It is very obvious why you work for yourself- your commitment to quality is so incredibly high. I mean that in a good way and with the utmost respect for your expertise and craftsmanship. Most people would have bored out the old part, shoved in inserts, and pushed out the door. If anyone would undertake to fabricate one, it probably would be slapped together and look like hell. Maybe that is why you always have work. Proof that craftsmanship is not dead. My hat is off to you.
Couldn't have said it any better myself 👍..it may end up being a little more expensive (maybe) but atleast u know you're getting the quality u paid for..as opposed 2 spending less and then having 2 end up getting them replaced a year or few months down the line
Curtis is exactly the kind of tradesman/journeyman that should be passing on his skill sets and values. For all the reasons you’ve listed. Easy for me to say as CEE isn’t my business, but it would be a shame to not pass on these skills. My $.02.
@@wills.7626 Totally agree. I guess that's why a lot of us watch this channel. Very much like EngelsCoachShop. Craftsmanship and integrity used to be commonplace. Now, not so much. My two cents...
I’m in Cleveland Ohio, 3 things I enjoy when watching CEE videos. 1. The machining of course 2. Clarity, editing of videos, and consistency on following a project. 3. The explanations given as to why a particular component has failed, I find it to be educative!
It just hit me why I love your channel so much,no music!!Just the sounds of the machines and Kurtis' excellent dialogue.Karens camera work and post production is second to none, great stuff,thanks.
As someone who has a high end custom woodworking shop , I watch a lot of shop related videos metal and wood , and Karen does it the best . Keep up the great work both of you .
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering You may have trouble getting the words out sometimes, but when you do get them out they are a good clear concise explanation of the task in hand. Well done, very few of us are actually comfortable speaking in public. Sometimes I think you should leave your more “Australian” descriptions in the final edit as they are hilarious. 👍 Cheers, Graham.
Well, this is an interestingly fun project. Watching you build a whole new piece is a rarity and really lets us see what kinds of skills are needed to make something new from scratch. The quality of the materials used, and your skills are amazing. I can't wait to see what kinds of projects and work you'll turn out when you've got the other machines finished and working. This channel will hit 1m quickly. By far the best machining channel on RU-vid.
Being a fitter and turner,tool maker,a 5 year apprenticeship (trades person) ,pressure vessel welder ,the most interesting item i find in your videos are the videos themselves ,great detail and some thing i find fascinating,, the gem in your process`s are the person whom does these videos which i find really professionally done , been doing this sort of work 45 years ... nothing changed ... never had a quality video done ,, who ever does the filming here is the true pro here
Kurt is a fantastic all-around engineer, and his wife, Karen, is a fantastic videoographer and editer, never boring watching these great videos. I have the utmost respect for them both. 🏴🇬🇧
I get drawn so deeply into your videos that every now and then I find myself blowing on the screen to clear away the chips. Always enjoy your work. You are a true craftsman - thank you!
Building a new part instead of repairing an old one seems to be even more satisfying, or is it just me? Eiither way, this was a very fun one, KKH. Thank you. :) Again, may the whole gang have a great 'effing weekend!
That beveling machine is really cool. I had a similar challenge once doing an internship at a company. The guy I was working for gave me a pallet full of medium sized parts that needed a bevel to be welded and he said to me "if you're lazy, you can take an angle grinder and do all of these by hand or if you are even lazier you can think of a smarter way to do the job" So I tried doing it with an angle grinder and i decided "nope, this takes forever, this way I'm gonna spend the rest of my two weeks I'm in this company doing that" so I found myself an old maho, did some setup work with a few reference blocks to get some repeatability and i milled the bevels with a facing mill with 45 degree indexed inserts. The results were pretty good and i saved myself a ton of time.
What a cool project to work on. On the surface so simple, but all the intricate details you highlight make the journey of making this part thoroughly intriguing. Can't wait for part 2, thank you ☺️
I have to hand it to you, you learned what most don’t, attention to detail is key to success. That beveler cost you dearly, but I’d wager it has brought you work. People see your previous work and think “now this guy knows how to do it right”. Keep Homeless happy.
I work for Hershey and I love that one of Milton Hersheys sayings was "quality is the best advertisement that sells itself". Curtis also follows this mantra 🤘
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering Please continue, I'm sure it's not to make fun or look stupid, just getting things in the most efficient non-confusing story telling order.
I get great pleasure watching a Craftsman at work I was mentored by two elderly German Machinists was I served my apprenticeship my grandfather a machinist served two hitches maintaining all kinds of steam operated equipment in Panama when we were building the Panama Canal he also worked as a Lead machinist for many railroads around our country Bless you and keep up your Great Work.
