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Center Boring the Spanish Cannon Hubs for Straight Bushings | Engels Coach 

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I am center boring for 2 1/2" sleeves in 12 Spanish Cannon Wheel Hubs on a 1919 Hendey Lathe, serial number 23239. This 2 1/2" morse taper bit is the largest in my selection. If I need to go larger them I have to use a boring bar.
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Teespring for mugs. teespring.com/...
Many of you are interested in the tire bolts and rivets I use in my videos. Since I use a large number of these, I do keep them in stock. An email to dave@engelscoachshop.com will get you a list of available sizes and pricing.
Some informative books on the Carriage Trade:
Carriage Terminology: An Historical Dictionary amzn.to/2Hfoq4H
The Brewster Story - amzn.to/2wzrUNq
Practical Carriage Building amzn.to/3cJALfR
Wheel making: Wooden Wheel Design amzn.to/2TIxfK8
Carriage and Wagon Axles amzn.to/3aGDXav
An Interesting account of an early English Wheelwright Shop amzn.to/39sAICR
The Wheelwright Shop, in Kindle form amzn.to/3bxYOhd
Misc. items I get frequent inquiries for:
3M spray adhesive I use amzn.to/2uLgqpp
The Rasp I like to use amzn.to/2wclyTI
The Rebar Leatherman I use amzn.to/2vuvWpH
The silk scarf I wear amzn.to/2wGqKQf
My metal marking pencil amzn.to/2Hu75oB
Metal marking pencil refills amzn.to/3744EDP
Music:
That Never Dies; Norma Rockwell
Casey Don't You Fret; Dan Lebowitz
Birds in Flight; Dan Lebowitz

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4 окт 2018

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Комментарии : 127   
@davidlosadasoler
@davidlosadasoler 5 лет назад
I'm a Spaniard on my fifties. When I was a child, my grandmother used to tell me how her father and his men used to repair the wagon wheels when they came damaged from the fields. I remember her explaining how they made a big fire on the ground and warm the rim to fix it to the wheel by contraction. It was something fascinating. I'm glad to have found this channel. I've seen it, I feel forty years younger and the remembrance of my grandmother is more vivid.
@ronmiller682
@ronmiller682 4 года назад
I'm with you. I miss listening to all the stories that the older people that helped would tell me. I try explaining to my kids that those days are about gone. I learned a lot of valuable things and still apply them today.
@josephwinkler4863
@josephwinkler4863 5 лет назад
I really like the fact that that lathe from the early 1900s Is still producing
@jonpanzarella1221
@jonpanzarella1221 5 лет назад
Dang, I can't get enough of this video content. Thanks as always for making these videos!
@pethoviejo
@pethoviejo 5 лет назад
Love the smell of wood chips in the morning. Another fun episode, thanks.
@BillB23
@BillB23 5 лет назад
Using the tool in the cross saddle for a poor man's run out gauge is pretty slick! Thanks for letting us watch.
@joebledsoe257
@joebledsoe257 5 лет назад
I was taught that in 10th grade for initial setups as school didn't have any dial indicators. Pretty handy way for nice non precision (0.005) work.
@john-nutsabouttools6989
@john-nutsabouttools6989 5 лет назад
Mr. Engel- Last week you mentioned that this week would be more BORING. Couldn't be further from the truth. Making holes with a machine over a century old with drill bits at least half that age. I am in awe of what you choose to share. I say THANK YOU!
@spaert
@spaert 5 лет назад
Love that beautiful old lathe! Being a hundred years old (nearly) doesn't mean it can't turn out a perfect product. And I love how versatile it is. Did my heart good to watch it in action. Thanks.
@davidconaway2830
@davidconaway2830 5 лет назад
Mr. Engles, I'm clearly not qualified to provide any advice to a skilled craftsman like yourself however, I had a customer ask for 20 centerpieces for the tables at a wedding reception and she wanted them cut from a 13inch ash log (branch). After some thought, I decided to make a cradle for my bandsaw which had a rail to slide through the miter slot. It worked better than expected and now hangs on the wall awaiting a similar order or request. BTW, what an incredible lathe and the tooling you have is simply awesome. Thanks for sharing.
