I'll try to translate .... Everything is fine, but welding the handle is like a fly in the ointment in a barrel of honey. By simple welding, I ruined everything.
Milling machine, we don’t need no stinking milling machine,Lol! Nice tool post and great example of using a lathe for what would normally be done on a milling machine.
Резцадержатель отличный , но резьба на болтах и сварка рукояти брак . Ведь можно было рукоятку изготовить на резьбе или запрессовать и на штифт посадить .
Заводская резцедержка (с термичкой,шлифовкой,годовой гарантией) стоит чуть дороже 100 американских рублей. Думается сам по себе процесс,как таковой,стоит во главе угла. Или человеку делать нечего.
thank you for an enjoyable video! I may do this, but I will cut off the 4 sides at the beginning with a band saw. Think of it: right there you would have the rocker piece for a lantern style tool post (actually, several of them)
I'm not going to criticize you on the welding job with the handle, very little is made in a day. I will say, for a 100 year + lathe, that's pretty good work. Functionality over looks will usually win every time. Cheers :)
How long did it really take you to turn round into square? Could have saved time and wear and tear, on your machine and inserts. .03 is a small cut, it must have taken you a day and a half to make a round blank square. Feeds and speeds, also material selection save time and money. I know this is a shop project, it just seems to me to be alot of wasted time. Time is money atleast in the 🇺🇲!
There is no way this project was made in a day (unless your talking 24 hours). And I would bet it was closer to 40. It's crazy to think someone with baby cuts could make this in a day. It is a great part high quality. But to think this was made in a day is ridiculous. Mabe if he started with the right material to begin with. I'm not knocking the part, I'm just not satisfied with the process.
@@albertpierce6263 i can't exactly tell how long it took but this was the only option for me at that time, because i dont have the Equipment to cut that efficiently. By the way who told you that it was made in one day lol, it took me weekends after weekends since i have a day time job
You need to look at your tool cutting height. Those blue 60 degree cutters are not on the same plane. You seem to be high on tool location. It's always better to be slightly lower than above center. Also invest in a good drill sharpener, or atleast a machinist drill guage.
Acreditei logo no início tratar_se de uma delicada cirurgia, tal a delicadeza e precisão de movimentos. Acompanhando as etapas do processo, fica clara a competência e domínio, por parte do torneiro, sobre aquilo que ele está a criar. Um trabalho meticuloso e de precisão incomparável! Parabéns! 😍😍😍🤣
This is a classic example of what you can accomplish when you ask "how CAN I do this?" instead of saying "I can't." So well done. Forget the weld and be proud of a good tool. Good video production too.
The lathe is such a universal tool, its just an amazing invention. But yeah i admit, most of the time i have to ask myself "how can i do it using only a lathe? " haha
I am very grateful for you using the lathe for most of the operations. Squaring the round stock, excellent. May people would use a saw or mill. Thank you for sharing your video.
Would have been sensible to use a saw (if available) to get most of the waste off, before making the stock accurately square in the lathe. Getting that amount of waste off using a lathe, in an interrupted cut, is not a nice operation.
Beautiful!! That is such awesome work. I have to make one of these for my old lathe but I am going to cast it out of aluminum until I can put together everything I need to perform these machinations. That is literally a piece of art that you made.
From the very first frames of processing, I realized that you are a tough dude... I would be afraid to process such a detail at such a distance in such a small lathe chuck. Dude, you don't even have steel, but titanium balls 😳👍
When i first saw this i thought oh no point watching as i dont have a mill .then i saw you using a lathe , it was amazing up untill you used a mill on your lathe. I am just starting out. I have a 1957 Hurcus lathe but Unfortionatly no drill chuck and obviously no mill vise. So Unfortionatly stopped at that point. The first part was amazing. I jever knew you could do that. I am only very new hence the old lathe and very broke hence the old lathe. I am currently learning how to sharpen HSS as i cannot afford all the carbide holders and bits for each size or type. But thankyou for atleast teaching me something. It was amazing in itself. Regards Andy
This reminds me of an old comic strip I saw. Man has a lathe and milling machine in his basement. His friend stops by and asks, "what do you make with your lathe & mill?". The first man says, parts for my lathe and mill.
Danke dir :) Ich hab eine Axial Kugellager verbaut damit es einfacher wird den hebel/griff zu lösen nachdem man es Fest-gezogen hat. Habe den trick von "fireball tool" gelernt wo er eine axialkugellager in seinen Schraubstock verbaut
That was beautiful! Regarding welds, nothing a die grinder than some 400 grit sandpaper on an improvised wooden drill machine attachment can't solve ^_^ Surface finish tells, your carbide tools are begging for more chip load. Time to upgrade to a higher speed motor. 🦾 But man o man did you pull a fine job of putting back 40 years of life back into that machine.
@@yak-machining it's not your fault. See while facing, the outer regions have a great finish, but as you move deep into the circle, the finish gradually starts deteriorating. That is a tell tale sign of work not spinning fast enough. As tool moves inward, the rpms remain same but the linear (tangential) velocity with respect to cutting point decreases. (V=r x theta) Sorry I'm an engineer 😅😋