t-slot covers?

When I arrived at my current job I found the leftovers of a roll (?) of a soft plastic t-slot filling material. It pressed into the t-slots leaving a surface flush with the table top which kept the chips easy to just brush off. I haven't been able to find anything like it. Anyone know who might sell it? Randy

Reply to
Randy Replogle
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I got a masonite one with a strip of wood on the bottom that fits in the t slot. the wood holds the masonite on the table and it wont move or slip.

John

Reply to
john

It's easier just to make a couple of covers for your table. Most of us keep out vice in the same place all the time, so ya just contour the ends ta match it's profile. Several of my friends us masonite, one has aluminum that he put a rubber top on to be nice to tooling. Plastic works well too. I've been thinking of making some new ones out of the masonite that's got a white plastic coating on it.. Then I could scribble 'white borad' notes right on the table.. LOL...

FWIW my lathe has T-slots on the cross slide, but has plenty of room at either end so I made super long T-thingies to slide in it...

Dave

Reply to
Dave August

Metric

Reply to
john

Hey Randy,

I've got some similar stuff, from maybe ten years back. But it came in table lengths, or maybe 5 or 6 feet, but not a long coil/roll. I cut mine up into a variety of lengths to suit different vise/rotary table/angle plate arrangements, so I don't have a "full piece" to measure for you. As far as I can recall, it came from KBC, but I note they don't list it now in their catalogue.

There is an aluminum type still available, but it is not flexible.

Take care.

Brian Laws>When I arrived at my current job I found the leftovers of a roll (?) of a

Reply to
Brian Lawson

Dave, I take it your refering to Bridgeport type mills. In my opinion a better stratagey is to move the vise off center on the table in the X axis. Alternate sides every so often to spread the wear over a longer length so when you need to do some longer work you don't develop a rotator cuff problem.

Extra points for moving ram in and out occasionaly to spread the wear over the Y axis.

Reply to
Garlicdude

Digital, or analog masonite??

Reply to
Garlicdude

Is it either of the items on the right side of this page?

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Best Regards, Keith Marshall snipped-for-privacy@progressivelogic.com

"I'm not grown up enough to be so old!"

Reply to
Keith Marshall

Masonite resists oil and coolant?

--Mitch

Reply to
Mitch

I use the rubber (vinyl) T-moldings you use to make countertops. Works like a champ, cheap and I got mine at the cabinet shop around the corner for a six pack.

Pedroman

Reply to
Pedroman

Garlic dude,

Set the vice over some ammount, (pick your number)

When ya swap it , swap the covers :-)

Dave

Reply to
Dave August

No those are things to cove the ways in the back of the tabel (whick I also have even though the BP has it's cool sliding covers)

Makes it really easy to clean up after working, ya don't have to dig stuff outta the dovetails :-)

Dave

Reply to
Dave August

Oops, I missed that the 1st 2 were way covers. I was mostly looking at the

3rd one down on the right. It's called Table Guard & Tote and is made to cover the table and fits into the T-slots. Doesn't sound like it's the same as what you're looking for but seems to serve the same purpose.

Best Regards, Keith Marshall snipped-for-privacy@progressivelogic.com

"I'm not grown up enough to be so old!"

Reply to
Keith Marshall

as I recall I got my slot covers from

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Reply to
everydayjoe

I got a couple of heavy plastic food serving trays (they come in lots of sizes) and contoured the ends to fit around the vise as you suggest. On the bottom I put a wooden key that engages the center T-slot so they don't fall off. They allow you to put tools and parts on the machine without knicking up the tables, and keep chips out of the T-slots. They're easily cleaned with a shop vac, or just by dumping into a trash container. I've been using the same pair for over ten years.

Most of these ideas don't work well if you use a lot of coolant, especially 'flood' coolant. Most mill tables use the T-slots as part of the coolant drain system. Most of my work is done dry, or with brush or spray botttle applied coolant, so it's not a problem.

Dan Mitchell ============

Reply to
Daniel A. Mitchell

I've seen this stuff for sale, but only in a size to fit the popular Bridgeport type machines. Many machines have other sized T-slots, both larger and smaller. I have, at home or at work, seven t-slotted machines, and NO two have the same size T-slots (it's a pain).

Dan Mitchell ============

Reply to
Daniel A. Mitchell

Reply to
Wayne

I saw those and might get some. The stuff I'm talking about is like a soft plastic rectangular tubing. I've used masonite before but I think it might dissolve in coolant. Maybe I could press some lengths of garden hose in the slots or some flat bars of PVC or something cheap. Randy

Reply to
Randy Replogle

"Randy Replogle" wrote in news:cb30e.6631$191.195@trnddc02:

Check with some of the extrusion manufacturers, i.e. Bosch, 80/20, FlexLink, etc. They offer plastic covers for the T-Slots in the extrusions, maybe you can find one that will work on the mill slots. These will be in a double-leg T or square U, with little lips on the ends of the legs to hook into the T

Reply to
Anthony

Keep in mind that you don't just have to "close up" the slots. You can cover the "entire top" of the table and just have one or two "guides" mounted to the bottom of the "table top" to fit into the T-nut slots (it doesn't even have to be a tight fit). This way, the entire top (except for the vise or other holding fixtures) is covered and can easily be brushed into a dustpan or whatever. I don't think I would want to fight with individual little "slot covers" when an entire top would protect the whole table top from falling bits, wrenches, etc. Ken.

Reply to
Ken Sterling

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