@jdcamc
@jdcamc 5 лет назад
Love watching skilled craftsman at their work, especially woodworking, which is something I've always wanted to learn! Great job!!
@richardcole9558
@richardcole9558 5 лет назад
Everything has a place , he knows where everything is , it gets used and put back ..a true craftsman ..the lathe will be 100 years old next year and still works perfectly ! I recon that’s just about paid for itself now ...
@kmondak3387
@kmondak3387 5 лет назад
Such good video editing and your such a good commentator. Just can't get enough of your work. Good job. So enjoy blacksmithing, steel work, and woodwork.
@edwarnock4534
@edwarnock4534 5 лет назад
As a youngster I worked as an apprentice machinist in my father in-law's shop. I did a lot of milling on Bridgeport mills, old school, no digital readouts. I later got to make bushings for CNC machine tooling (customized tool heads) on the lathe. I really enjoyed the lathe. Did alot of boring and then had to finish cut the IDs. The whole time I worked for him I only scrapped two parts, and it was because I forgot that when you make a cut on one side it also takes the same amount off the other side so I removed too much material. Once I figured that out the lathe was great machine to run. Chucking that mahogany up looks a bit tricky, I like your method of using the lathe tool in the tool post on the cross-saddle to get it straight! I would have probably tried to use some dial gauges, which would have taken longer and been very difficult with wood. Nice trick! 😉
@firstbuck4089
@firstbuck4089 5 лет назад
WOOD BUTCHER??? More like artist. I envy your skill.
@TrikeRoadPoet
@TrikeRoadPoet 4 года назад
You do more exercising then most of the gym rats, and its just a day at work! Love the way the hub is created, a wonderful video, thanks for taking us a long.
@karriefalon7779
@karriefalon7779 3 года назад
and a kook like me waching dave, one thought comes to mind, with the cut offs you can make some very cute small wooden wheels to use to make some sort of child's toy, or special wood ornamint for some older one to cherish. i say this cause i used to make wierd toys from cut off scraps when i had my shop.
@courtneyhall7140
@courtneyhall7140 5 лет назад
it is always a pleasure to watch a masters master at work,thanks.
@user-fr7mj9qp9f
@user-fr7mj9qp9f Год назад
Судя по Вашему оборудованию, Вы делаете колеса уже не одну сотню лет. Господь Вам в помощь, Мастер! Здоровья Вам и успехов! Я многому у Вас научился. Спасибо..
@jimwilloughby
@jimwilloughby 5 лет назад
Can't think of a better machine to use when making cannon hub replicas than a hundred year old lathe.
@joenet42567
@joenet42567 5 лет назад
Great work as always. I can picture myself riding into the sunset in that beautiful picture you posted. Your a lucky man to live in a land touched by god.
@spaert
@spaert 5 лет назад
That's beautiful country. We'll probably retire up that way in a few years. Been thinking about it for a while now.
@joenet42567
@joenet42567 5 лет назад
Truly Gods country. I rode when I was young. I miss it. A man and his horse. I'm Connecticut born and raised. Always wanted to go west, but responsibilities always got in the way. I have a wonderful wife and 2 terrific daughters, and grandsons so my dreams stayed dreams. I can tell you appreciate what you have. Good luck and God bless. Many thanks for posting the pictures.
@joenet42567
@joenet42567 5 лет назад
I envy you.
@Ujeb08
@Ujeb08 5 лет назад
I just happened onto your channel and I'm happy I did! You are quite a craftsman and artist. The older I get the more I appreciate old, well made things. Although you have a lot of old equipment, your shop is very well organized and neat. Thank you for sharing your skills and talents!
@notsoserious0944
@notsoserious0944 5 лет назад
Super video. I can almost smell the stank from the abrasive cut off saw. Ugggh!
@duard1220
@duard1220 5 лет назад
Your videos are truly great! Love that shop!!
@boblasley5640
@boblasley5640 5 лет назад
Great video as usual. Never really thought about using a drill bit as a dead center as you did when you faced off that first end. Saved a tool change and once again proves there are so many different ways to skin a cat! Keep 'em coming Dave.
