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Pretty good one, World . . . but will it be just off-pace enough to gradually illuminate the entire surface area (appearing to turn by virtue of refresh at like 2 RPM?) |
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So you optically freeze a perfectly axisymmetric object to see what it will look like when it stops spinning along the axis of symmetry? Doesn't such an object -by definition- look the same regardless of angular position? |
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[FF] Often you aren't turning something perfectly axisymmetric. Take a table leg that starts off square and goes round for example. Or the texture of a wood piece - have I sanded enough? am I getting too close to that knot? is that nick I made earlier completely gone? |
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I had that same thought, [freefall], but gave some further consideration: due to the speed of the spin, I've noticed that the edges can look quite blurry when working on a lathe. |
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OK worldgineer, I submit to that. I hadn't considered things like material inclusions (knots) and surface finishes for wood turning. I guess the square-post-to-turned-spindle could benefit as well, as you'll be able to see when the flats are gone. |
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Bone withdrawn, Bun given. |
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Great idea, I'm a lathe man myself, or at least aspiring to be. It's real easy to get started and you can make some real nice shapes. But to do it right takes a lot of practice. This idea would come in handy on my workbench. |
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A strobe light would be quite cheap, and timing could be set by hand. Discharge lighting might also work if your lathe has an integer gear ratio. |
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But beware the dangers of an apparently stationary object. |
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Why do you need to be so high-tech? Surely you could simply take a belt off a pulley on the lathe and have it drive a slotted disk in front of a masked light source. If the pulleys at each end were the same diameter you'd automatically get the timing right. |
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CNC milling machines allow you to look at how the object looks at every stage in the milling process. Its not a camera that shows you, the mill follows the blueprint which in turn can be watched on a computer screen. |
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agreed, this idea needed some unabubbing. |
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I know I have used handheld strobe-light tachometers with a knob for setting speed and an LCD readout for flash-rate. Google for one of those. |
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You could attach a zoetrope around whatever you're machining... |
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