The instrument Donny is referring is a dial indicator. It's used to calculate runout and tooling position. A micrometer is a measuring tool used to measure the outside diameter of a part, accurate within ten thousands of an inch.
Yeah i gotta agree with that. It shows that you are very experienced Adam and explain the steps very well. Dealing with a piece as big as this and getting it to precision like you do takes experience and patience, also as you do, measure twice and think before you cut. :-) A joy to watch and it makes me miss my old job making tools by hand. I guess i'll have to come up with a project to give me an excuse to visit the workshop again. ;-)
Very Good. That is a pretty long turn with no taper. I enjoyed watching this. I'm now retired but I did just this kind of work for 35 years. Nice work, Adam!
Adam, I'm not a machinist but, I'm constantly amazed at the amount of knowledge and skill you show in you episodes. You explain everything tin a way that even a layman such as myself understands what you're doing. Great videos man. Keep it up.
The thing i always found fascinating about machining, especially lathe turning, is you can see all the imperfections (out of rounds in this case) and see the work involved in making it perfect. Doesn't matter if it's wood metal or plastic, it's always very cool watching the work machining done
watching the chips fly off straw colored and land in the pile as they blue themselves really puts into perspective how much work the tool is doing. really incredible what they can do.
Many years ago,I worked on a Herbert 9 turret lathe.This reminds me of those days.Not quite on the scale of this machine,but it was a fairly large machine.Love seeing machining of this size being worked. Great vids.
Turret lathes are awesome. I run an old Warner & Swasey No. 3 at my shop every day. I use it for production runs as well as one offs (turret makes a great quick-change tailstock...)
Beautiful work Abom. Perfection is in the details, and you showed us the right way to do it. I got my start on a big Monarch in 1956 in Charlotte, N.C. Machining is in your blood and I now enjoy working in my own shop. Keep producing these great videos.
good luck catching up on the 2 years of material!, also check out, keith rucker, doubleboost, keith fenner, along the way if you havent so far, lots of lathe work to see
Adam, this is the kind of machining that brought me to your channel, 2+ years back. You making those nice colorful chips was awesome. All of your machining work is first class! Keep producing these videos and I'll keep watching! Thanks for the super heavy duty work! ....13
This weekend I had to do something similar but on a much much smaller scale . A shaft needed bearing pockets on each side . Shaft was to big to pass trough the lathe spindle So I did like you showed it . Machined a true section on each side , put up the steady , worked one face flipped it around ..... Worked like charm ! Thank you somuch for sharing .
I think it great to watch a machinest that is so very confident in his work and can make something of this magnitude. Adam your a true top notch machinest my man and it's always a pleasure to watch you work.
Very nice , the shaft turned out great. Finish WOW almost looks center ground. Big difference from the journals I use to turn after the stick welded them 40 years ago. But my finish was always polished to a shine and size. Only I had to use files and Emory belts in different grits. The shop lathe you use is a well made one. Pacemaker top shelf in there day.Thanks Adam for another memory from my long past life. Gary
I did stuff like that on a work experience program through my high school when I was 17, The knowledge I received from the guys in that shop has stuck with me till this day. I believe in accuracy and precision
Around 18:00, you can SEE the runout in the rough material in the width of the chips being formed. Cool. I love how you can hear it too. Those chips are such a beautiful blue.
coming off blue, means you are working about as fast as is possible to go, the slightly less hurried is the 'coming off tan and turning blue' is the usual, but with a job that makes chips by the ton, you need to get a hurry on i guess
Awesome job... full respect for you... was in the trade 20 years ago. I worked in the aerospace end of things but once a machinist always a Machinist. I prefer the milling machine and I guess that makes me a mill head. But I'm blown away by the lack of run out over the entire shaft. You made the dynamic balancer job easy..
You are Inspiration , converting this heavy metal into a usable part is an institutional expression , I wonder when will I have a machine shop of my own , to feel what you feel , and do a fraction of what you can do. I am building a small Milling machine with limited set of tools , A hammer , a hand held drill , a saw and some screw drivers, and aluminum .. Measurements and precision is a Bliss which I am trying to achieve , But I am not (Adam) however my mistakes in the making enable me to appreciate the masters. You for sure are a master and a mentor. Respects and Regards.