The perfect Friday breakfast, with Karen, Kurtis and Homey! I love seeing how that lathe and boring bar can chew through 5 mm of steel and leave a beautiful surface finish. Making a new H-link is something I cannot even imagine, so I'm really looking forward to part 2! Our gratitude to Karen for her perfect video work that we have come to enjoy and honour! Thanks to you both and to Homey from Bruce, Karin, Halgrim and Bella in Germany. Have a peaceful and pleasant weekend!
Hi Bruce & family! Yeah that monkula anti-vibe bar can take nice depths of cut, it definitely makes a boring job more enjoyable 😂 I think you're going to like part 2 when it all comes together! Thanks for the weekly support we always appreciate it 👍
I worked in machining metal for 42 years and I tapped holes the same way as you do. That chamfer tool looks great. Those HSS bits are the pits. Love the carbide inserts, lots of clearance on the cutting edge.👍I'm thinking your design will be better than the original. The Masters Touch. 😁 That bevel machine is slick. Well worth the money. 👍 The Safety Officer workout at the outdoor gym. 😂 Thanks Karen for all your extra touches in the video.
I spent most of my working life around machine tools. Many years later, I can smell the hot chips and the coolant. Fond memories of big and small machine tools and the monster machines that they built, as well as the skilled people that operated them.
I am now in my late 70's and have never been a machinist or metal worker my past has partly been been involved with woodwork. I just love watching people with different skills and crafts making things and your work on heavy machinery I find fascinating perhaps it may be your tend to talk to the layman like myself and no technical jargon. Keep up thr good video's and may you continue to prosper in your business
I love your videos. As a kid I loved going to a friends engineering shop and watch them using the lathe and mill but could never see a project from start to finish. Here I can with the bonus of an explanation of the why and how.
I’m still blown away at your knowledge for your age I mean that with the upmost respect. Most machinist I know are cantankerous old timers much to learn from but hard to get much out of. Thanks for sharing your knowledge. Great work my man.
We always like to know what our viewers enjoyed the best in our video, let us know in the comment what your favourite part was! 😎👍 WATCH NEXT Part 2 here: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-g2pvjVsq-cU.html 🛍Official CEE Merch shop: www.ceeshop.com.au 📲Follow us online here: linktr.ee/CEEAUS 🎉Bonus content in our Patreon community: www.patreon.com/cuttingedgeengineering
The way y’all explain exactly what each component does, fitment, and the different failure modes sets your channel apart. It would be great to see some more “Homeless cam”, watching him run around is absolutely hilarious.
I liked the bit where you did the Machining.... Okay, jokes aside - seeing the actual part in action = cool. The random asides to explain why you do or don't do something = cool. The Safety Officer = Super Cool.
Got to watch until the end of the outtakes every time 🙈 Great content and editing, really puts together a story and is interesting to watch the whole way through 👍🏼
As a craftsman in my trade, I can very much appreciate your approach to you trade. No short cuts or "that's close enough " attitude. I'm not a machinest but I can tell that you take pride in your work. Thankyou for your videos!
I just love the craftsmanship of your machining and the camera work of your wife. You both deserve an award for the talent you show in making of the videos. Always impressed and never disappointed. The slow motion of the cuttings are out of this world. WOW ! !
Buenos días. Usted realiza un excelente trabajo de precisión y limpieza admirable. Gracias a Karen con su gran habilidad y talento con la cámara nos permite ver cada detalle con la perspectiva exacta. Muchas felicidades porque hacen un equipo perfecto, saludos desde México.
Recently retired after 30+ years of working with medium to heavy fabrications for CAT, John Deere, and Freightliner. Love your work and attention to detail. You folks impress me with every video!!
I use to work on documentaries, including National Geographic. I have seen the "professionals" get it wrong. She has got some talent. She is able to be artistic, entertaining, and informative / educational all at the same time with her shots and edits; all while not going over the top and loosing the interest of viewers. I don't know how many times I have seen great, hard to get unique footage, just get butchered at the editing phase. You really can't train people to do that.
