The only way you can tap in turning mode is on centerline. In that case I turn the thread. On the Mazak I have never tapped in turning mode. If I ever did a part where I could not reach the thread with a threading bar on centerline. I think I would tap with the milling spindle anyway. Because I have never tapped in the turning mode. I’m not completely sure it does it with rigid tapping. Where the tap doesn’t need a floating tap driver. If that were the case I would never do it that way.
This channel is a national treasure for machinists and toolmakers, my great grandfather was a tool and die maker in the 1920s-1950s. I have an old vise he made from scratch I plan to refinish this winter or spring it should be a fun project. You make some amazingly complex and difficult to machine parts its awesome to watch!
Pete, I hope that one day you will be able to show us the machining of the actual part again! That is a very intense part you are machining and I sure we would all love to watch you machine that.
I wonder if the designer had this method in mind when designing the part? It seems like it’s about the only way to get that corner radius at the bottom. Creative solution to a darn near impossible situation. Good job.
mark muranyi speaking from experience as a machinist for nearly 10 years, and now going back to school for mechanical engineering, they most likely don’t. The guys in my classes are near brain dead when it comes to actual creation of there designs. They don’t understand the basic concepts of rotating tools. Can’t make a perfect square hole with conventional rotating tools. We have some very basic DFMA but most of these guys don’t get it. Straight outta high school or just been in post secondary for a while they have never been to a machine shop and have watched some videos here on RU-vid but don’t understand the mechanics of how parts are usually made. This is why engineering firms shit a brick when they get a quote back on some specialty parts, just cause THIS kind level of fab and setup is required for what they think is simple cause the computer said it works
@@markmuranyi9289 Some do, and some don't. Just like in any other profession, engineers come in "standard," "good," and "master" grades, but you can only know which is which when you hire them if you have good back door references, or have an interview process with actual practical work challenges involved. (You'd think there would be "bad" engineers, too, but if you don't cut it on the job, you won't be working as an engineer for too long, so those generally churn out.)
@@CorndogBrownie A good machines shop building repeat business will send back a print with trouble areas ringed in red, and description of how to save money there. You can add value there m, and thus even earn higher rates, if you find the right fit for you. Just gotta be respectful about it -- "I can make it for X but if you changed these features, it'd cost Y," kind of deal. Unfortunately, you probably can't spend that kind of effort on every odd job you bid on, if you're mainly a "lowest bidder" job shop...
And now we start the video, wherein our Master Machinist spends a whole day making a thousand dollar custom tool to cut a part feature that could have been functionally replaced with a dog-point setscrew.
Mind boggling to think that the tooling costs of a job like this exceed what most people would imagine the cost of the entire job should be. You must have developed a great relationship with your customers, where they know that for the quality they are asking for - they expect to pay for the same level of attention on the tooling as on the finished part. Great content - as always.
yeah I would assume, parts of this complexity, with little bosses inside the bore with fillets on them, they know they have to take these parts to a wizard, and they know the wizard will be charging big $$ but it will be done to spec without worry.
Thank you for making these videos. They are truly awesome. I wonder if the genius engineer who designed this part has ever been in a machine shop. Someone should tell him that you cannot 3D print a part like this. Perhaps tie him down a la A Clockwork Orange and make him watch your videos... Your skills are legendary. I am glad you are sharing them with the world.
I am a design engineer with lots of machining experience, not all "hands on" but very knowledgeable of tooling like Edge Precision uses. These parts are just a few of the many I've seen in my past and kind of know whom they maybe for. These engineers developing these parts have PhD's, and are developing this stuff, and they do work with shops like E.P.. One thing I would have done if this was my design, I would have put an internal key way in the part shown, and put the key as an external feature on the mating part. Got to remember, most of these parts are only made in small quantities for usually one job and never made again. Price is generally an option on this stuff! The oilfield needs it now! Bill us later!!! Ken.
A video about cnc and how to use it that was worth seeing. Great skill! After 22 years as operator and programmer of cnc machines, I'm not really impressed by most videos showing off machines and set-ups. This video was impressing, and I look forward to see this tool in action 😊
Fantastic work, love whenever you post something new. That finish almost looks like when they burnish watch components, very neat. Thank you for the time you put into this content. Greatly appreciated
With every new 'episode' this part gets more and more impossible . Peter i've said it many times already , but you really are a master of the trade . I would be honored to learn from you . If on youtube i see this kind of amazing techniques , can't imagine what it would be in person . Looking forward to the completion of the part , possibly some tolerance details too (no drawing of course)
I am so worried that this type of expertise will not be passed on to the next generation. They will know how to operate the machine and the software but this type of creativity is only learned through exposure to others who are willing to pass on their knowledge. Well done sir!!
