Sociology, asked by jahangiralom3732, 8 months ago

lathe mandrels can be termed as a​

Answers

Answered by MsChoudhary
3

❤️A mandrel is one of the following: a round object against which material can be forged or shaped; or. a flanged or tapered or threaded bar that grips a workpiece to be machined in a lathe. In addition to lathes, arbors are used to hold buffing wheels, circular saws, and sanding discs❤️

Answered by tushargupta0691
0

Answer:

lathe mandrels can be termed as a fixture.

Explanation:

  • Hollow workpieces are supported by lathe mandrels. Lathe mandrels are considered a type of fixture.
  • A mandrel is typically a cylindrical, tapered, or spindle that is put into a hole in a piece of work to support it during machining or a metal bar that acts as a core around which material (such as metal) may be cast, moulded, forged, bent, or otherwise shaped.
  • The utilisation of numerous lathe attachments considerably expands the range of work that may be done on the lathe. Some lathes come with unique accessories; others require ordering separately. The steady rest with cathead, the follower rest, the tool post grinder, the lathe micrometre stop, the lathe milling fixture, the lathe coolant attachment, the lathe indexing fixture, and the milling-grinding-drilling-slotting attachment are some popular lathe attachments (or Versa-Mil).

Thus this is the answer.

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