Rough alignment – Grizzly Wood Copy Attachment G2891 User Manual

Page 12

Advertising
background image

-10-

G2891 Lathe Copy Attachment

4.

Tighten the large cap screws securing the

mounting brackets to the lathe bed with the

large Allen

®

wrench provided. Then tighten

the hex nuts securing the Copy Attachment

Bed to the mounting brackets.

5.

Once the brackets and bed are securely

attached, remove the gauge boards.

6.

Install the longitudinal-feed handwheel.

This is the larger of the two handwheels.

It mounts on the shaft at the left hand end

of the Copy Attachment Bed. Secure the

wheel with the setscrew included.

7.

Attach the crossfeed handwheel handle to

the smaller wheel on the the sliding car-

riage.

8.

Install the cutting tool into the arbor and

tighten the collar set screw. See figure 5.

Once the Copy Attachment Bed is attached to the

mounting brackets, the following procedures will

allow you to begin the very important process of

aligning the parallelism between the centers of

the lathe and those of the centers which will hold

your template or original profile.

1.

To roughly align the Copy Attachment

with the lathe headstock/tailstock axis two

gauge boards will be needed. The gauge

boards should be approximately 1- 1

1

8

''

thick, 12'' long and 3'' wide. Clamp these

gauge boards onto the lathe bed, one

under the headstock, the other under the

tailstock.

2.

Place a machinist’s square on top of the

wood and measure 6'' toward the Copy

Attachment bed. See figure 4. Place a

precise mark across the width of the wood.

Repeat the process with another piece of

wood at the headstock.

rough alignment

6"

Copy

Attachment

Bed

figure 4.

Use of gauge boards for alignment.

3.

Once both gauges are marked, slide the

Copy Attachment bed over the board until

the leading edge is even with the marks on

both the left and right sides.

use caution when handling the Copy

attachment’s cutting tool. Its sharp edges

could cause skin lacerations if handled

improperly.

figure 5.

Securing cutting tool.

Advertising