A real skilled craftsman and a pleasure to follow the process. My Great-grandfather, grandfather, my own father and a number of uncles were all engineers, working with machinery like this, working to make steam engines right through to aircraft parts. Great work Sir!
I miss the days of cranking dials! Good to see the Aloris Tool post in use and of course, from one to another, it's good to see someone who's an old school machinist. Awesome videos.
Love watching those chips turn color. Machinists know that color well. I don't think it exists anywhere else on the planet. Adam is Abom, but he is also THE BOMB!!!
I'm only a hobbyist but I picked up some great tips and techniques from this series. Was fascinated by your approach particularly recutting the center before the making your final cuts and managing the chips.
In today's day and age of CNC this type of skill is becoming rarer to find. Before CNC everything was machined and turned manually, it's always refreshing to watch a skilled machinist turning precision pieces by hand regardless of the scale of the work piece.
Hi Abom, I stumbled about your channel while surfing through youtube and been stuck there ever since for days! Love to watch your cool, precise style and of course your honest way to talk! Great fan!!!
yay the advantages of being late to the party on to vid 3 and get to see from start to finish in one hit..... grate vids and great work its such a pleasure to watch some one who knows what they're doing and most of all has pride in they're work.
Beautiful work, beautiful video production. Should be required viewing in all high school shop classes. Kids have no idea about what it takes to keep this civilization arrow straight into the future.
Any body can say what they want but this guy Adam is one heck of a machinist and he is what they call a real machinist not just a programmer of a computer to do all the work
Recutting that centre was beautiful. As I've said before, working as a precision NC grinder in aerospace, seeing this kind of creative manual machining makes me wish I could spend a day in your shop making chips!
Beautiful work brother! I’m doing similar work on an old stankoimport lathe. 260 diameter 4140 solid shaft, love those 1/2” cuts! Peace from New Zealand. 🤘
Seeing alll those chips being made reminds me of the time back in 1972/73 when I worked on the railroad. One of the big local businesses made 105mm shells for the Vietnam War. We'd send in open-topped carloads of ~5-inch square steel bars, and bring boxcar loads of finished shells out. The company's contract gave them the scrap, so we'd also bring out carloads of full of steaming chips.
+Old Machinist I'm comfortable with .250 per side on that machine. Usually all I need to rough a shaft down quickly. Would love to see heavy cuts though.
I made pump shafts and gear box shafts for 30 yrs. Would grind them all. I guess he does not have a cylindrical grinder. I guess you do the best with what you have. That is a beefy shaft but those long keyways could have relieved some stress when they were cut in and the shaft could have moved. I would grind between centers after keys were cut in. Probably good enough for a big old gear box. You could check this shaft by making a set of wooden v blocks rough sawn out of 2x4s. Sounds crazy but they work well when you oil them. Set them at the bearing journals and indicate the rest of the shaft. When i was shown the wooden V blocks for the first time i was skeptical but after using them for years i started calling them high precision wooded V blocks. I guess i really liked my job. I could not stop watching and had to comment. Thanks
I worked in repair shop then refinery machine shop. It is great that people can learn from your videos. In the old days we would do something the same way for 10 yrs and a new hire would come in and do it a better way and you would say Dan that's a good idea. Just like the wooded V blocks to check runouts on shafts. I'm going to watch you other videos. Thanks
I like watching the chips. Especially how they change all their temper colors from plane metal right when they fall off, all the way to blue as they rest in the chip trey.
Nice work man. A lot of guys get in trouble because they indicate by the chuck and then the steady rest. They get it zeroed out but the tail end is low or high in relation to the lathe bed and the cuts are tapered.
Great set of videos. I can't wait for the last video!!! You have an awesome setup and do very fine work my friend. Thanks for sharing your incredible skills!
On many of our steady rests we ground clearance under the shoulder to prevent the chips from bulking up and pushing without losing the integrity of the steady rest. Also used second spray lube, (empty of course), to blow out accumulated chips. What was Rc of shaft? Loved machining 4150....get glass finishes taking .050" at .025" feeds final cut......great teaching videos...keep it up.....from a retired job shop machinest and still missing it after ten years!
I use to use old Printing Shop rubber pieces for the guard on the steady rest, it is very heavy duty rubber on one side, cloth on the back, could actually stretch it over the diameter, it wouldn't even let coolant get into the rollers. Print shops use to throw that stuff away, I don't know if they still do that now.
