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why will this not satisfy the scribd upload i do not understand but if i can add
some bs perhaps it will accept the content and give me the free download. this
is aboout gaining access to info that is free elsewhere but here is demanding pa
yment. ok so here is my payment.
Purchased Busy Bee 10"X18" B2227L-metal lathe for my garage shop.After few month
s I find out a lot of backlash on the carriage perpendicular to bed ways,about 3
/16 inch.
Can't find in manual any help how to eliminate this play of the carriage.
I am new too this forum,and if anybody can help me fine the way to fix this prob
lem,I will be very appreciate.
I have that lathe, and have not experienced what you are talking about. When you
say 3/16" of backlash PERPENDICULAR to the ways, that doesn't compute. What is
moving?--The saddle (which sets directly on the ways), or the cross slide,(which
sets directly on top of the saddle) or the compound rest which is the very topm
ost part which supports the tool holder? I just dug my owners manual out of my d
esk---there is an exploded view of the carriage on page 16
There's three areas where that play can exist- one is the fit between the lead s
crew and the nut, another is the nut mounting to the slide, and the third is the
lead screw being able to move back and forth. Not sure on that lathe, but there
's usually something to take up the backlash between the screw and the nut. It c
ould be a split in the nut, and you somehow wedge that open or closed to tighten
the fit.
The nut should mount firmly to the slide so it doesn't move relative to the slid
e. On my lathe there's a screw from the top of the slide that tightens the nut a
gainst the slide.
I have seen some poor fits where the lead screw mates with the fixed part of the
carriage. Sometimes you'd have to machine up a suitable washer or some thing si
milar to give a good shoulder on the lead screw to bear against the mating face
on the carriage. Usually there's a means of taking this play out by adjusting th
e position of the dial. I think what's fairly common here is to get the play dow
n to 15 thou or less, which is the loose play you will see on the dial markings.
I've had mine down to about 7 thou, which does increase of course the more you
use it. Normally there's just bushings here- often it's just the cast iron faces
on the carriage that the shoulder on the lead screw can bear against- same for
the dial wheel on the outside. On my mill I got rid of that by adding needle thr
ust bearings, but I haven't yet done that on the lathe.
3/16 is a lot of play in that area- there's something loose or poorly adjusted,
or just plain wrong. That lathe has not likely received any TLC as it comes to y
ou already assembled, so you would want to check out all these areas. I'm sure y
ou'll find the main source fairly easi
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excellent colleges, but Harvard is arguably the most prestigious, holding a prom
inent place in the public imagination. It s the university everyone has heard of,
from elementary school students to my grandparents friends in an isolated village
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The remote that comes with your Apple TV is beautiful, but a bit too minimal to
always do everything you want.
It's best to download the Remote app and control your Apple TV with your iPhone
or iPad instead. The app is especially useful when you're searching for stuff on
your Apple TV. For example, instead of navigating the keyboard on your TV with
the arrow keys on your remote, you can just type away on your iPhone or iPad.
Anyone who shells out the best part of 1,500 (around $2,300, or AU$2,900) or more
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how long will it be until my brand spanking new PC is limping under the pressur
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ook after the new rig and buy it plenty of treats to
en need to splash out cash to ensure your PC remains
imple regular housekeeping measures can help to make
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Gaming PCs are complex beasts that occasionally need to be tamed into submission
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When you ask the master distiller of a bourbon distillery about the strongest in
fluences in bourbon production, you get the following answer: the grain, the yea
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What's the reasoning behind this statement, which tells nothing about the partic
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e American distilleries usually have the same production equipment and the same
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ust be sought on another level.
Put corn in a burlap bag and wet with warm water.
Place the bag in a warm dark place and keep moist for about ten days. When the s
prouts are about a 1/4" long the corn is ready for the next step.
Wash the corn in a tub of water, rubbing the sprouts and roots off. Throw the sp
routs and roots away and transfer the corn into your primary fermenter.
With a pole or another hard object, mash the corn, make sure all the kernels are
cracked.
Add 5 gallons of boiling water and when the mash cools, add the yeast. Seal the
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Nathan Myhrvold met Jack Horner on the set of the Jurassic Park sequel in 1996. Ho
rner is an eminent paleontologist, and was a consultant on the movie. Myhrvold w
as there because he really likes dinosaurs. Between takes, the two men got to ta
lking, and Horner asked Myhrvold if he was interested in funding dinosaur expedi
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He is gregarious, enthusiastic, and nerdy on an epic scale. He graduated from hi
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rote proving that it was theoretically possible for sauropods his favorite kind of
dinosaur to have snapped their tails back and forth faster than the speed of soun
d. How could he say no to the great Jack Horner?
Most stock quote data provided by BATS. Market indices are shown in real time, e
xcept for the DJIA, which is delayed by two minutes. All times are ET. Disclaime
r. Morningstar: 2015 Morningstar, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Factset: FactSet Res
earch Systems Inc. 2015. All rights reserved. Chicago Mercantile Association: Ce
rtain market data is the property of Chicago Mercantile Exchange Inc. and its li
censors. All rights reserved. Dow Jones: The Dow Jones branded indices are propr
ietary to and are calculated, distributed and marketed by DJI Opco, a subsidiary
of S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC and have been licensed for use to S&P Opco, LLC an
d CNN. Standard & Poor's and S&P are registered trademarks of Standard & Poor s Fi
nancial Services LLC and Dow Jones is a registered trademark of Dow Jones Tradem
ark Holdings LLC. All content of the Dow Jones branded indices S&P Dow Jones Ind
ices LLC 2015 and/or its affiliates
Zombies are undead creatures, typically depicted as mindless, reanimated human c
orpses with a hunger for human flesh. Zombies are most commonly found in horror
and fantasy genre works. The term comes from Haitian folklore (Haitian French: z
ombi, Haitian Creole: zonbi) where a zombie is a dead body animated by magic. Mo
dern depictions of zombies do not necessarily involve magic but invoke other met
hods such as a virus.[1][2]
Zombies have a complex literary heritage, with antecedents ranging from Richard
Matheson and H. P. Lovecraft to Mary Shelley's Frankenstein drawing on European
folklore of the undead. George A. Romero's reinvention of the monster for his 19
68 film Night of the Living Dead led to several zombie films in the 1980s and a
resurgence of popularity in the 2000s. The "zombie apocalypse" concept, in which
the civilized world is brought low by a global zombie infestation, became a sta
ple of modern popular art.