Heey Taylor. Thanks for all these very cool and informative videos. I just have a Honda cb 500 which I am going to rebuild. Looking at your videos is helping me allot. I really miss your new videos on your channel. It has been such a pleasure to watch. I hope your doing alright and we wil see you soon back here. Best regards!!!
A knee mill is a awesome tool to have! I have worked with them for many years. If you can get a quill scale as it will be much more useful than the z scale for the table.
Brick House Builds mentioned your name in his last video, which reminded me that I haven't seen a vid for while. And sure enough its been 5 month. I hope its nothing serious and your just taking a break from RU-vid to recharge batteries. Hope to see a vid soon. rsm8
I enjoyed that one, I've seen them loads of time son different channels and basically knew how they worked, but your demonstration made it more clear in my mind, not that I'll ever need to use one.
Great video as always. I have the same type of Mill that I converted to CNC using ball screws and stepper motors. It is now an awesome machine. I’m sure with your fabrication skills it will be very easy for you to do it. Then you will need learn Fusion 360 and Mach 3 to run it.
Would you help; I have Kawasaki kz750 twin building from scratch (bobber) my regular have 2 yellow wires one black one white and red and brown … Yellows need to connect to stator, Black is negative - White/red it positive + And brown I have not a clue… on diagram looks like is connected to brake light switch 🤷🏻♂️. Would you help please?
Hey Taylor. Just wanted to let you know we all miss you! Hope you make an update video at some point. I’ve been dreaming of basically flipping/restoring 70s and 80s bikes for a living. That dream all started on this channel. I know it’s a very risky and challenging career but I do want to try doing something that I love for work. Again, just hope you’re doing well!
that kit is a pretty slick retrofit for your mill. it's amazing to me just how accurate, what is essentially a bolt on three axis electronic micrometer, can be, and because of that accuracy, it will make using that mill so much easier for you. i have a small craftsman metal lathe that was made in the 50's and doesn't have indicator hash marks on the travel handles, so i have to constantly stop and check my work with a mic or a set of calipers and dividers to know when the work is at the proper size. although i would love to install one of these units on it, i have a sneaking suspicion it would cost more than i paid for the lathe. edit; i followed your link to their website, and was pleasantly surprised by the price of a two axis DRO that would fit my lathe. $150 is about half of what i was expecting the cost to be, so i think i see one in my future, and IMO installing it will more than double the value of my lathe, make using it at least three times easier, and cut my work time in half. for those at home keeping score, that's a win/win/win! so much winning, thanx taylor, you tha man!
Hey I reached out by email, I have a 1971 cb350 with no power at all and I can't figure it out. I was wondering if I could take it over to you. I am local to your area . Thank you
I have to admit, I keep checking here to see if there's any news. If I lived nearby I would definitely check in, i'm sure there's a business address somewhere? I'm not even in the same country, let alone the same state, so a bit tricky. Hope all is ok and he is taking a break, but the more time that passes the more I think something bad has happened, I seriously hope not.
@@ClassicOctanegood to hear you are doing ok, I'm sure I'm not the only one here relieved to hear from you, take as much time as you need. Look forward to your next video!
The best way to mount the knee scale is with the slot facing away from the front on the machine. Mount the bracket to dogleg around the scale. This way will keep chips and coolant away from the slot and reader…