I used to work in the heavy roller industry and one of our customers was Welspun. They had a couple different size V- Rollers and they were pretty heavy duty. They were solid built, no ID cuts. We would remove the old urethan coating and reapply new coatings. I hated dealing with those things. The shape makes them hard to work with and move. And the journals were always broken off so had to get that fixed too.
I’d love to see a short course on conversational programming and how you set up for that. Chips are cool but I’d like to see how you get the machine to do what you want without a full-fledged program.
I think it finished beautiful. When the parts turn out looking like yours allways do,... your customers want to buy them parts. You do some real nice work. thanks, from Denver CO
I have worked in plastics for the past 3 years, and did lots of 4140 turning in the past... So this is a bit like watching porn for me, not gonna lie .
Haha, thanks man. This is definitely not "How to channel " I really don't have time to explain every little thing. So that's it, you like it or you don't.
@@ChrisMaj I love it....I love some of the how too channels, but yours is a different take and the stuff you make is pretty unique compared to some...keep up the great work
It probably could. Is it gonna be cheaper, I don't know. You still have to machine that whole thing. A lot of times customer wants it to be made from solid round bar and being a repair shop most of the jobs are needed yesterday/ ASAP.
I'm not a machinist so I'm asking a stupid question. Why don't you start with a piece of material closer to the size of the finished part? It appears to me that there is a bunch of wasted machine time and tooling to remove a massive amount of material unnecessarily. I'm sure there is a good reason for this but I don't know what it is. Please explain if yo u can take the time to answer what I am sure is a stupid question.
Всё , как и всегда, сделано красиво:) Но может идея поливалки для сож пригодится - ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-I8c32xiIE1k.html С 9.25 показана.
What's the chance those parts were originally cast, and that you had to mow off a lot of metal that the customer could just as easily have left on there? I mean the print's the print and as long as they're paying they can have what they want.
@@jimsvideos7201 casting, and THEN turning/milling a new part are way more energy, and time consuming.. than just to do it this way, and in a better and longer lasting material than centuries ago.
Мы ремонтная мастерская. Если клиент ждет детали, у нас действительно нет времени на кастинги. Заказчик оплачивает материалы и часы, потраченные на работу.
Вот что он делает. Я на работе, у меня нет времени установить какую-нибудь навороченную камеру и записывать столько, сколько я хочу. У меня есть работа, которую я должен закончить, все, что я могу записать, это то, что вы видите. Второго дубля нет.