i guess im asking the wrong place but does any of you know a method to get back into an instagram account..? I somehow lost my login password. I appreciate any assistance you can offer me
@Samuel Chaim Thanks for your reply. I got to the site on google and im trying it out now. Takes quite some time so I will get back to you later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
They are filming through the window. There is no way you can be near that when it’s running! You will get hit with razor blades of metal chips. I speak from experience.
This the best chanel I've ever found on youtube. I've always had a interest in these type of machines, but there is NO WHERE , where you can learn about them. Gonna start binge watching all the videos on this now . 👍
IN YOUR THREE SPEED LATHE YOU HAVE A CHIP BREAKING TOOL. BUT SEE HERE- CHIIP BREAKER IS NOT THERE AND CHIPES ARE JUST FLOWING OUT LIKE A TAPE WHICH IS NOT GOOD. MACHINE IS GOOD-BUT FLAW IS THERE.
In the spirit of pushing machines to their limits, can we see a video on how to choose machining strategies based on factors like spindle power curves, rigidity, max rpm, and max feed rates? One of my big questions is when is it worth going past the horsepower peak for the purpose of increasing MRR via reduced cutting forces in materials like aluminum?
I used to do this for a living, and I had to walk away from this. Couldn't take the stress of this job, and hoping the mega speeds they wanted to run wouldn't make the tool holder grenade itself.
These guys/girls are doing really well hard to watch without cooling suds 😳 feed rates and amount of material is perfect and just shows how tight they run there machines top work!! Booom!
1:15 you can't underestimate the advantages of investing in quality work and toolholdings. I used to work in a place where every vice was a 'Chick' vice with detachable jaws held in with a 12mm pin from the side and every tool holder was a ER 25 and 32 collet holder, to machine a cast block with a 16mm end mill in the same way as this cutting pass took about 4 times as long as in this video. The vibrations and chatter I got using these types of vices and toolholders was unreal and sounded terrible....if I remember correctly it was in a mazak vertical machining centre, the one with the divider in the middle of the work table which allowed you to load one side whilst the others were cutting. I liked using Mazatrol, very adaptable programming method.
Yeah, we have ER32 holders for woodworking CNC and they are pretty terrible and those jaws have to be replaced almost each time when you break tool with small diameters, but they don't want to buy some thermo holders because it's too expensive and they say "it's enough for wood" but it's not, those jaws are really terrible, it can't hold small diameter well and it wil always break and also that 50 mm nut is very big and I am constantly hitting suckers with that and I can't do anything with that because there is no other option how to do that when I need to mill front or back side of material. I have ordered adapter to ER20 for drilling which fits to ER32 holder and will make it longer with small diametr at the end, I hope it will solve at least drilling, it's just 3000 RPM, it should be ok.
@@jeepmanxj I dunno why there is so much hate against metric. Titan is clearly passionate about teaching people this trade, and since America is the only country on earth that still uses imperial, i see no reason why anyone would expect him to only cater to imperial units. These videos feature maybe 30-40 figures that appear on screen for feed, surface speed depth of cut, radial and axial etc, and converting them all one after the other so metric uses can relate is not practical and it is a major barrier to metric users. Of course, all of us understand imperial and can convert and know roughly what all these figures mean, but we work every day in metric, we do not use imperial for precision engineering at all in the rest of the world, and imperial is a second language to us. There are too many figures appearing too quickly to be able to quickly understand something without pausing the video to think about it, especially since you seem to arbitrarily switch between fractions, decimals of an inch and numbers of thou, none of which make any real sense if you have not been bought up using the system. Titan clearly agrees as he has replied to multiple people saying they are planing on including metric dimensions in future videos.
Very informative videos you make thanks for that, is it possible to mention parameters in metric as well? that will be very easy to understand. thanks.
Damn , your 3/4" hogging cuts look better than final pass. However , I'm not using a 1/2 Million dollar machine with 5K bits. Very impressive work. Too much G code for me
I see the concept. It's very low engagement with full depth of cut and very high chip load. I use high feed mills which use 95% engagement with extremely high chip load and very small depth of cut. I've never seen this concept before, but it's the same concept, but used oppositely. Interesting.
Looks great, fast cuts, but how often do you replace the end mill before it snaps and mess up the part ,every 1-2 parts? Those carbide end mills aren’t cheap.
TItan, it would be interesting to see other tooling attempt the speeds and feeds on the materials you decimate with Kennametal tooling !, everything from a cheap cobalt tooling uncoated to the higher end competition
Just about every tooling company sells tools capable of this work. The problem is finding machines capable of doing it without failing or positioning errors.
Our 10 mm mill cutters for wood are constantly broken and we have to move with that like 2-3 m/min to not break it, I don't understand how these things can work. 😀 But on other hand 20 mm cutter, that's something completely different, that can cut crazy fast, like 10+ m/min. But I guess metal has advantage that it's mostly homogenous material, with wood, it's probematical, it has different resistance in each direction of cutting and also when you hit a knot, it can be problem for small diameter tools.
Dang, That is some rigid machining, I have noticed you guys have gotten away from the HAAS units for this type of work, This stuff makes Haas looks like toys now, Back when I started, Mori Seiki was the machines to have, 30 years later, The Lathes still hold tenths, Even closer depending on material. I had 6 of them at my prime, They are all worthless now, But they still hog solid and run good :0)