Sujet : Re: Jacobs super chuck question
De : <bp (at) *nospam* www.zefox.net>
Groupes : rec.crafts.metalworkingDate : 16. Mar 2024, 00:43:57
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <ut2mft$2hb8f$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2
User-Agent : tin/2.6.2-20221225 ("Pittyvaich") (FreeBSD/14.0-RELEASE-p5 (arm64))
Jim Wilkins <
muratlanne@gmail.com> wrote:
wrote in message news:ustd7j$16u57$2@dont-email.me...
I have a knurled-sleeve Jacobs No. 1 Super Chuck ...
---------------------
Does it have diamond knurling? I have a very old Jacobs that does, but no
extra screw in the back. Perhaps it was added to attach a work stop for
production?
Yes, it's diamond knurling. I took the screw out and looked inside,
the screw hole runs into the annular passage where the tails of the
jaws reside. No moving parts visible at all. The screw is very neatly
set so it doesn't alter the outline of the chuck significantly. Not
at all a hack job.
Could it have been to connect some kind of purge line, to keep debris
from getting into the chuck?
The whole chuck looks battered, as if it was used in an extremely
rough environment like a mine or quarry, or maybe a heavy blacksmith
shop. It moves freely when more than half open, closing it all the
way takes a key and some effort but no other tools.
The oddest artifact is three marks between the key pivot holes.
It looks as if the chuck was placed in a larger three jaw chuck
and squeezed until the larger jaws left impressions between the
pivot holes. Must have taken considerable force..
Thanks for writing,
bob prohaska