Not everything goes as planned.
In my haste ordering a DRO, I got a 1m x axis thinking, hey my table is 42", that's more than a meter. Well, the scale is 1m readable length, not overall... Thankfully the seller exchanged it for a shorter one. Even the one I ended up with is longer than I need, but oh well. I did manage to get the Y axis hooked up.
Also, FB told me to buy a vise, but it didn't want to come home without bringing some friends. Not a bad haul for $700. 10" Horton 3 jaw chuck, 12" Troyke rotary table and a new Kurt 688 vise.... I think I do these things to avoid making progress.... Anywho....
This then morphed into rebuilding the chuck, and thankfully the brain trust here steerede towards Evaporust vs building an electrolytic cleaner... Simpler, and worked great.
With the chuck clean, reassembled and drilled to mount to the table, I mounted it to check runout and found .005" axial runout. That won't do, so off came so I can stone the high spots - that got me down to .0025" runout. From there, a couple paper shims gets me down to about .001". Good enough.
Now to install the X axis of the dro, then I can get to building the brake rotor hats.
I suppose I left out the "why?" of this detour... I have a lathe, why not use it you might ask? Well, frankly, I'm not as good at using it and don't have confidence I'll make good parts. It's a Craftsman 12-42 lathe, so small and kind of flexy. I made it work work small bushings and sleeves, but nothing that'll spin and have noticeable effects if not made square. I had to use it a couple months back and it felt like a toy. I couldn't believe the flex in the compound slide! After all this, I may still try to borrow some time on a buddies good lathe, but more tools and more capability is more better, right?
Stay tuned, hopefully I actually build something by the next update.