral to setting up and removing the collet.
So my questions are:
Do I need one before I even start to try to learn on the lathe?
Where can I get one?
Can I make it out of something else? Seems like I could. Looks to be something very similar to the centering punch in a staking set.
Posts: 152 | Location: Miami, Florida in the USA | Registered: August 11, 2009
Dale, you just brought a smile to my face I remember my first lathe also had this missing also they slide out and get lost recheck the packing material and ask the seller has he found it on the floor , you need one, so there is your first project....
The index pin is mostly needed to fix a part in different positions and file some flat's with a file and a file guard, like the square section of a stem ( or for wheel cutting); You never need it to open or close the collets
Regards, Gerald
Posts: 742 | Location: Wertheim in Germany | Registered: February 21, 2009
any tool steel rod of the correct diameter will work. The pin positions the collet in the keyway slot and prevents it spinning by locking it in one position. I've had many made for me by my tool and die maker friend Reg Miller of St.Thomas ,Ontario, a great toolmaker ,and a great guy
Posts: 1746 | Location: Aylmer, Ontario in Canada | Registered: December 15, 2009