@ralphcline6930
@ralphcline6930 5 лет назад
Another great video . I appreciate you allowing me along for the journey , also for your wife to allow you to tinker , unhindered . Lol . Thanks.
@glenngoodale1709
@glenngoodale1709 5 лет назад
Awesome project. Very interesting to watch
@robroiboi
@robroiboi 5 лет назад
Always a treat when you post a video. I honestly look forward to them!
@77gravity
@77gravity 5 лет назад
5:10 "..but I'm not gonna show you what I did" - and I think that's a good idea, because I can visualize it, and I cringe. Dear Reader: I would suggest a jig or cradle to hold the workpiece level and secure, while going through the bandsaw. Something that clamps onto the piece, allows it to move freely in the correct directions, and not move at all in the incorrect directions. :)
@DeepPastry
@DeepPastry 3 года назад
I would suggest you use a wood saw or an actual parting tool while the piece is spinning in the lathe. Forget the bandsaw completely, it's a waste of time. One or two inch flat bar, sharpened on the end of one edge, makes a fine parting tool.
@aldemir6127
@aldemir6127 5 лет назад
So nice to see old fashion way of doing things. Pure and delightful. thanks
@tomtruesdale6901
@tomtruesdale6901 5 лет назад
You did a great job on those hubs, can't wait till the next video. I did wonder about why you didn't use the 1 1/2 drill bit to center the hubs before using the larger, last bill. But then you lined it up by eye and by using the tool in the cross saddle. That shows why I don't know how to use a lath.
@Jeddco66
@Jeddco66 5 лет назад
Love your work as always
@dougankrum3328
@dougankrum3328 5 лет назад
...DOM tubing, I really like that for hinges, axle tubes, etc....expensive but worth it... Your videos certainly give an insight to how much work these various wagon parts involved when they were made the 'Old Way'...!
@aerialrescuesolutions3277
@aerialrescuesolutions3277 3 года назад
Dear Mr. Engels, once again the video angles and the choice of close ups, and slow motion is absolutely superb. The clean shavings coming out from the hole of the massive 2 1/2 " drill are crisp and so nice to see. Somebody knows what sharp tools are in Joliet. Thank you so much. Stay safe, and "Keep up the great work". Jim
@billmorris2613
@billmorris2613 2 года назад
Good morning to all from SE Louisiana 10 Jan 22.
@DeepPastry
@DeepPastry 3 года назад
You need a cutter for you lathe; a "parting tool". Machining off that two inches is time consuming, but so is using a seperate band saw to do exactly what the lathe can do (just moving the wood instead of a band). Make your own from 1"-2" flat bar, if you don't want to buy a carbide tipped blade, and throw it into a tool holder. Or just hold a wood saw against the side of the piece while it spins and just push down with the saw.
@wayneshirey6999
@wayneshirey6999 5 лет назад
Watching all the work necessary to put wheels on these cannons makes me wonder how the folks without power tools managed it back in the day. Thanks for another interesting video.
@lwilton
@lwilton 5 лет назад
Lathes and drills and drill presses have been around for hundreds of years, if not thousands. The older you go the more primitive they would have been, and the faster they would have worn out and needed to be be adjusted and maintained. Of course older tools would have been steam powered, water powered, wind powered, or even hand powered. But the idea of an axle goes back thousands of years, and that is really about all a lathe or drill is. When the founders of the US came over on the Mayflower they brought screws with them (big screws, like a lathe feed screw, used as jacks and clamps) because metal fabrication was something they would not be able to do in the new colonies. If England could make iron screws in the 1400s they also could have made bearings and drills, so there were probably lathes then too.
@wayneshirey6999
@wayneshirey6999 5 лет назад
@@lwilton Right, but they didn't have his mortiser.
@scruffy6151
@scruffy6151 5 лет назад
Thank you ECS. 30,000 subscriber just around the corner i am glad your channel is growing. Breaking the project up into more videos give you a chance to get into more information on how you do it. Love the old iron still getting the job done you do not alway need new. Using a cutting tool to center your piece good idea.
