OK Joe 
Now you've got me, I'm down right impressed! That is ONE SLICK set up! 
( I Need some time to compose my thoughts, But for now all I can say At this 
time, is WOW!) ;-) 
C.A.G. 
----- Original Message -----

From: "'joe biunno' via Legacy Ornamental Mills" 
<legacy-ornamental-mills@googlegroups.com> 
To: legacy-ornamental-mills@googlegroups.com 
Sent: Thursday, March 12, 2015 5:58:39 PM 
Subject: Re: "Z" axis template follower 

hey curtis!...and anyone else in the group...attached are photos of my "Z" 
carriage set up to do a faceplate milling operation...for reference, the 
plywood mock up piece in the photos is 19 1/2" in diameter, which is the 
maximum capacity of my mill...in the first photo is an aluminum plate i added 
last year...the plate measures 5/8" thick X 5" wide X 12" long, with proper 
aligned mounting holes that match the legacy steel plate...the holes are 
drilled every 1" for different mounting heights...this will allow me to lower 
the rotary table and router down to a level to reach the center of any large 
faceplate turning...once lowered down you would simply use the rotary table and 
rotate the router 90 degrees, so the router bit is perpendicular to the work 
piece...a faster way to get to this point is to simply lower the router down a 
bit, and then use the tilting feature of the rotary table to swing the router 
down(2nd photo), and then rotate the router to a position that is perpendicular 
to the work piece(3rd photo)...and doing it this way also has the advantage of 
rotating the router further, so the router bit can cut in an arc type 
pattern(4th photo)...in the router chuck is a typical, ball shaped router bit 
to show this better...the setting of the angle of attack for the router bit is 
infinite with this set up of tilts and rotations... you can also then use a 
template follower on the "Y" axis(will work on that mod some day!) to do 
profiles on a faceplate work piece...now once i finish the "Z" axis template 
follower, that particular operation can be done with the legacy circular table 
attachment, but i like the crisp, positive indexing that the head stock can 
provide if i choose to do a work piece as a face plate turning...but as 
mentioned, there are infinite possibilities and options that i haven't even 
thought of yet to do all kinds of work...technically, i could do under cuts on 
a spindle coming in from the six o'clock position if the spindle was of a 
certain size...now, why would i want to do that?, i don't know...but maybe mac 
can figure that out and let us know!...LMAO!...anyway, work gets back to the 
counter weight i need, tomorrow...perhaps an update will be 
forthcoming...thanks for the read...all comments welcome...joe 











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