Very interested to see this work. I'm just getting into manual machining. I have a decent lathe and a 2hp bridgeport, today I made my first custom tool. I made a small fly cutter. I was pretty proud of my accomplishment until I watched this lol.
Your videos are always interesting. A lot of the time for me, especially when talking about the programming, you are way above my skill level. Self taught with machining and I have manual machines only. Wish I understood cnc programming, because it would be nice for curves and multiple milling. You sir are a master craftsman.
Peter your workmanship is amazing and admiring.One thing puzzles me is quite often you make your own tooling for the job which adds more to cost of part then again when they want something complicated as most of your work I suppose you can squeeze every dollar out of them where as my tight customers squeeze every cent out of me on basic few dollar jobs.😁
The complexity of these parts is mind boggling. Impossible for this uneducated amateur lathe hack to contemplate what it does. Or just how expensive the part nor the rest of the machinery it is attached too Is. Amazing, thanks for sharing.
great vid, what a crazy part! very minor critique about that bandsaw info at the start: text that scrolls by is focus-distracting since you have to wait to see what it says while you build the sentence up in your head, it can be better to have text show up all at once and then go away all at once. This lets people pause to read something if they read slow or read something fast and not miss anything. I think you struck the right balance with how much machining footage you showed at how much speedup.
Angle grinder used carefully leaves a surprisingly good (looking) finish! I was just drafting a shaping tool for milling machine as well. For the sake of simplicity I think it will be a rod with a hole drilled across and an old carbide end mill.
Can you do a video on the accuracy of your touching off method vs a height gauge. Your work is so precise and I feel that touching off can be so subjective to pressure and feel. Love your work. Its a master class every time.
I can tell the difference between one click on the hand wheel. That would be .0001". Because the dowell pin is hard there is no give and it's round shape lets you approach the setting gradually. With a shim/feeler gauge you can not get the same feel. Also you have to know the location of the surface you are using as a reference accurately. A height gauge can be equally as accurate depending on its use.
Creative solution to a feature that could probably have been designed a little better or at least with manufacturing in mind as someone else pointed out earlier. But then again we wouldnt have been treated to this video, on how to be solution oriented and find ways to overcome. Thank you!
Most of the time I see you make medium sized parts on this CNC. Parts that would fit on a much smaller CNC. How come yours is so big? Would it not be cheaper to run a small CNC and get the wear there? Does the size of the machine affect the cost of operation? I am just curious about why you have such a big machine whereas others have one that is half the size.
Que grande eres..y que poder resolutivo..da gusto ver la capacidad que tiene tu mente..gracias de verdad por hacernos un poco menos ignorantes..un saludo
I wonder how many times do you end up putting this same part in the machine to do all these different steps? Doing that really adds to the chances of a scraped part. Thanks for sharing your custom solution. Charles
All the ID work that runs concentric to the OD on this end will be done in one operation. Even the holes and ports you saw in the model. Including this key and the one farther in the bore. These parts have many operations it’s unavoidable. I just have to be careful about misalignments.
I make broaching tools all the time it's not that hard ph horn REV from italy inserts are already too expensive I don't have $300 sometimes $500 for a holder so I'll hack something myself
Pretty Slick there Peter. Necessity is the mother of invention. Make those engineers pay for what they draw on a screen. Not actually knowing the difficulties of machining such features.
Yet another crazy part. Makes me wonder if Peter is giving kickbacks to the engineer so he will design parts that only Peter can make? ;) I used to like solving tricky problems, but I think if I had to make all these parts I would just lose it.
wow, you must be the old school machinist make it to modern machine shop. not too many modern machine shop want to make tool, they make tool to win bid quick, then ...... it. Thank for showing us these trick
Great solution. One question. Why did you not just turn most of the shank to base dia and leave the pocket portion for milling. Like a "hammer head shark" Did it really need the extra material to aid rigidity. I notice you were content to leave front square and flat. Were you not worried about swarm falling down and being crushed between shoulder on job and tool?
