Dictionary Definition
lathe n : machine tool for shaping metal or wood;
the workpiece turns about a horizontal axis against a fixed
tool
User Contributed Dictionary
see lath
English
Pronunciation
- /leɪð/, /leID/
-
- Rhymes with: -eɪð
Noun
- A machine tool
used to shape a piece of material, or workpiece, by rotating the
workpiece against a cutting tool.
- He shaped the bedpost by turning it on a lathe.
- An administrative division of the county of Kent, in England, from the Anglo-Saxon period until it fell entirely out of use in the early twentieth century.
Translations
machine tool used to shape a piece of material
- Chinese: 车床 (chēchuáng)
- Dutch: draaibank
- Finnish: sorvi
- French: tour
- German: Drechselbank Drehbank , Drehmaschine , Drehstuhl , Holzdrehmaschine
- Hebrew: מחרטה
- Icelandic: rennibekkur
- Italian: tornio
- Japanese: 旋盤
- Korean: 선반 (seonban)
- Norwegian: dreiebenk
- Polish: tokarka
- Portuguese: torno
- Russian: токарный станок
- Serbian: strugalica , strug
- Slovene: stružnica
- Spanish: torno
- Swedish: drejskiva, slagbom, svarv , svarvstol
Verb
- To shape with a lathe.
Translations
to shape with a lathe
- Finnish: sorvata
- German: drehen
- Japanese: 削る
See also
lathExtensive Definition
A lathe () is a machine tool
which spins a block of material to perform various operations such
as cutting, sanding, knurling, drilling, or deformation with tools that
are applied to the workpiece to create an object which has symmetry
about an axis of
rotation.
Lathes are used in woodturning, metalworking, metal
spinning, and glassworking. Lathes can be used to shape
pottery, the best-known
design being the potter's
wheel. Most suitably equipped metalworking lathes can also be
used to produce most solids
of revolution, plane surfaces and screw threads or helices.
Ornamental lathes can produce three-dimensional solids of
incredible complexity. The material is held in place by either one
or two centers, at least one of which can be moved horizontally to
accommodate varying material lengths. Examples of objects that can
be produced on a lathe include candlestick holders,
cue
sticks, table legs,
bowls,
baseball
bats, crankshafts
and camshafts.
History
The lathe is an ancient tool, dating at least to the Egyptians and, known and used in Assyria, Greece, the Roman and Byzantine Empires.The origin of turning dates to around 1300BC when
the Egyptians
first developed a two-person lathe. One person would turn the wood
work piece with a rope while the other used a sharp tool to cut
shapes in the wood. The Romans
improved the Egyptian design with the addition of a turning bow.
Early bow lathes were also developed and used in Germany, France
and Britain. In the Middle Ages a
pedal replaced hand-operated turning, freeing both the craftsman's
hands to hold the woodturning tools. The pedal was usually
connected to a pole, often a straight-grained sapling. The system
today is called the "spring pole" lathe (see Polelathe).
Spring pole lathes were in common use into the early 20th Century.
A two-person lathe, called a "great lathe", allowed a piece to turn
continuously (like today's power lathes). A master would cut the
wood while an apprentice turned the crank.
During the industrial
revolution the lathe was motorized, allowing wooden turned
items to be created in less time and allowing the working of metal
on a lathe. The motor also produced a greater rotational speed,
making it easier to quickly produce high quality work. Today most
commercial lathes are computer-operated allowing for
mass-production that can be created with accurate precision and
without the cost of employing craftsmen.
Description
Parts of a lathe
A lathe may or may not have a stand (or legs),
which sits on the floor and elevates the lathe bed to a working
height. Some lathes are small and sit on a workbench or table, and
do not have a stand.
All lathes have a "bed", which is (almost always)
a horizontal beam (although some CNC lathes have a
vertical beam for bed to ensure that swarf, or chips, falls free of
the bed).
At one end of the bed (almost always the left, as
the operator faces the lathe) is a "headstock". The headstock
contains high-precision spinning bearings.
Rotating within the bearings is a horizontal
axle, with an axis parallel to the bed, called the "spindle".
