Heres a picture of the not very exciting square box I made that bolts together and holds the spinea unit in the horizontal plane. Some of the joints got scraped in and then the bottom was scraped for squareness with the spinea flange. You can see my overhung fixture bar is already attached.

https://photos.app.goo.gl/uPyBioiBrsJNtiVg6

Note the key use of gorilla tape on the outside of the ts200 and the last round of notes from measurement/scraping still on the unit. Regular duct-tape is not approved for cycloidal use.

Here's what happens when you drive your drill chuck into that pipe fixture from the side.

https://photos.app.goo.gl/zHxXurYgmY22msqb9


-Dave


On Wed, 01 Apr 2020 03:05:52 -0400, John Dammeyer <[email protected]> wrote:

From: David Berndt [mailto:[email protected]]
Alright, maybe i'm shooting myself in the foot here by inducing demand and
I won't be able to get any cheap ebay units in future, but here goes...

I bought a used spinea ts200 about a year ago and put a 750w servo on the
back of it, built an enclosure and use it primarily as a fixturing
positioner. It's awesome for my needs. 169:1 ratio. Position holding under
light milling (think 5hp or less is my experience, I don't have a 40hp
beast to test with)

Any pictures?



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