I think we have found the one Karen which henceforth we should strive to mold all Karens Irony would have it so that Karen became the manager of all things 🥰 Or maybe Aussies are more upside down than we ever imagined ^^
@@cenccenc946 As a Cinematographer who was the son of a machinist, oh, heck yes!! Absolutely agree. CameraOp here is doing a great job, good clear vision, superb audio, few effects shots that could do with a little more polish to get to movie quality, but it was very easy to sit here and watch close on 40 minutes of a bloke doing all the prep work ready to assemble next time. Seen plenty of big gigs where good work by a camo was ruined in post, or where the editor could take well shot footage with all the basics correct, and export a compelling eyes-glued-to-the-screen piece. This is far closer to the latter then the vast majority of what's on commercial TV these days.
Great information, I was a fitter for 10 years, I used to love when a temporary assignment would come open in the shop, those old timers knew their way around the shop tools.
Hey guys, I just recently found your channel and have been binge watching all your videos. Gotta say you guys are awesome and show true skill in both your quality of work in the shop and the quality of videos...... Sending love from Canada
What do I enjoy most? The sequencing. The planning of the order of operations to account for the need: to maintain concentricity/squareness, retain material to hold in chuck/mill vice, manage for things like shrinkage or weld-distortion. Often explained but sometimes implicit: "Why did he do that? Oh now i get it ..."
I don’t think I can say what my favorite part would be. I’m a bit of a hobby machinist and am just very interested in your methodology. I’m always impressed! Here, in the U.S., this is my Friday fix. Karen, you do an excellent editing job, you just seem to know when to speed up the action, we don’t miss anything and the videos aren’t 4 hours long. Thank for all the two of you do!
Cracking job, I like the bevel machine, and those clamps you're using look very handy, I've aways used Carver clamps which are great but slow, those ones of yours seem to have a very quick clamping action. The needles are a nightmare I often use magnets inside a poly bag to try and catch them before they go everywhere. Looking forwards to part two
@@fredfred4086 This is Kurtis, he looks after his kit. How do you know he doesnt oil the bearing?? It might be/probably is a sealed bearing anyway due to the nature of the work its required to do. What youre doing is giving unwanted advice to somebody at the top of his game, while assuming he doesnt take care of his tools. As far as engineering goes, hes probably forgotten more than you know..........
Once again you demonstrate your prowess at machining. Also, your caution regarding the care of your various machines is noteworthy. I am glad you took time t discuss the care/caution of your machines/tools. Great job!!
Quality tooling just makes the job so much better.... The countersink cutter, bevelling machine etc must have cost a fortune, but I can see the savings they'll generate by doing the job properly each time. Nice interesting fabrication job!
Your comment about the power tools on the lathe brought back memories of high school shop some 60+ years ago. Mr. Cashman yelling across the room at a classmate about to use a impact , “if that gun touches that machine you fail the class!”
You have a good, educational, and exited blog.You teach people that if they want to be thought of as one of the best. It's easy. Don't take short cuts, keep your tools clean and well servested, work area is clean any tools that is even the slightest bit damaged, replace it, correct others errors, and don't loan your tools. You really do some exalent work and it brings me great pleasure to see someone put so much pride in their work
Hello Kurtis, Jose from Puerto Rico. Just watching your craftsmanship is mesmerizing! The quality of your work is second to none. Australia should adopt the Japenese way of honoring craftmanship like yours and making you a national treasure. My only regret is not using my younger years to pursue your craft as I mentioned before in another video you made. When clients have to go through a waiting list and are okay with that, it shows the level of expertise and passion you put on your craft. That my friend, tells me that you've arrived! I wish I could travel to Australia just to shake your hand sir!
Good question. What does one likes most of the video’s. To me it is well rounded. Being an engineer myself I can’t really pinpoint something in particular as being the most interesting. I sometimes see new or clever techniques of which I didn’t know it existed ( bevel machine) so that’s a bonus. Editing is beautifull, doggy keeps us grounded, birds too. So. Just keep going. My wife is an operasinger. She likes to watch now and then too for no apparent reason apart from her saying she wants to learn.
There is often something new I learn by watching these videos. It's usually a little difficult to keep a threading tap straight when you start to thread by hand. I did never thought of that you can start by putting the tap in a drill chuck. And the tap is made of hard material, so it starts to slip before it breaks unless you tighten the chuck too hard. Thank you! 👍
Thanks another great video Kurtis and Karen you do such a great job of explaining what and why and no annoying music . You fast forward enough to stop it being boring but give enough time so no important detail is lost . Love to how you explain the way you do things so your equipment doesn’t wear out as quick . So much of your content help me and gives me confidence to give jobs a go . Thanks again looking forward to part 2 . Your skills are impressive
Am in awe of both of you and the quality of work into the machining/welding,along with the filming/editing Thanks again for the time and effort gone into your feed
This is my favourite channel, I owned a trucking Co and we had our own heavy duty shop and you never appreciate the machine shop till you don't have one anymore. That angle cutter / grinder is on my " I need that" list. The two of you are a great team and your safety officer reminds me of my old German sheppard who had the run of our business.
