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Advice needed: Nova 1624 pulley alignment

Joined
Feb 25, 2023
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Louisville, KY
Recently the set screw on the spindle pulley loosened up and the pulley walked out of alignment with the motor pulley. I've eyeballed them into somewhat close alignment, but am having trouble getting it just right and am seeing vibration and belt wear as a result. I have no experience working on machines and am pretty clueless here. Any advice on how to properly align these pulleys? It's pretty disorienting to have my turning be true but still vibrating! Plus I'm sure the vibration is bad for the machine.
 
I would set my knockout bar against the large side of the pulley (touching both the upper and lower edge of the side as close to the shaft as possible) and move the pulley till the knockout bar touches the other pulley edge.
 

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I would set my knockout bar against the large side of the pulley (touching both the upper and lower edge of the side as close to the shaft as possible) and move the pulley till the knockout bar touches the other pulley edge.
Such a simple idea! Don’t know why I didn’t think of that. Thanks!
 
Problem with lining up the outside edges of the pulleys is, depending on the process used to manufacture the pulley, generally factory does not bother with machining or otherwise refining the outside lip or edge of the pulley, so there can be thickness and/or other dimensional variations between the center of the Vee of one pulley from the other, which would lead to mis-alignment I know of only a few specific applications where the outside lip of the pulley is machined to specific tolerances in relation to center of the vee, and those generally are very very expensive parts (the ones I have seen in person are used on outdoor power equipment - and usually the outer surface of pulley is used to drive something, or machined to tolerance for a brake, etc. Then there's the Polaris CVT/ Reeves drive used on many ATV's & snowmobiles which have an alignment tool, so their unique pulleys are machined to specific tolerances for alignment)

For drive belt alignment, you actually want the center of the Vee notch to line up, which might be accomplished with a thin steel rule laid flat along the vee notch with the edge of rule in bottom of Vee , then you might line up the belt surfaces (assuming the rule itself was perfectly true and flat and not allowed to bend or flex) Or, you could get a known straight edge (wood or metal) and machine one edge to the same Vee angle as the drive pulleys...
 
As you can see from the above posts, there's no shortage of methods for aligning your pulleys. However, once aligned again, you will still have the original problem of a set screw that loosened up. One fix for that would be to apply a thread locking compound (Loctite) on the screw before reinstalling it. Another very effective locking technique is to simply install two set screws, one on top of the other. Tighten the first one, then tighten the second one on top of it. Easy to disassemble if needed, but holds like a weld until then.
 
You may want to buy a new set of pulleys at Nova Parts. That may helped in case the ones you have are worn at a slight angle so aligning them will never happen.
 
You may want to buy a new set of pulleys at Nova Parts. That may helped in case the ones you have are worn at a slight angle so aligning them will never happen.
Thanks for the advice, Steven. I thought of that as well. However, I'm waiting on my new lathe (Nova Nebula, backordered), so I'm just trying to keep this one operational until the new one arrives. Want to minimize expenses on a machine I'll be getting rid of in the next few weeks.
 
The cheaper diecast reeves pulleys can wear out in several locations and cause your belt to fail prematurely. A routine cleaning and lubrication
of the motor shaft and reeves pulleys will extend the life of the belt and pulleys. A shot of WD-40 on a weekly basis on the motor shaft and pulley
surfaces running the speed up and down a few times and giving another shot of WD-40 will remove the debris and lubricate the moving parts. If you
wait too long, many times you end up having to dis-assemble the pulleys from the motor shaft to get them cleaned.
 
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