Hi Chris for this great lathe machining video. I love the Kurtis CEE "banana" caliper, I'm a fan of this channel like yours, have a good weekend Chris and look forward to discovering your next videos.
5:36... No you didn't... 5:48 Are you serious? It has a certified calibration? I don't remember them mentioning that. I'm need to get my order in. Love those guys.
Nice machining 👍🏼👍🏼! I would never be able to keep those round. Every time I grip slightly thinner pieces they tend to get out of round. Sometimes it feels like turning pieces around make them "oval"...
Tricky part? Looks to me like you've had plenty of time to master your 3 wire magic skills. Never really liked using 3 wires. Just something you had to learn and use.
3:01 - Cutter leaved a wonderful finish 3:44 - Shame you can't use the Pi Tape on IDs. 5:40 - That had to come from Curtis! 5:49 - Yep. (and just the next comment) 7:58 - Several of the tolerances are just begging to be mis-read. 12:35 - No squeak; dampened mic frame? 12:57 - Bet that ID finish is going to get a clean-up. 15:47 - Did you let the temps normalize first?
2:13 - 15/16". 3/4 = 12/16", and since the distance "on the left" between witness lines is noticeably greater than the one on the right, then it must be 15/16'... probably ;-) Or, alternatively, just tell those idiots to switch to proper measuring systems for machining, foots and inches are good for making barns or wooden cart wheels ;-) Or, at the very least, tell them to use decimal inches.For a God's sake, 13/16" on a technical drawing? Where did those hillbillies come from?
Hey mate glad the calipers made it to you and have come in handy 🍌😂 thanks for having fun with it and keep up the great videos & work 😎👍
I'm sure I'll get a lot of use out of it. Thanks again for the entire package.
Curtis would be proud that use are using only the best tools. Fine work. Thanks.
When the drawings you get are that hard to read, a banana caliper seems like exactly the right measuring instrument.
I see you upgraded to the Kurtis 🍌 measuring system. 👍
Hi Chris for this great lathe machining video. I love the Kurtis CEE "banana" caliper, I'm a fan of this channel like yours, have a good weekend Chris and look forward to discovering your next videos.
Thanks Chris.
Gday Chris, nothing like have the right tools to get the job done😉, beautiful work as always mate, cheers
Great job Chris, I see the banana standard is getting around now.👍
Nice to see finished parts fitting together.
Bit scary with that screw cutting tool, not a lot of clearance once it finishes a pass.
Very accurate and excellent, dear colleague 👏👏👍👍
Wenn ich deine und CEE Videos am Wochenende anschaue, ist das wie Yoga für mich 😉👍
Lol, so you got one of CEE's Banana Scales. Now that's funny 😅 Thanks for sharing 👍
I do love watching you and CCE
Great bit of turning, and measuring thanks for sharing 👍
5:36... No you didn't...
5:48 Are you serious? It has a certified calibration? I don't remember them mentioning that. I'm need to get my order in. Love those guys.
I think they're sold out right now.
@@ChrisMaj Figures. The great American banana strike of 2023.
Beautiful Chris such a great finish on mild steel, it always left tiny lumps when I did it using the old HSS cutters😊
Outstanding video, and a nice set of calipers sir.
J étais pas rassuré pour Chris au moment où fallait prendre la côte avec le micromètre géant et au vissage de la deuxième bague.
Beau boulot 👍👍👍👍
Nice machining 👍🏼👍🏼! I would never be able to keep those round. Every time I grip slightly thinner pieces they tend to get out of round. Sometimes it feels like turning pieces around make them "oval"...
Curtis only uses the best. Glad to see everybody adopting this exceptional measurement standards.😂😂
5:50 hahahahaha thats fun :D
I too own a very near set of calipers ,
Красотаааа !! Beauty !!
Tricky part? Looks to me like you've had plenty of time to master your 3 wire magic skills. Never really liked using 3 wires. Just something you had to learn and use.
3:01 - Cutter leaved a wonderful finish
3:44 - Shame you can't use the Pi Tape on IDs.
5:40 - That had to come from Curtis! 5:49 - Yep. (and just the next comment)
7:58 - Several of the tolerances are just begging to be mis-read.
12:35 - No squeak; dampened mic frame?
12:57 - Bet that ID finish is going to get a clean-up.
15:47 - Did you let the temps normalize first?
thanks for ueing the banana standards
How do you set the tool offsets? Can you show for one of the tools in a future video?
Beautiful setups
Small button magnets to hold the measuring threading wires temporary!?
✋🏼🇦🇺👍🏼
Hello Chris, why don't you cut the threads with solid profile plates ?
A36 is so nice to cut
My lathe shop is the same
Mr. Chris, can you recommend some speeds and feeds for turning and drilling tantalum?
Cnc??? Con tornillos exagonales en la torreta??
Faultless.
13/16? 15/16? Wait, who the hell sends drawings by fax? 😒
Also, @5:41 Is that Starrett? Mitutoyo, maybe? 🤣
We get a lot of these old drawings.
First👍
wow
Those drafters really need to use a computer because their hand writing is atrocious.
The date on them is 1959, and they probably were photocopied hundreds of times.
It’s also handy when they are converted from Japanese to English then metric to imperial then back to metric.
@@ChrisMaj I gotcha, That makes it okay then Lol. Just imagine somewhere someone has the master copy maybe
1.478🍌 = 24.636🍐 … 🙄
2:13 - 15/16". 3/4 = 12/16", and since the distance "on the left" between witness lines is noticeably greater than the one on the right, then it must be 15/16'... probably ;-)
Or, alternatively, just tell those idiots to switch to proper measuring systems for machining, foots and inches are good for making barns or wooden cart wheels ;-)
Or, at the very least, tell them to use decimal inches.For a God's sake, 13/16" on a technical drawing? Where did those hillbillies come from?
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Он у трехсотчиков норму ворует