@petefor25
@petefor25 5 лет назад
Hubs are coming along, they look great. Love your videos.
@loch1957
@loch1957 5 лет назад
Its nice to see hand work in a cnc age. I have lathe in my shop, old atlas,,,still play with it. thanks sir.
@timdouglass9831
@timdouglass9831 5 лет назад
Had to laugh when I say you counting the pieces of pipe you had cut. I can't tell how many times when I've needed 12 I've ended up with either 11 or 13!
@jimlong527
@jimlong527 5 лет назад
Everything has a place and in that place it will be found.
@stun9771
@stun9771 5 лет назад
A 1919 Lathe...one year younger than my father would have been on 5th October...👍🏻
@rtkville
@rtkville 5 лет назад
Interesting lathe work, after you first centered the tail end and before you started to drill I was concerned about stability without some kind of steady rest, at least to get the drill started, but your experience shown through. Excellent video! Thank you!
@RebeccaSmith-yy8yi
@RebeccaSmith-yy8yi 5 лет назад
Love your dance with the hubs at the end.
@joebledsoe257
@joebledsoe257 5 лет назад
chatter, turn the speed down a notch. But it will work fine. I've got a funny fingernail thanks to misuse of a band saw. Lucky I still have that finger. My knees don't like floor cuts. Love watching making the "Old Stuff".
@davidharris6581
@davidharris6581 5 лет назад
Pretty smart using the cutting tool to check your run out.
@TheBbbobbby
@TheBbbobbby 5 лет назад
Strange how the mind works. After watching this I feel saw dust in my shirt. Great video as always.
@bluemtnsman
@bluemtnsman 5 лет назад
That lath of yours has some kick butt jaws. Not a twitch on that hunk of wood 16" out. Delightful.
@bwayne40004
@bwayne40004 5 лет назад
Thank you once again. I really enjoy the project.
@peterhase1045
@peterhase1045 2 года назад
I used to cut of excess directly on the lathe by just taking a handsaw and let the lathe spin. That in the end makes a kind of inverse bandsaw, where the blade is standing and the wood is moving. A bit less arkward imo and you don´t have to take the piece of the lathe and over to the bandsaw.
@brownbear226
@brownbear226 5 лет назад
thats a fast chop saw you got there love the videos keep them coming
5 лет назад
Once again thanks for showing us.
@brownmilligan1936
@brownmilligan1936 5 лет назад
good show. tools are on the way. tanks as allways.
@stokkelandsmia1631
@stokkelandsmia1631 5 лет назад
Engels coach shop when nothing but dead perfect will do 😄
@zzz13zzz17
@zzz13zzz17 5 лет назад
Very good video. Thank you
@dananelson3534
@dananelson3534 5 лет назад
Thanks for sharing.
@GilbertoMartinez55
@GilbertoMartinez55 5 лет назад
Mr. Dave, Parabéns pelo seu Trabalho primoroso e é sempre um grande prazer ver o senhor trabalhando, gostei e sempre dando o meu LAIKE.
@garylambert5212
@garylambert5212 4 года назад
Doesn’t the built in knock out in your tailstock work. I’ve used a lot of lathes but the only time I needed a drift was for removing a stuck tool. I like your videos. They are fascinating. Thank you for them.
@ianrobinson1589
@ianrobinson1589 5 лет назад
And Thank You
@nakamakai5553
@nakamakai5553 5 лет назад
This entire series is excellent. One question - how do you not impress jaw marks on the hubs throughout this? It'd seem to me that it takes a lot of chuck force to hold these, and I'd worry about denting the wood, especially for the 2.5 inch boring. Great work, thank you for sharing.
@oneshotme
@oneshotme 5 лет назад
Now that's a drill bit Thumbs up on your video and enjoyed it
@duanelundgren7985
@duanelundgren7985 5 лет назад
Hi, Mr. Dave! As mentioned below, I was thinking a 'sled' would be the thing for the band saw cuts... Ya gotta do what ya gotta do!! :-) I'm hoping your Winter isn't coming too quickly.... some are wondering what happened to Fall!! Thanks for sharing!!