Spindles are often hollow, and have exterior threads and/or an
interior Morse taper
on the "inboard" (i.e., facing to the right / towards the bed) by
which accessories which hold the workpiece may be mounted to the
spindle. Spindles may also have exterior threads and/or an interior
taper at their "outboard" (i.e., facing away from the bed) end,
and/or may have a handwheel or other accessory mechanism on their
outboard end. Spindles are powered, and impart motion to the
workpiece.
The spindle is driven, either by foot power from
a treadle and flywheel or by a belt drive to a power source. In
some modern lathes this power source is an integral electric motor,
often either in the headstock, to the left of the headstock, or
beneath the headstock, concealed in the stand.
The counterpoint to the headstock is the
tailstock, sometimes referred to as the loose head, as it can be
positioned at any convenient point on the bed, by undoing a locking
nut, sliding it to the required area, and then relocking it. The
tailstock contains a barrel which does not rotate, but can slide in
and out parallel to the axis of the bed, and directly in line with
the headstock spindle. The barrel is hollow, and usually contains a
taper to facilitate the gripping of various type of tooling. Its
most common uses are to hold a hardened steel centre, which is used
to support long thin shafts while turning, or to hold drill bits
for drilling axial holes in the work piece. Many other uses are
possible.
Metalworking lathes have a "cross slide", which
is a flat piece that sits crosswise on the bed, and can be cranked
at right angles to the bed. Sitting atop the cross slide is a
toolpost, which holds a cutting tool which removes material from
the workpiece. There may or may not be a leadscrew, which moves the
cross slide along the bed.
Woodturning and metal spinning lathes do not have
cross slides, but have "banjos", which are flat pieces that sit
crosswise on the bed. The position of a banjo can be adjusted by
hand; no gearing is involved. Ascending vertically from the banjo
is a tool post, at the top of which is a horizontal "tool rest". In
woodturning, hand tools are braced against the tool rest and
levered into the workpiece. In metal spinning, the further pin
ascends vertically from the tool rest, and serves as a fulcrum
against which tools may be levered into the workpiece.
Accessories
Unless a workpiece has a taper machined onto it
which perfectly matches the internal taper in the spindle, or has
threads which perfectly match the external threads on the spindle
(two things which almost never happen), an accessory must be used
to mount a workpiece to the spindle.
A workpiece may be bolted or screwed to a
faceplate,
a large flat disk that mounts to the spindle. Alternatively
faceplate
dogs may be used to secure the work to the faceplate.
A workpiece may be clamped in a
three- or four-jaw chuck, which mounts directly to the spindle
or mounted on a mandrel.
In precision work (and in some classes of
repetition work), cylindrical workpieces are invariably held in a
collet inserted into the
spindle and secured either by a drawbar, or by a collet closing cap
on the spindle. Suitable collets may also be used to mount square
or hexagonal workpieces. In precision toolmaking work such collets
are usually of the draw in variety, where as collet is tightened
the workpiece moves slightly back into the headstock, whereas for
most repetition work the dead length variety is preferered as this
ensures that the position of the workpiece does not move as the
collet is tightened, so the workpiece can be set in the lathe to a
fixed position and it will not move on tightening the collet.
A soft workpiece (wooden) may be pinched between
centers by using a spur
drive at the headstock, which bites into the wood and imparts
torque to it.
A soft dead center is used in the headstock
spindle as the work rotates with the centre. Because the centre is
soft it can be trued in place before use. The included angle is 60
degrees. Traditionally a hard dead
center is used together with suitable lubricant in the
tailstock to support the workpiece. In modern practice the dead
center is frequently replaced by a live
center or (revolving center) as it turns freely with the
workpiece usually on ball bearings, reducing the frictional heat,
which is especially important at high RPM. A lathe
carrier or lathe dog may
also be employed when turning between two centers.
In woodturning, one subtype of a live center is a
cup
center, which is a cone of metal surrounded by an annular ring
of metal that decreases the chances of the workpiece
splitting.
A circular metal plate with even spaced holes
around the periphery, mounted to the spindle, is called an "index
plate". It can be used to rotate the spindle a precise number of
degrees, then lock it in place, facilitating repeated auxiliary
operations done to the workpiece.
