This is a nuisance you gotta do once in a while. The symptom today was that the mill axis didn’t line up at all with the laser aimer I have mounted on the ceiling; it’s supposed to point right down the spindle bore, but the bore wandered all over the place. Took me a while to realize it was really that bad…
Basically, you must take the headstock off, unplug the axis motors, and put the mill on the workbench so you can get convenient access to the back of the column. Unscrew the cap screw holding the Z-axis backlash lock plate and disconnect the saddle nut. Make sure the lock doesn’t engage.
Loosen the gib lock, remove the gib, clean the crap off the mating dovetail surfaces & gib, add a touch of their approved silicone lube, slide the gib back & lock it in place. Slide the saddle up & down (that’s why you want the saddle nut disconnected) and tweak the gib until it slides more-or-less freely along the entire length without binding or being too loose. My saddle gets stiff near the very bottom of the column, but it never gets that low in actual use. Make sure the gib lock is tight.
Run the saddle nut to the top of the leadscrew, slide the saddle in place, back those two tiny setscrews out, secure the saddle nut to the saddle with a short cap screw, then turn the setscrews until they just touch the nut.
At this point, the nut should be in its nominal position, centered on the leadscrew and aligned concentric with its axis. If you turn the Z-axis knob and it binds, then you get to loosen the cap screw, futz with the setscrews, tighten the cap screw, check for binding, and iterate until it works properly.When it’s OK at the top, crank it all the way to the bottom and verify that it doesn’t bind elsewhere.
Mine took one iteration this time, which is just sheer blind good fortune. Or maybe the saddle nut is wearing out and getting sloppy?
Then adjust the backlash lock to reduce the backlash to whatever you think is appropriate. My Z-axis has a few mils unless that thing is way too snug.
Sherline’s instructions for aligning the saddle nut screw that connects the leadscrew to the saddle are on Sherline’s site, hidden in the instructions for the “new” Z-axis backlash adjustment: http://www.sherline.com/4017Zinst.htm.
Memo to Self: do this more often.
Comments
One response to “Adjusting Sherline Mill Column Gib”
[…] Reinstallation requires putting the motor mount at the same spot on the Z-axis column as before. I moved the saddle to the top of the column, ran the leadscrew into the saddle nut, and then tightened the motor mount screws. That allows the mount to move to suit the saddle nut’s position, rather than going through the tedious saddle alignment process I mentioned as part of the gib adjustment. […]