Well, I started doing TBC in the fall last year. It solved numerous problems I had been having with mandrel turning, and has allowed me to get pretty much perfect seams between the blank and the kit parts. However, it seems that even with TBC bushings, I am having problems with both the dead and live centers, which are 60 degree, wearing...with grooves being carved into the metals by both the bushings, as well as the brass tubes when I take the bushings off for final sanding and finishing.
It seems that this starts happening within just a matter of a few pens, and by the time I've made dozens of pens, the marring of the surface of the centers is enough to throw off the centering of the blank, and I start getting non-concentricity issues again.
I'm curious what other people are doing to solve this problem. Is there a solution? I can't really afford to be replacing these parts every month or two...that would add a lot to my costs, not to mention with markets and shipping as it is these days, I may not be able to get replacements all the time. Does anyone know if there are any replaceable tips or something like that that could be attached to the centers, so that the tips can simply be replaced, without having to replace the centers? Or is there any other way to prevent marring of the center surface?
The dead centers usually last longer, as at least there is drive power behind them, and I can clean up the surface for a while. It is mostly the dead centers that become problematic, as they have a bearing and there is no real way to get them to spin so I can clean up the surface (I've just been using some fine grit sandpaper to smooth out the surface for a while, which is good for a little while, but not good enough to keep the centers viable for much longer than a couple months.)
It seems that this starts happening within just a matter of a few pens, and by the time I've made dozens of pens, the marring of the surface of the centers is enough to throw off the centering of the blank, and I start getting non-concentricity issues again.
I'm curious what other people are doing to solve this problem. Is there a solution? I can't really afford to be replacing these parts every month or two...that would add a lot to my costs, not to mention with markets and shipping as it is these days, I may not be able to get replacements all the time. Does anyone know if there are any replaceable tips or something like that that could be attached to the centers, so that the tips can simply be replaced, without having to replace the centers? Or is there any other way to prevent marring of the center surface?
The dead centers usually last longer, as at least there is drive power behind them, and I can clean up the surface for a while. It is mostly the dead centers that become problematic, as they have a bearing and there is no real way to get them to spin so I can clean up the surface (I've just been using some fine grit sandpaper to smooth out the surface for a while, which is good for a little while, but not good enough to keep the centers viable for much longer than a couple months.)