39:20 "It's on there!" I think you read my mind, it did look tooo smooth, nice vid Adam and that big lathe sure runs nice and smooth i might add. Very good shot of adjusting the centre .
Finally part 2! Guess it's not so bad, I only saw part 1 last week! I do miss this stuff, I'm a fitter and turner by trade, used to teach it while I was in the Navy. Keep up the great videos mate!
Speaking of being nervous: I once scrapped a 10 ft x 30 inch by 8 inch thick piece of titanium while operating an abrasive waterjet machine. My supervisor accepted the responsibility for the error as I followed his orders despite my warning that IMHO it was being undercut. It was.
man I work in a large job shop called Everett engineering in Everett WA, and a lot of our turning tools use the cnmg 64x tools like that. I absolutely love them, especially the CNMG643MT. keep up the nice work brother. if you ever take a pnw vacation, holler my way
32:10 Was my favorite part of the video.....that dial gauge not moving whatsoever is somehow insanely pleasing.
The instrument Donny is referring is a dial indicator. It's used to calculate runout and tooling position.
A micrometer is a measuring tool used to measure the outside diameter of a part, accurate within ten thousands of an inch.
Watching you work is like therapy for me. Very relaxing. Excellent job Adam!
Yeah i gotta agree with that. It shows that you are very experienced Adam and explain the steps very well. Dealing with a piece as big as this and getting it to precision like you do takes experience and patience, also as you do, measure twice and think before you cut. :-) A joy to watch and it makes me miss my old job making tools by hand. I guess i'll have to come up with a project to give me an excuse to visit the workshop again. ;-)
Absolutely. This is just mesmerizing.
I could watch Adam true up his work pieces for an entire video. It's awesome watching a pro at work, working with thousandths of an inch.
Antonmursid🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🇲🇨🇲🇨🇲🇨🇲🇨🇲🇨
People like you are the unsung heroes that keep this country running.
I really like the way you format these videos, no messing around, straight to work. The slideshow/wrap up at the end is a nice touch too!
Very Good. That is a pretty long turn with no taper. I enjoyed watching this. I'm now retired but I did just this kind of work for 35 years. Nice work, Adam!
Only guys like us would say "those chips are beautiful"! And they were. Thank you for sharing.
that was running through my head the whole time heheh
It's part of my job to create some great looking chips!
Chips Ahoy..mate...Seriously, I never get tired of looking at them or the gleaming, shiny metal.
Im very late to make a response to your comment, but girls like me also love those chips.
Adam, I'm not a machinist but, I'm constantly amazed at the amount of knowledge and skill you show in you episodes. You explain everything tin a way that even a layman such as myself understands what you're doing. Great videos man. Keep it up.
Beautiful blue chips. You could fill up a glass vase with those chips and it would make a great decorative piece for the machinists home.
I did something like that once and unfortunately they corroded really fast :(
Cocobolo81 cast it in clear resin perhaps?
Spray some oil on them, or use stainless steel chips ;)
I've got a couple small boxes with some chips from past projects saved. one of them being this shaft.
@@Abom79 what do you do with so the chips from your shop? Recycle them?
I am enjoying the patience and expertise this master machinist is demonstrating during his work. He is truly impressive!
Thanks Cheral!
Cheral Rallock como poner bobinas nuevas a un motor eléctrico
The thing i always found fascinating about machining, especially lathe turning, is you can see all the imperfections (out of rounds in this case) and see the work involved in making it perfect. Doesn't matter if it's wood metal or plastic, it's always very cool watching the work machining done
watching the chips fly off straw colored and land in the pile as they blue themselves really puts into perspective how much work the tool is doing. really incredible what they can do.
Many years ago,I worked on a Herbert 9 turret lathe.This reminds me of those days.Not quite on the scale of this machine,but it was a fairly large machine.Love seeing machining of this size being worked. Great vids.
Turret lathes are awesome. I run an old Warner & Swasey No. 3 at my shop every day. I use it for production runs as well as one offs (turret makes a great quick-change tailstock...)
Beautiful work Abom. Perfection is in the details, and you showed us the right way to do it. I got my start on a big Monarch in 1956 in Charlotte, N.C. Machining is in your blood and I now enjoy working in my own shop. Keep producing these great videos.