I guess I could have done it that way. It would have reduced the machining and also the strength of the tool. The tool isn’t really round it’s more oval shaped. I will be running high pressure coolant thru the tool and it will be stoping a good .187” from the back shoulder. I don’t think there will be any shaving problem.
budzab all I have to do is take a Capto turning tool holder that’s designed to hold a square shank. Mount it in the adapter in the C axis. Than indicate on it. This will give me the orientation.
PETER SOMEDAY YOU MIGHT WANT TO EXPLAIN HOW YOU DESIGN TOOLING. OF COURSE ITS EASY FOR ME TO SAY THAT. YOU PROBABLY WILL NEVER HAVE THE TIME. THANKS FOR ALL YOUR VIDEOS.
Thanks Doug, there really isn’t a process per say. I always try to use standard tooling when possible. I look at the part and what I have available to me. If that won’t do the job I design something. And this is important. To do it with what I can afford or what I can build. There are many ways to do things. These are the way I come up with. I don’t contend they are the best or even the right way. It just my way. I present them for everyone’s interest and critic.
can you elaborate ? I am not a machinist, was the part technically flawed ? too time consuming to produce ? oh and by part, do you mean the tool he made or the actual part with the keyway thingy he needed to produce ? thanks in advance dimitar
Sorry, i meant the part being machined. The tool looks perfect. As for the part, having an integral key is difficult enough but there is also space behind which might not be too difficult to machine with the proper boring bar but it is still too complex. Any indexing or moment transfer needs could have been met easier i think (even not knowing the restrictions i would think that)
Edge Precision okay cool. At work we have talked about these shrink fit tools. Currently we have a couple of hydraulic holders but they have limitations. Primarily being incredibly expensive lol. Making shrink fit tools seems like it could be a cheaper alternative.
Thanks for showing the broken flute! Makes me feel normal :-) If you can finish the pass with a single flute, could you feed 3x faster with three flutes than what you do here? (Not that it matters much for a one off!)
What other controls have you used Machining wise ? Favourites? Pros and cons ? I’ve been pretty much fanuc and heidenhain. Each have their merits. I’m interested In your opinion.
my understanding is heidenhain is the "smartest" of it all everybody loves fanuc it's basically universal i was a okuma operator for years but now i find mazatrol to be the best the easiest the conversational GO TO control what machines are you running?
Seems to me the better solution to the design intent on the clients piece would be just like the capto tool shanks you are using. You have far more patience and tolerance than me. I would have taken a big stick and beat some engineering savy into the designer.
Great work! I’ve always wondered, do you keep all the specialty tooling that you make for different jobs, in case you get that job again? If yes, you must have quite he collection of oddball tooling around that can’t be used for anything but the job you made then for!
aaaah I get it now but wouldn't it be crazy if whoever designed that "key" accidentally added fillets? I work with novice engineers a lot and I often have to go back to them and ask whether filets are needed or are they ok with not having any
Interested to see how well the insert holds up when it reaches the bottom of the bore. I’ve had similar issues while “blind broaching”. Also will you program this by hand or CAM? Could we see the code please? Great as always 👍🏻
So right now I'm in the middle of learning about wrapped tool paths. I see that you didn't use one when you were roughing out the clearance areas of the tool. Was a wrapped tool path the option you passed up on? Specifically I mean a tool path that has your endmill 90° from your z axis and the path would mostly use the Y, Z, and C axis? Is that the path that you said it harder to program?
Are you using SpaceClaim for your solid modeling? We just finished an emergency order of 500 pieces due to customers machines being down. Print called out for a +-. 002" tolerance on a. 012" rad on a. 210 wide internal tab with open I'd tolerances. We had a hand full of broaches custom EDM'd to fit those specs albeit we got it working just enough to be to spec... Big headache
I do still use SpaceClaim for cad. I’m just starting to using Fusion as well. I expect to use a little of Fusion’s cam side for some things on these titanium parts. Not having a functional post for the Mazak I will process the code and manually insert it into a Esprit made program. We will see how that works.
@@EdgePrecision nice. I use SpaceClaim for all our solid modeling and GibbsCam for, well cam system. I started going through Titans of cnc academy to learn fusion for personal use and hopefully to use as a step in where GibbsCam falls short.