Modes of use
When a workpiece is fixed between the headstock
and the tailstock, it is said to be "between centers". When a
workpiece is supported at both ends, it is more stable, and more
force may be applied to the workpiece, via tools, at a right angle
to the axis of rotation, without fear that the workpiece may break
loose.
When a workpiece is fixed only to the spindle at
the headstock end, the work is said to be "face work". When a
workpiece is supported in this manner, less force may be applied to
the workpiece, via tools, at a right angle to the axis of rotation,
lest the workpiece rip free. Thus, most work must be done axially,
towards the headstock, or at right angles, but gently.
When a workpiece is mounted with a certain axis
of rotation, worked, then remounted with a new axis of rotation,
this is referred to as "eccentric turning" or "multi axis turning".
The result is that various cross sections of the workpiece are
rotationally symmetric, but the workpiece as a whole is not
rotationally symmetric. This technique is used for camshafts,
various types of chair legs, etc.
Varieties
The smallest lathes are "jewelers lathes" or
"watchmaker lathes", which are small enough that they may be held
in one hand. Although the workpieces machined on a jeweler's lathes
are metal, jeweler's lathes differ from all other metal working
lathes in that the cutting tools (called "gravers") are hand held
and supported by a T-rest, not fixed to a cross slide. The work is
usually held in a collet. Two spindle bore sizes to receive the
collets are common, namely 6 mm and 8 mm. Two
patterns of bed are common: the WW (Webster Whitcomb) bed, a
truncated triangular prism (found only on 8 mm watchmakers
lathes); and the continental D-style bar bed (used on both
6 mm and 8 mm lathes by firms such as Lorch and
Star). Other bed designs have been used, such a triangular prism on
some Boley 6.5 mm lathes, and a V-edged bed on IME's
8 mm lathes.
Lathes that sit on a bench or table are called
"bench lathes".
Lathes that do not have additional integral
features for repetitive production, but rather are used for
individual part production or modification as the primary role, are
called "engine lathes".
Lathes with a very large spindle bore and a chuck
on both ends of the spindle are called "oil field lathes."
Fully automatic mechanical lathes, employing cams
and gear trains for controlled movement, are called screw
machines.
Lathes that are controlled by a computer are
CNC lathes.
Lathes with the spindle mounted in a vertical
configuration, instead of horizontal configuration, are called
vertical lathes or vertical boring machines. They are used where
very large diameters must be turned, and the workpiece
(comparatively) is not very long.
A lathe with a cylindrical tailstock that can
rotate around a vertical axis, so as to present different facets
towards the headstock (and the workpiece) are turret
lathes.
A lathe equipped with indexing plates, profile
cutters, spiral or helical guides, etc., so as to enable ornamental
turning is an ornamental
lathe.
Various combinations are possible: e.g. one could
have a vertical CNC lathe (such as a CNC VTL),
etc.
Lathes can be combined with other machine tools,
such as a drill
press or vertical
milling machine. These are usually referred to as
combination lathes.
Major categories of lathes
Woodworking lathes
Woodworking lathes are the oldest variety. All other varieties are descended from these simple lathes. An adjustable horizontal metal rail - the tool rest - between the material and the operator accommodates the positioning of shaping tools, which are usually hand-held. With wood, it is common practice to press and slide sandpaper against the still-spinning object after shaping to smooth the surface made with the metal shaping tools.There are also woodworking lathes for making
bowls and plates, which have no horizontal metal rail, as the bowl
or plate needs only to be held by one side from a metal face plate.
Without this rail, there is very little restriction to the width of
the piece being turned. Further detail can be found on the woodturning page.
Metalworking lathes
In a metalworking lathe, metal is removed from the workpiece using a hardened cutting tool, which is usually fixed to a solid moveable mounting called the "toolpost", which is then moved against the workpiece using handwheels and/or computer controlled motors.The toolpost is operated by leadscrews that can
accurately position the tool in a variety of planes. The toolpost
may be driven manually or automatically to produce the roughing and
finishing cuts required to turn the workpiece to the desired shape
and dimensions, or for cutting threads,
worm
gears, etc. Cutting
fluid may also be pumped to the cutting site to provide
cooling, lubrication and clearing of swarf from the workpiece. Some
lathes
may be operated under control of a computer for mass
production of parts (see "Computer Numerical
Control").