@stephboeker7835
@stephboeker7835 5 лет назад
The last statement about the fins answered my question :) lol Hahahahaha.Also, I bet you don't just run up to the hardware store to get a replacement drive belt for your 99yr old lathe ? Is it custom made ? Have you ever replaced it ?Thanks again for sharing,Sincerely ......................
@RosaStringWorks
@RosaStringWorks 5 лет назад
Nice job.
@dougberrett8094
@dougberrett8094 5 лет назад
Have you tried running a roller against the end, from the side to remove run out? The roller or wheel will push the part to run true. Way faster than a gage.
@jesscneal
@jesscneal 5 лет назад
That drillbit is probably older than most of the people watching this video :)
@scruffy6151
@scruffy6151 5 лет назад
Lol. But true.
@geneintn9320
@geneintn9320 5 лет назад
I am 73 but still agree
@aserta
@aserta 5 лет назад
I have a few augers that are earmarked in our farm ..eh dunno what the exact word for it would be in English, so let's go with "bill of purchase", with the date of April 1889. I'm pretty sure they're Irwin (as in Irwin Auger bit company), imported all the way to Germany, still work perfectly today, keep 'em sharp and they last forever.
@petert3355
@petert3355 3 года назад
@@aserta It's not often that a video will both prove and disprove an old adage. "They don't make em like they used to" That drill, and your, yeah they most certainly DON'T make drill like that anymore. These cannon wheels ARE being made like they used to. With skill, care, and meticulous attention to detail.
@kimguldberg5676
@kimguldberg5676 5 лет назад
When you do those time compressed sections it would be interesting to see how much time each step actually took.
@kimguldberg5676
@kimguldberg5676 5 лет назад
It's completely OK to speed it up, just write som text telling us how long it actually took
@mickmangles8000
@mickmangles8000 5 лет назад
Man you have some nice gear ..
@jonka1
@jonka1 5 лет назад
@8:00 it seems you are a quick learner. The first few tubes took ages to measure and cut. All of a sudden you got the hang of it and the rest took seconds each. Now that shows remarkable skill and I'll bet they were just the right length.
@quintinstephens2573
@quintinstephens2573 3 года назад
I don’t know how many time during this video I thought to myself, “Well, that’s one...”
@louieargana3124
@louieargana3124 5 лет назад
Good Morning Sir.
@alangilman6711
@alangilman6711 5 лет назад
Another excellent video! Would love to see a tour of your shop sometime. Like who made some of the equipment,how old it is, how you acquired it. I think that would make an interesting video.... I also notice you have rubber gloves now instead of your old favorite work gloves that everyone complained about. lol
@dwightl5863
@dwightl5863 5 лет назад
He did a shop tour. Check out: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-qzgXEs8YgAk.html
@kennymysak2079
@kennymysak2079 5 лет назад
They are going to be some nice cannon wheels when you are all done with them so does a bearing go on the inside of the pipe or just the axle. Keep up the great videos
@billy19461
@billy19461 5 лет назад
Love ❤️ your videos!
@davidjohnson4222
@davidjohnson4222 5 лет назад
thank you for the video
@hindugoat2302
@hindugoat2302 5 лет назад
the hubs are made from 3 separate pieces glued together, that doesn't seem very strong... this is for a canon that will put a huge shock through the wheels when its fired... lets see them hold up after 100 shots
@mouvittwice
@mouvittwice 5 лет назад
Top Shelf work... ! !
@davidshaper5146
@davidshaper5146 2 года назад
Thank you for not showing the bandsaw cut. You're right - an unsupported cut, especially on something rounded, can go south quickly. You could probably have used a hub mortise with a tenoned jig to better hold it. There are way too many YTers proudly demonstrating unsafe work practices.
@josephwinkler4863
@josephwinkler4863 5 лет назад
You know tooling like that you really can’t replace it
@TomLaios
@TomLaios 5 лет назад
They are some serious drill bits.I'd hate to think what they'd cost to replace
@amundsen575
@amundsen575 5 лет назад
wrong way to remove a live center. Use a drift if you have a slot in the Quill or wedges or add an extension bolt to the back of the live center to release when fully retracted. Great work. Dangerous band sawing would be nice to see!
