Chapter VI.—THE LATHE.
The lathe may be justly termed the most important of all metal-cutting machine tools. Not only on account of the rapidity of its execution which is due to its cutting continuously while many others cut intermittently, but also because of the great variety of the duty it will perform to advantage. In the general operations of the lathe, drilling, boring, reaming, and other processes corresponding to those performed by the drilling machine, are executed, while many operations usually performed by the planing machine, or planer as it is sometimes termed, may be so efficiently performed by the lathe that it sometimes becomes a matter of consideration whether the lathe or the planer is the best machine to use for the purpose.
The forms of cutting tools employed in the planer, drilling machine, shaping machine, and boring machine, are all to be found among lathe tools, while the work-holding devices employed on lathe work include, substantially, very nearly all those employed on all other machines and, in addition, a great many that are peculiar to itself. In former times, and in England even at the present day, an efficient turner (as a lathe operator is termed), or lathe hand, is deemed capable of skilfully operating a planer, boring machine, screw-cutting machine, drilling machine, or any of the ordinary machine tools, whereas those who have learned to operate any or all of those machine tools would prove altogether inefficient if put to operate a lathe.
In almost all the mechanic arts the lathe in some form or other is to be found, varying in weight from the jewellers’ lathe of a few pounds to the pulley or fly-wheel lathe of the engine builder, weighing many tons.
Fig. 479.
The lathe is the oldest of machine tools and exists in a greater variety of forms than any other machine tool. [Fig. 479] represents a lathe of primitive construction actually in use at the present day, and concerning which the “Engineering” of London (England), says, “At the Vienna Exhibition there were exhibited wood, glasses, bottles, vases, &c., made by the Hucules, the remnant of an old Asiatic nation which had settled at the time of the general migration of nations in the remotest parts of Galicia, in the dense forests of the Carpathian Mountains. The lathe they are using has been employed by them from time immemorial. They make the cones b, b (of maple) serve as centres, one being fixed and the other movable (longitudinally). They rough out the work with a hatchet, making one end a cylindrical, to receive the rope for giving rotary motion. The cross-bar d is fastened to the trees so as to form a rest for the cutting tool, which consists of a chisel.” c, of course, is the treadle, the lathe or pole being a sapling.
In other forms of ancient lathes a wooden frame was made to receive the work-centres, and one of these centres was carried in a block capable of adjustment along the frame to suit different lengths of work. In place of a sapling a pole or lath was employed, and from this lath is probably derived the term lathe.
It is obvious, however, that with such a lathe no cutting operation can be performed while the work is rotating backwards, and further, that during the period of rest of the cutting tool it is liable to move and not meet the cut properly when the direction of work rotation is reversed and cutting recommences, hence the operation is crude in the extreme, being merely mentioned as a curiosity.