Metalworking lathes are commonly provided with a
variable ratio gear train to drive the main leadscrew. This enables
different pitches of threads to be cut. Some older gear trains are
changed manually by using interchangeable gears with various
numbers of teeth, while more modern or elaborate lathes have a
quick change box to provide commonly used ratios by the operation
of a lever.
The threads that can be cut are, in some ways,
determined by the pitch of the leadscrew: A lathe with a metric leadscrew will readily cut
metric threads (including
BA), while one with an imperial leadscrew will readily cut
imperial unit based threads such as BSW
or UTS
(UNF,UNC).
The workpiece may be supported between a pair of
points called centres, or it may be bolted to a faceplate or held
in a chuck. A chuck has movable jaws that can grip the workpiece
securely.
Cue lathes
Cue lathes function similar to turning and spinning lathes allowing for a perfectly radially-symmetrical cut for billiard cues. They can also be used to refinish cues that have been worn over the years.Glassworking lathes
Glassworking lathes are similar in design to other lathes, but differ markedly in how the workpiece is modified. Glassworking lathes slowly rotate a hollow glass vessel over a fixed or variable temperature flame. The source of the flame may be either hand-held, or mounted to a banjo/cross slide that can be moved along the lathe bed. The flame serves to soften the glass being worked, so that the glass in a specific area of the workpiece becomes malleable, and subject to forming either by inflation ("glassblowing"), or by deformation with a heat resistant tool. Such lathes usually have two headstocks with chucks holding the work, arranged so that they both rotate together in unison. Air can be introduced through the headstock chuck spindle for glassblowing. The tools to deform the glass and tubes to blow (inflate) the glass are usually handheld.In diamond
turning, a computer-controlled lathe with a diamond-tipped tool
is used to make precision optical surfaces in glass or other
optical materials. Unlike conventional optical grinding, complex
aspheric
surfaces can be machined easily. Instead of the dovetailed ways
used on the tool slide of a metal turning lathe, the ways typically
float on air bearings and the position of the tool is measured by
optical interferometry to achieve the necessary standard of
precision for optical work. The finished work piece usually
requires a small amount subsequent polishing by conventional
techniques to achieve a finished surface suitably smooth for use in
a lens, but the rough grinding time is significantly reduced for
complex lenses.
Metal spinning lathes
In metal spinning, a disk of sheet metal is held perpendicularly to the main axis of the lathe, and tools with polished tips (spoons) are hand held, but levered by hand against fixed posts, to develop large amounts of torque/pressure that deform the spinning sheet of metal.Metal spinning lathes are almost as simple as
woodturning lathes (and, at this point, lathes being used for metal
spinning almost always are woodworking lathes). Typically, metal
spinning lathes require a user-supplied rotationally symmetric
mandrel, usually made of wood, which serves as a template onto
which the workpiece is moulded (non-symmetric shapes can be done,
but it is a very advanced technique). For example, if you want to
make a sheet metal
bowl, you need a solid chunk of wood in the shape of the bowl; if
you want to make a vase,
you need a solid template of a vase, etc.
Given the advent of high speed, high pressure,
industrial die forming, metal spinning is less common now than it
once was, but still a valuable technique for producing one-off
prototypes or small batches where die forming would be
uneconomical.
Ornamental turning lathes
The ornamental turning lathe was developed around
the same time as the industrial screwcutting lathe in the
nineteenth century. It was used not for making practical objects,
but for decorative
work - ornamental turning. By using accessories such as the
horizontal and vertical cutting
frames, eccentric chuck and elliptical chuck, solids
of extraordinary complexity may be produced by various generative
procedures. A special purpose lathe, the Rose
engine lathe is also used for ornamental turning, in particular
for engine turning, typically in precious metals, for example to
decorate pocket watch cases. As well as a wide range of
accessories, these lathes usually have complex dividing
arrangements to allow the exact rotation of the mandrel. Cutting is
usually carried out by rotating cutters, rather than directly by
the rotation of the work itself. Because of the difficulty of
polishing such work, the materials turned, such as wood or ivory,
are usually quite soft, and the cutter has to be exceptionally
sharp. The finest ornamental lathes are generally considered to be
those made by Holtzapffel
around the turn of the 19th century.