Haven’t even watched this video yet and I already know it’s gonna be good. One of my favorite channels to wait for every week. I love what you guys do. It’s awesome.
To watch you turn a part, it looks smooth, shiny, clean. To see others do the same job, looks rough, like it has small threads cut into it. My lord your work is fantastic, be very proud of what you do, and how well you do it. As always great job.
Thank you team . Great job all of you. There is no place like home. I bet homeless wagged his tail like mad when Kurtis got home and Karen ❤ was happy.😊😊😊
I am so proud of you! My god you can do anything, PLEASE keep filming all this, you are changing the world, the camera person is amazing, and the puppy dog proves life matters along with the birds, you are a very smart man ! thank you for all of this!
I have watched the odd 'overseas video' where it looks like the lathes being used were second hand when they came off the Ark and haven't seen a lick of maintenance since! I admire the respect for and care of your machinery you practice including little things like Kurtis' reasoning for winding the chucks in by hand. Excellent effort as always K, K & H - Thank you 👍
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering I appreciate it's a lol but am glad you have not gone there. You guys are the package in my view with the knowledge, skills, attitude and practices to produce top quality product (both 'goods' and videos) that is the best outcome for your customers. I hope you stay on the high ground as shooting fish in a barrel is too easy.
I love the close up shots. Shows the importance of the right tool height and quality inserts. Sometimes I think inserts are one of the most overlooked aspects of it and I believe they’re one of the most important parts of it. The quality of my lathe work became much much better when I reached a little deeper in my pockets and bought quality inserts. I used to be able to buy 10 or 20 inserts for what I pay for one now and that’s no joke. But the work shows the difference and it makes it well worth the extra coin.
Spot on explanation of why not to use anything but your hand on opening and closing chuck jaws. Machining and welding are unlike any other industry, where the faster you are almost always the quality of work is of poorer quality. You will never see an impatient machinist put out quality work.
Great video! This one is another great example of how your large work translates into the smaller stuff a home shop guy might be dealing with. We might have a worn out part that is impossible to find as a replacement and not feasible to re-sleeve or other type of repair. A new part doesn't have to look like the original, and it is a damn sight more expensive to hand craft, but it will often be more cost effective than junking the whole machine you are trying to repair. Thanks CEE for once again showing us how it's done!
Wow !! Karen, you are so amazing with the filming and, of course, the editing. It was an awesome job, Kurt. Your level of skill using every piece of equipment is to perfection awesome video, hommie is just hommie. Without him, it's not an entertaining video. Take care, thanks 😊
Hey bud, Over the years I have dealt with many of the frames and linkages, bucket quick changes. Pretty much everything attached to the stick. this one has been run dry for many a day by an operator that is terrified by a grease gun eh. I call all these jobs as a "Barny" (From the Flintstones) Being able to order pieces like these is a real bonus. Having 20 feet of these rounds and sheets of high quality TQ100 plate in stock is a lot of $ tied up that may not be used for an extended time would be like owning a bank that pays no interest. Oh how I wish I had discovered you 10 years before I retired as a tailstock chuck would certainly been made. You do have a number of time savers built to make life a bunch easier my friend. Things like that wet boring bar are winners as well. Well Kurtis, You and your lady have produced yet another post that seemed far too short. Nice job old friend.
awesome video as always 👍.....huge thanks to you and your wife and dog for making these videos happen.....the H Link is made from A36 Plate, and the pins are 4140 hardened to 65 Rockwell....I know you can look it up yourself, but you made me curious about it when you were talking about the H Link breaks inserts, so I looked it up.....thanks man👍
Amazing … I am experienced with a wood lathe but this is way beyond anything I’ve seen. I would leave some of the outtakes in the main video. They’re funny, interesting, and I think we can relate to them…shows we’re human and can deal with adversity.
Best part is Kurtis describing what is being done along with Karen getting close to the work with video. You two could make a video of slicing onions and it would be educational and entertaining. Love your videos.