Adam you have the skill of a Master Craftsman and the Patients of a Saint! Very Very nice work!
Great videos! Love watching this rather than videos of CNC machines. You have true talent. Beautiful work Adam!
I just got a lathe not too long ago but I just found your channel yesterday you are truly awesome!
good luck catching up on the 2 years of material!, also check out, keith rucker, doubleboost, keith fenner, along the way if you havent so far, lots of lathe work to see
Island JK Productions Welcome aboard!
jusb1066 I did actually watch part one last night lol so I guess I didn't have to wait too long lol
Welcome to the machining world!
Don't forget OxToolCo
It is a pleasure to watch someone who knows and likes his work!
Adam, this is the kind of machining that brought me to your channel, 2+ years back. You making those nice colorful chips was awesome. All of your machining work is first class!
Keep producing these videos and I'll keep watching! Thanks for the super heavy duty work!
....13
I love the way steel in turned into a product and you are very good at you job,continue doing so in their foot steps.
This weekend I had to do something similar but on a much much smaller scale .
A shaft needed bearing pockets on each side . Shaft was to big to pass trough the lathe spindle
So I did like you showed it .
Machined a true section on each side , put up the steady , worked one face flipped it around .....
Worked like charm !
Thank you somuch for sharing .
I think it great to watch a machinest that is so very confident in his work and can make something of this magnitude. Adam your a true top notch machinest my man and it's always a pleasure to watch you work.
Very nice , the shaft turned out great. Finish WOW almost looks center ground. Big difference from the journals I use to turn after the stick welded them 40 years ago. But my finish was always polished to a shine and size. Only I had to use files and Emory belts in different grits. The shop lathe you use is a well made one. Pacemaker top shelf in there day.Thanks Adam for another memory from my long past life. Gary
The Pacemaker truly is a wonderful machine of design and engineering.
awesome work Adam, that new insert sure made short work removing the bulk of the waste material and beautiful chips too. thank you for sharing with us
I did stuff like that on a work experience program through my high school when I was 17, The knowledge I received from the guys in that shop has stuck with me till this day. I believe in accuracy and precision
Around 18:00, you can SEE the runout in the rough material in the width of the chips being formed. Cool. I love how you can hear it too. Those chips are such a beautiful blue.
coming off blue, means you are working about as fast as is possible to go, the slightly less hurried is the 'coming off tan and turning blue' is the usual, but with a job that makes chips by the ton, you need to get a hurry on i guess
You're the bob Ross of machinist! Your videos are the most relaxing thing ever!
This was the first video that brought me to your channel and now it is complete! Thank Adam!
Awesome job... full respect for you... was in the trade 20 years ago. I worked in the aerospace end of things but once a machinist always a Machinist. I prefer the milling machine and I guess that makes me a mill head. But I'm blown away by the lack of run out over the entire shaft. You made the dynamic balancer job easy..
You are Inspiration , converting this heavy metal into a usable part is an institutional expression , I wonder when will I have a machine shop of my own , to feel what you feel , and do a fraction of what you can do. I am building a small Milling machine with limited set of tools , A hammer , a hand held drill , a saw and some screw drivers, and aluminum ..
Measurements and precision is a Bliss which I am trying to achieve , But I am not (Adam) however my mistakes in the making enable me to appreciate the masters.
You for sure are a master and a mentor.
Respects and Regards.
Full of respect for your work Adam, tons of cutting video on RUclips, first seeing someone actually tells how, what, and why.
A real skilled craftsman and a pleasure to follow the process. My Great-grandfather, grandfather, my own father and a number of uncles were all engineers, working with machinery like this, working to make steam engines right through to aircraft parts. Great work Sir!
Bet it went down well when you told your family you were taking psychology and sociology at college?
I miss the days of cranking dials! Good to see the Aloris Tool post in use and of course, from one to another, it's good to see someone who's an old school machinist. Awesome videos.
Beautiful work Adam. I always enjoy your videos. The things I learn from your videos help me in my job on a daily basis. Thanks for sharing.
New machinist here... I learn a lot from watching your videos! Keep up the good work.
Artwork Adam! Pure craftsmanship!! Thanks for letting us all come along!!
Another example of great work and demonstration of expert craftsmanship well done.
