Activity 002: Workholding Setup and Indicator Practice¶
Activity ID: U8M1-ACT-002 Duration: 40 minutes Objective: Set up workholding on the lathe and mill, and practice using a dial indicator for alignment verification.
Overview¶
Students practice mounting workpieces in a lathe chuck, setting up a milling vise, and using a dial test indicator to verify alignment. These are prerequisite skills for all machining operations.
Materials & Equipment Needed¶
- Metal lathe with three-jaw and four-jaw chucks
- Milling machine with Kurt-style vise
- Dial test indicator (0.001" resolution) with magnetic base
- Precision ground test bar (1" diameter)
- Assorted round stock (3/4", 1", 1-1/2" diameter aluminum)
- Parallels set
- Brass hammer (soft mallet)
- T-slot bolts, step blocks, strap clamps
- Safety glasses
Instructions & Procedure¶
Phase 1: Three-Jaw Chuck Setup (10 minutes)¶
- Open the three-jaw chuck using the chuck key.
- Insert a 1" diameter aluminum rod, extending approximately 2" from the jaws.
- Tighten the chuck firmly using the chuck key. Remove the chuck key immediately.
- Mount the dial indicator on the carriage or tool post with the magnetic base.
- Touch the indicator tip to the workpiece surface. Zero the indicator.
- Slowly rotate the chuck by hand (one full revolution). Read the Total Indicator Runout (TIR).
- Record the TIR. Typical for a three-jaw: 0.003-0.005".
- Repeat with a different diameter rod (3/4" or 1-1/2").
Phase 2: Four-Jaw Chuck Centering (15 minutes)¶
- Switch to the four-jaw independent chuck (instructor assists with chuck change).
- Roughly center the 1" aluminum rod using the jaw markings as guides.
- Mount the dial indicator to contact the rod surface.
- Rotate the chuck by hand. Note the high and low points on the indicator.
- Centering process:
- Identify the jaw nearest the high point (maximum indicator reading)
- Loosen that jaw slightly and tighten the opposing jaw to move the workpiece toward center
- Rotate again and repeat for the perpendicular jaw pair
- Iterate until TIR is 0.002" or less
- Record the final TIR. Note how many iterations were required.
Phase 3: Mill Vise Setup (10 minutes)¶
- Clean the mill table and vise base thoroughly—any debris causes misalignment.
- Bolt the vise to the mill table using T-slot bolts. Snug but not fully tight.
- Mount the dial indicator in the mill spindle using a magnetic base on the quill.
- Touch the indicator to the fixed jaw face.
- Move the table in the X-axis using the handwheel. The indicator should read consistently along the jaw face.
- If the jaw is not parallel to X travel, tap the vise body with a brass hammer to adjust. Re-check with the indicator.
- Once the jaw is within 0.001" over its full length, fully tighten the mounting bolts.
- Re-verify alignment after tightening (tightening can shift the vise).
Phase 4: Workpiece in Vise (5 minutes)¶
- Place parallels in the vise (appropriate height to elevate the workpiece above the jaw tops).
- Place an aluminum block on the parallels.
- Tighten the vise handle firmly.
- Tap the workpiece down onto the parallels with a brass hammer. Check that both parallels are captive (cannot slide out).
- If a parallel is loose, the workpiece is not seated—loosen, reposition, and retighten.
Discussion Points¶
- Why is removing the chuck key the most critical habit in machining?
- What TIR would be acceptable for roughing vs. finishing operations?
- Why must the mill vise be indicated every time it is mounted?
- What happens if parallels are not fully seated?
Expected Outcomes¶
- Students can mount workpieces in three-jaw and four-jaw chucks
- Students can center a workpiece in a four-jaw chuck to within 0.002" TIR
- Students can indicate a mill vise to within 0.001" over its jaw length
- Students demonstrate chuck key discipline (immediate removal after use)
Assessment Rubric¶
| Criteria | Excellent (4) | Proficient (3) | Developing (2) | Beginning (1) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Three-Jaw Setup | Clean setup, key removed immediately, TIR recorded | Minor prompting on key removal | Needed guidance on indicator setup | Cannot operate chuck |
| Four-Jaw Centering | Achieved <0.002" TIR in <5 iterations | Achieved <0.002" in 5-8 iterations | Achieved <0.005" | Cannot center workpiece |
| Vise Indication | <0.001" alignment, maintained after tightening | <0.002" alignment | Aligned but shifted on tightening | Cannot use indicator |
| Chuck Key Discipline | Never left key in chuck | Left key once, self-corrected | Required prompting twice | Repeatedly left key |
Safety Considerations¶
- NEVER leave the chuck key in the chuck—it becomes a lethal projectile when the lathe starts
- Always stand clear of the chuck when another person is near the lathe controls
- Use only a brass or soft mallet for tapping workpieces—never a steel hammer on aluminum
- Keep the indicator away from moving parts when spinning the chuck
- Safety glasses required throughout
Last Updated: 2026-03-19