As to "slicing" - The swarf coming off the material is both *razor* sharp (albeit jagged, which makes it way worse) and really hot (starts yellowish around 200°C, the darkest blue is around 300°C and the more it get towards the blueish gray you're at 360°C plus). So it will both cut and fry you at the same time. And the coolant ain't too good for the wound either... The long continuous swarf (for which the correct English term escapes me, "Fliesspahn" in German) are the bane in machining, since they can cut you up real fast without you initially noting it. Back when I was learning that stuff (and never really working in that field afterwards), the machine shop head was *very* adamant to make everyone aware of the dangers. (And don't get me started on not forgetting to pull the tool off the chuck after fastening a piece of material). We had numerous incidents at that shop when noobs forgot to pull that thing, and it went flying across the shop. Friendly fire isn't. Worst incident I got to know at that shop was after noticing a 2m^2 area of the shop floor looked like it had been patched up with new concrete. That was when the machine shop head honcho told us that after an end of vocational training test, someone effed up and didn't correctly fasten the chuck on the lathe after replacing it. And that thing went flying.... 🤕💀☠ Side note - has anyone beside me ever seen someone driving an honing cone (installed on a standing drill) through the back of his hand? That lucky bastard managed to put it right between the bones of his middle and index finger of his left hand, so it only pushed them apart without crushing them. Will never forget the stupid look on his face when he looked at it (he had en expression on his face like the T1000 at the end of T2, when being frozen up by the liquid N2 his limbs started to crystalize and shatter...)
Great video Kurtis and good job. The beveling machine is nice. Take care and have a blessed and safe week and I'll see you on your next video. Looking forward to part two.
I am pretty much housebound these days and your videos help me take my mind off things. I appreciate the time you take to explain why you do things the way you do and the sequence in which you do them. I'm even beginning to like that odd looking dog. And... You have some of the coolest tools. That bevelling machine is something else. I've never seen one before.
I really do have to say, you are the king of machining on RU-vid. The wife and I are planning on coming down under a some point to visit family and friends. Would love to buy you guys a schooner or two and listen to what you have to say about building your amazing business. From a greatful pom! 🤙
You two do an excellent job both in the machining and the filming, what I liked about this video is when you brought out the BLINGING (bevelling) machine 😁. Work smart not hard. Your attention to details and commitment to professional work is what keeps you busy Kurtis. Well done . Informative 👍👍👍. Thank you for sharing. Take care of yourselves 🇨🇦
That bloopers in the end is smart because it gives me a second to remember to hit like, and then pause so I can look at next vid suggestions without it kicking to next video too fast. The machining is good too.
I love the way you take on a job where you explain all the potential issues and things that could go wrong, and yet you proceed to do it as if it was an everyday job for you. Very nice work and oddly satisfying to watch. Thank you also for the excellent video flow, it is very much what I could have wished for on TV when I was a kid.
Your commitment to doing only quality work is very commendable. It is something you do not see enough of in today's workforce. That BM-18 is like a huge router designed for steel. 😀
I love watching this channel as a hobby machinist, I learn where I'm wasting time in setups. I'm obviously not in production but I'd still like to be efficient.
Your man is an impressive piece of needed knowledge within today's need of fab, and maintenance. It is a dying trade, but it is so important. Keep him happy, fat, and loved. We need him!!
No way, was that really by eye? You are a wizard with that machine! Curious if the links are all made of weird materials is there a reason for that and why will the more standard material you have chosen work as well?
hey mate yeah was 100% by eye. Not all H links are made from this weird cast material, many other machinery manufacturers use fabricated H Links made from hollow bar & plate. Will try and answer this in Part 2 👍
As soon as you start describing what you're doing I'm lost, and it's not a language thing, you are just so knowledgeable that I have a hard time keeping up. You come across as somebody who has been doing this since you were 10 years old :) I really enjoy watching a Master work at their craft and you are in that category for sure. Keep it up, amazing content!
Wait. A. Minute. All good; but the shaving/chip sequences at 17 minutes are quite mesmerizing. Y'all are modeling best practices in technical cinematography here. Well captured. Well delivered. (from a cave man who used to sharpen my own HS bits) Carry on
Beveling Machine just moved to #1 on tools I want in my shop. Never seen one in action. Impressive. Needle cuttings sounds like a welcome break from clouds of grinder grit and dust.
Don't have an H-link? No problem, we'll just fab one up! Be a couple days, though... Outstanding work; I love the attention to detail. I really like that you show where the bits live in real life, and how they are supposed to work. That adds more to your channel than you might realize, I think. Thanks for putting it up!
Kurtis that bevelling machine looks fantastic and a real time saver, once again you have built something that has saved your customer a lot of money and time. Karen your editing is brilliant really award winning, poor Homeless must be getting dejected because his toy bin is getting a bit depleted, once again thank you for sharing your blog all the best from Tassie