by zeke79 » 21 Aug 2009 12:51
Be sure your vise jaws are clean. Seems remedial but a large brass shaving between the vise and the key blade can put you several thousandths off from one side of the blank to the next.
This can also happen for various reasons. The machine being dropped and one of the vice jaws or the carrage guide rod bending slightly worn out bearings and or bushings. You never said what kind of machine you have which would help us get things lined out.
The "bearings" they are talking about in the carrage are most likely bushings. Some machines even use bushings instead of bearings in the head of the machine that the cutter shaft rides on which wear quickly. Machines designed this way are the lower cost machines designed more for intermittent use such as a hardware store that duplicates the occasional key and not a lock shop that does many duplications daily.
The benefit of machines that use bushings instead of bearings is the fact that if you cannot find replacement bushings you can have them made cheaply out of bronze by driving the old ones out, measuring them and then having a machine shop turn some new ones out. The advantage of this is you can pull the machine apart and measure shafts on the machine for wear or bends along with the bushings. If your guide rods, shafts etc are worn then replacing with standard replacement bushings will still leave problems in the machine. Having the new bushings made with your measurements ensures that the machine is nice, tight and straight. The only problem you might have in doing this is that you will need to ensure proper tolerances and interference fitting etc which finding actual engineering specifications for your machine will be hard if not impossible. This information is not required as long as you use common sense when you order the custom bushings. You would want the carrage bushings to be tight on the guide rod but not so tight that the carrage binds or is hard to move.
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