Canoe,
Suds should ALWAYS stop before the wheel! For that very reason.
We used to use 42" dia wheels on the journal grinders & 36" on the cam lobe grinders.
They go seriously out of balance, especially when you have 6 of them on the same spindle if they get loaded with coolant!
What are the DC's btw?
Junk them and fit AC servos?
Just match the inertia, use epicyclic gearboxes if you need to!
You'll get MUCH better response.
A thou is a yard in grinding terms, we used to barrel crank pins by 0.003mm, yes 3 microns!
We would hold better than +/-0.008mm on diameter every part from first start up from cold.
Roundness & TIR would also be better than 0.01mm.
Brings back memories!
The co. I used to work for still build their beds from seasoned cast iron.
Lead time for a new machine is 18 months - 2 years to allow adequate seasoning on the bed casting.
This is why we could and they still do hold such good tolerances.
What make was that machine btw?
Would love to get back to that stuff!
Spent all day working on wood working machines, servicing a Tenoner, a Planer / Thicknesser & a Spindle Moulder, & then a Wadkin GD moulder, which had to be stripped to get the 2 vertical spindles out as they were not moving, all siezed up, all really boring mechanical stuff.
Got to go back tomorrow & Friday to rebuild the Moulder, finish its service, and then service a cross cut, table saw, calibrating sander, another Planer/Thicknesser, a morticer, a cross cut, a narrow bandsaw, pedestal drill, bench grinder, and a 36" resaw. Possibly a couple more too I have forgotten!
Damn shame is I have another customer with a CNC fault I am dying to get to! Now that's more interesting! Especially as I don't know what the control is yet!!!