@thangquocnguyenmdp
@thangquocnguyenmdp 5 лет назад
I would make a wooden V shape to put the huffs on then cut with the band saw...
@thangquocnguyenmdp
@thangquocnguyenmdp 5 лет назад
I didn’t spell shocked on the hub
@markgoddard2560
@markgoddard2560 5 лет назад
I noticed the hubs were made up of three blocks of wood. Do you know what process is used to join these blocks together to take the weight and stress? Is it just glue? Thanks. Wonderful video as usual!
@roadrunner4404
@roadrunner4404 5 лет назад
Thanks for the upload. Fins are a good idea. Will there be any epoxy or adhesive too. Love your old lathe.
@wi11y1960
@wi11y1960 5 лет назад
No Live stteady rest in case the wood wobbles? Pretty gutsy
@Crewsy
@Crewsy 5 лет назад
It took about 3 passes on the ends when you faced off the first one with the 1.5” drill bit centering it before I realized there was no risk of you running the cross slide in too far and contacting the cutter to the bit. 😔 My brain is running a little slow this week.
@arkansas1336
@arkansas1336 5 лет назад
Thanks for another great video! ....13
@rodneywroten2994
@rodneywroten2994 5 лет назад
still fun to watch ya. wish i could help. lol
@Sourdo1
@Sourdo1 5 лет назад
Lots of work. Lots and lots, and lots, and lots of work.
@rexjerome5931
@rexjerome5931 5 лет назад
That's about the biggest twist drill bit I've seen. I don't think the local Ace Hardware carries that size. 🤣
@idadho
@idadho 5 лет назад
Could you use a parting tool to trim to length on the lathe? I can only image the risky band saw maneuver as I type with only 4 1/2 fingers on each hand.
@donniebeall8152
@donniebeall8152 5 лет назад
What is the most stylistic unique or complex wagon wheel?? .
@BobBlarneystone
@BobBlarneystone 5 лет назад
Is the 1.5" drill bit ground to seek the center of rotation like a standard center drill? (Hmm), if wanted cut off the excess on the hub on the bandsaw, I'd either make a sled to carry them while clamped to the sled, or I'd stick a couple of spokes in the hub to act as handles that would give leverage.)
@JasperJanssen
@JasperJanssen 4 года назад
Steel tubing doesn’t seem like period accurate material choice - but I guess these are probably going to be display pieces where that is not the primary consideration.
@aubreyaub
@aubreyaub 5 лет назад
A wedge with a groove, to knock out your 'Tail Stock CENTER".
@GuyWithAnOpinion2
@GuyWithAnOpinion2 Год назад
I'm beginning to think that the "coach shop" is really just a front to launder money from your real moneymaking business of sawdust and kindling sales. 😁
@stepaushi
@stepaushi 3 года назад
16:40 What's happening off-screen on the left?
@AndyFromBeaverton
@AndyFromBeaverton 5 лет назад
5:05 Too bad you can't set up a portable bandsaw attachment to the lathe so you can easily cut off that extra length.
@53jed
@53jed 5 лет назад
Parting chisel?
@unclebuzz6913
@unclebuzz6913 5 лет назад
THEY SURE DON'T MAKE MACHINERY AS GOOD AS YOUR LATHE ANY MORE. SEEMS LIKE IT HAS TURNED INTO A THROW AWAY WORLD NOWADAYS ,AND THAT'S A SHAME.MY COUSIN IS A MACHINIST AND HE'S BEEN AT IT 40 YEARS,AND STILL WORKING ,BUT NOW HAS HIS OWN CNC MACHINE.. GOD BLESS YOU YOUR FAMILY AND HOME
@johnfriend240
@johnfriend240 Год назад
A quick mod to your lathe to ease the long hole drilling: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-bVPGJuzYilY.html&ab_channel=OldIronMachineWorks
@michaelagalasso2389
@michaelagalasso2389 5 лет назад
Dave, What type of boots do you where? They look like Whites.
@michaelagalasso2389
@michaelagalasso2389 5 лет назад
Dave out of the two companies which do you prefer?
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