Reducing Lathe
Many types of lathes can be equipped with
accessory components to allow them to reproduce an item: the
original item is mounted on one spindle, the blank is mounted on
another, and as both turn in synchronized manner, one end of an arm
"reads" the original and the other end of the arm "carves" the
duplicate.
A reducing lathe is a specialized lathe that is
designed with this feature, and which incorporates a mechanism
similar to a pantograph, so that when the
"reading" end of the arm reads a detail that measures one inch (for
example), the cutting end of the arm creates an analogous detail
that is (for example) one quarter of an inch (a 4:1 reduction,
although given appropriate machinery and appropriate settings, any
reduction ratio is possible).
Reducing lathes are used in coin-making, where a
plaster original (or an epoxy master made from the plaster
original, or a copper shelled master made from the plaster
original, etc.) is duplicated and reduced on the reducing lathe,
generating a
master die.
Rotary lathes
A lathe in which softwood logs are turned against a very sharp blade and peeled off in one continuous or semi-continuous roll. Invented by Immanuel Nobel (father of the more famous Alfred Nobel). The first such lathes were set up in the United States in the mid-19th centuryWatchmaker's lathes
Watchmakers lathes are delicate but precise metalworking lathes, usually without provision for screwcutting, and are still used by horologists for work such as the turning of balance shafts. A handheld tool called a graver is often used in preference to a slide mounted tool. The original watchmaker's turns was a simple dead-centre lathe with a moveable rest and two loose headstocks. The workpiece would be rotated by a bow, typically of horsehair, wrapped around it.Gallery
Examples of lathes
Examples of work produced from a lathe
See also
References
In line in text
History
- lathes - Information on all lathes including specifications, photos and much more
- Lathes.co.uk - Everything you ever wanted to know about lathes
- Medieval and Renaissance lathes
- The history of the lathe
- Early Wood-Working
- Spring pole lathe
- Introduction to Metal Spinning on Manual and Automatic CNC Lathes
- On ye art and mystery of Turning
- South Bend diagrams and description of the 9 inch Workshop Lathes.
- Modern Machine Shop Practice a historic Victorian text describing lathe design, construction and use in 1880s.
Instruction/Support
- Large archive of information on older lathes and other machine tools. Also sells books on the use of lathes. http://www.lathes.co.uk/
- 7x10, 7x12 and 7x14 Asian mini-lathes http://www.mini-lathe.com includes beginner info as well as mini-lathe product reviews
- How to Run a Lathe, 15th Ed - 1914 by South Bend Lathe
- Beginners Guide to a Mini-Lathe
- Various 'How to' guides by South Bend Lathe
- Hand Metal Spinning and CNC Metal Spinning Lathe Video Demonstrations
Important books
- Turning Wood With Richard Raffan
- Turning and Mechanical Manipulation Volume V}}
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
T square, alembic, anvil, awl, bale breaker, bar, battering ram, bevel, bevel square, bodkin, bradawl, buffer, caldron, calipers, cant hook, caulking
iron, center punch, crowbar, crucible, dibble, dividers, edger, electric sander, electric
soldering iron, engine,
file, flail, forceps, fork, grapnel, grappling iron, grease
gun, grindstone,
hawk, hook, jack, jackscrew, jointer, level, machine, melting pot, miter box,
mortar, motor, nail file, nail puller,
palette knife, peavey,
pincers, pinch bar,
pitchfork, planer, pliers, puller, punch, punch pliers, puncheon, putty knife, ram, rammer, ramrod, retort, ripping bar, screwdriver, shaper, soldering iron, spatula, square, stapler, tackle, tamp, tamper, tamping pick, tap, test tube, tire iron, tire
tool, tongs, transducer, transformer, tweezers, vise, wrecking
bar