Jump to content

A handle for a Levin


measuretwice

Recommended Posts

I have a Levin lathe that was missing a handle - that was today's little project and I thought I'd post some photos.  The blank is small, .220" dia and less than an inch long.  I turned the press fit section in big lathe then switch to a Pultra and did the balance by hand with a graver.  Fun work, sort of like wood turning.

 

48LxvsW.jpg

Lkw7Afx.jpg

The one I made is on the right, obviously not identical, but good enough for an eyeball job

23AKt5G.jpg

  • Like 5
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, jdrichard said:

Where do you get your stock and can i use the same stock for turning Balance Staffs
 

I took a load of steel out of a high school machine shop that closed 20 years ago, lifetime supply, but any service centre should have 12L14.  Online metals or metal supermarkets would be two that deal in small quantities.  Its not suitable for a balance staff as its not a steel you can heat treat (for all effective purposes anyway).   For staffs I would use a carbon tool steel like O1, cheap, readily available and easy enough to machine and heat treat.  otoh I'm not exactly deeply steeped in watchmaking experience so I wouldn't be too shocked if there was something else that guys preferred

Edited by measuretwice
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I took a load of steel out of a high school machine shop that closed 20 years ago, lifetime supply, but any service centre should have 12L14.  Online metals or metal supermarkets would be two that deal in small quantities.  Its not suitable for a balance staff as its not a steel you can heat treat (for all effective purposes anyway).   For staffs I would use a carbon tool steel like O1, cheap, readily available and easy enough to machine and heat treat.  otoh I'm not exactly deeply steeped in watchmaking experience so I wouldn't be too shocked if there was something else that guys preferred

Thanks for the reply. The guy i bought the lathe from included some stock, but i dont know what the steel is so i dont want to start cutting Staffs and find out it is nit the right stuff.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 9 months later...

The 12L14 is leaded stock and is specifically formulated tor lathe turning work. It cuts easily and produces a beautiful finish. The lead acts as a built in lubricant and enables the metal to cut like butter. I spent much of my working life in a manufacturing company and we ran tons and tons of leaded stock on turret lathes. We would occasionally get it hardened but we always sent our work out to a heat treating company when hardening was required. I am not sure of the process they used to heat treat leaded stock but they had  equipment like computer controlled vacuum furnaces and  vats of molten cyanide and other nasty stuff that you would not want in your shop.  The major drawback to the metal is is could not be welded.

david

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 hours ago, david said:

The 12L14 is leaded stock and is specifically formulated tor lathe turning work. It cuts easily and produces a beautiful finish. The lead acts as a built in lubricant and enables the metal to cut like butter. I spent much of my working life in a manufacturing company and we ran tons and tons of leaded stock on turret lathes. We would occasionally get it hardened but we always sent our work out to a heat treating company when hardening was required. I am not sure of the process they used to heat treat leaded stock but they had  equipment like computer controlled vacuum furnaces and  vats of molten cyanide and other nasty stuff that you would not want in your shop.  The major drawback to the metal is is could not be welded.

david

Did you manage to squirrel away some drop:)

It would be case hardening, only way to harden a low carbon steel.  Basically you soak it at temp in something it can draw carbon from and you get a high carbon outer layer, then quench.  Think mild steel with an outer skin of O1 (sort of).  It can be really useful as you leave the outside dead hard (no temper) but still have the ductile core so its not brittle.  Same idea as the gunsmiths do for colour pack case hardening, 

You can do this at home with smelly stuff like bone meal, but its hard to get more than a few thou depth; the commercial guys with the nasty bath can get 50 thou with an overnight soak.   I can remember doing the cyanide bath in high school 40 years ago on the grade 9 project, a tack hammer.  I can't imagine a school allowing it today with the general level of paranoia.  Also, you still get mild steel strength, not tool steel's higher tensile strength.  Right on with the welding, but it does braze and silver solder well

Edited by measuretwice
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Tmuir,

Leaded stock almost polishes itself when you turn it. If you want to see a dramatic contrast in ease of turning, try to turn a piece of rebar and see how it behaves.. Rebar is made from melted ships and is just about the nastiest steel I can think of.

david. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.



  • Recently Browsing

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Topics

  • Posts

    • Welcome my friend. 
    • Been there. Worn that Tshirt.  'ping'. Hands and knees. Nothing. Nada. 20 minutes? Ha! I found it 7 month later. How? Well, after advice from a member, I invested in a £4 UV light torch.  Hands and knees looking for a 'ping' from a Sekonda, found them both within 30 seconds. UV makes the jewel shine. easy peasy. Could have taken longer. Just lucky on the location of the search. Hope this helps.
    • Thanks Dell. I thought about silver soldering. Have never done it but would like to give it a go. Do you think to put flux on the butted joint then run the solder in or to maybe brace it with a piece of scrap spring steel?
    • Never and others. Yes, like you I do spend a fair amount of time reading the contents of this forum. I find it better that any other. Clear, lucid, no Prima Donas, and most of all an easy access without adverts. All thanks to Mark. God bless you mate. You give so much to many of us. What if? No Mark? Hypothetically. A forum. I did run a forum for a few years. Really enjoyed it, but became so engrossed that it did affect my health. I gave to to others to run. Not been back. It was very successful and rivalled a number of large paying sites. No adverts, no others but me. I did ask and listen to members comments and it worked well.    Costs Having a domain name, £10 annually.  Register the site with a forum company, free. Build the site using the forum company guide lines, free. It looked and ran almost the same a Mark's. All the same facilities. The cost was only £5 per month, but counted visits (views). If I recall, it was that price for 5,000 views. Each extra 5,000 views increased the price by £2 per month. Success was my own personal undoing. From £5 per month initially, it rose to £60 a month and looked like increasing. This was 10 years ago. I could not afford that, and asked it anyone would like to take over and someone did. I would assume that this is the price that Mark is funding for us all. His return is our continued comments on the internet about his course, and the fact that many of the big names on YouTube mention him as their Tutor. Those of us who have done, and are still using, his course, benefit. In comparison to other courses, I can't believe how cheap it is, and the value is exceptional. It is the structure that gives the value. Long may Mark reign. Ross  
    • Hi all, total newbie to watchmaking and I've had a bit of a mishap. Just completing level 2 and was doing ok, but I was just on the last part of the reassembly of my ST3620 when the balance end stone shot across the room, just as I was trying to see if I had put the correct amount of oil between it and the balance end, aarrrgh! Been on my hands and knees combing the carpet for 20mins looking for it but to no avail. Does anybody know where I can get a replacement from and what to look for please?? Thanks.
×
×
  • Create New...