Love watching those chips turn color. Machinists know that color well. I don't think it exists anywhere else on the planet. Adam is Abom, but he is also THE BOMB!!!
I'm only a hobbyist but I picked up some great tips and techniques from this series. Was fascinated by your approach particularly recutting the center before the making your final cuts and managing the chips.
I think your Company is Proud of having you !!!
In today's day and age of CNC this type of skill is becoming rarer to find.
Before CNC everything was machined and turned manually, it's always refreshing to
watch a skilled machinist turning precision pieces by hand regardless of the scale
of the work piece.
love it watching! It is much better than TV shows these days!
Thanks
Hi Abom, I stumbled about your channel while surfing through youtube and been stuck there ever since for days! Love to watch your cool, precise style and of course your honest way to talk! Great fan!!!
Another Great job Adom. Love watching a Craftsman at work
Thirty years of experience machinist here, the last fifteen with CNC. I wish I could work in your shop! Love old school machining!
yay the advantages of being late to the party on to vid 3 and get to see from start to finish in one hit..... grate vids and great work its such a pleasure to watch some one who knows what they're doing and most of all has pride in they're work.
I could watch this all day.thank you
You are a brilliant and humble man. I love watching your work.
Beautiful work, beautiful video production. Should be required viewing in all high school shop classes. Kids have no idea about what it takes to keep this civilization arrow straight into the future.
Been waiting on part 2 for ages Adam - thank you!
where the heck is part one?
It's right there on my channel's home page
Yea i found it, Sorry for not posting that i found it. Keep up the great work Adam. I really enjoy watching your videos.
@@Acremers87 3/26/2016
I had to watch the turning of the shaft again, you take craftsmanship to a new level. Great job.
Compared to what I do now. I am amazed I was actually trainig to do this kind of work.
Mad respect for you.
Any body can say what they want but this guy Adam is one heck of a machinist and he is what they call a real machinist not just a programmer of a computer to do all the work
Just started my first machine shop job, running a manual lathe. I love it!
+Dylan Potts awesome! I hope you enjoy it!
32:10 Uhh, I think maybe this Adam guy maybe kinda knows how to work a 4-jaw chuck or somethin. I mean, maybe sorta, kinda.
110 % man, even i though the same! Love the Heavy Metal Machining !
when i saw that i thought "holy hell"
Renewable Oilcan Rim b
Nissar Ahmed ن
Yeah that's just astonishingly perfect.
Recutting that centre was beautiful. As I've said before, working as a precision NC grinder in aerospace, seeing this kind of creative manual machining makes me wish I could spend a day in your shop making chips!
Beautiful work brother! I’m doing similar work on an old stankoimport lathe. 260 diameter 4140 solid shaft, love those 1/2” cuts! Peace from New Zealand. 🤘
You’re a true artist! All your pieces are functional art!!
Seeing alll those chips being made reminds me of the time back in 1972/73 when I worked on the railroad. One of the big local businesses made 105mm shells for the Vietnam War. We'd send in open-topped carloads of ~5-inch square steel bars, and bring boxcar loads of finished shells out. The company's contract gave them the scrap, so we'd also bring out carloads of full of steaming chips.
So beautiful to see something so big being cut that easily.
Like always, EXCELLENT!!!!. Thanks for putting these videos up for all to enjoy.
I really loved to watch this. Thank You for all the effort put in this.
Even though this is 4 years old at this point it is still so fun to watch, my favorite is him removing a half inch in a pass.
Full of respect for you and your work Adam.
Its good therapy just watching the guy work.
Straight chunkin it. Love it. Thanks for the entertainment man! Great work!
Awesome machinist! Really enjoy watching him
Thank you !, Finally someone that takes a REAL d.o.c. and a good feed and speed setup.
+Old Machinist I'm comfortable with .250 per side on that machine. Usually all I need to rough a shaft down quickly. Would love to see heavy cuts though.
Abom79
I see the " younger guys" taking no more than .05 per side and think they are doing it right.
Oh please.. Then educate them you crotchety old coot
Полиграфович you can't teach those who feel they know more than you. Plus your name calling is very juvenile.
I im new in this job and this video's teach me a lot thanks for the time u take to make this possible
Very nice work Abom, great videos. Greetings from Africa.
Hi Adam, love the big stuff. thanks for the awesome video. Much appreciated, i have learned alot from your show.
getting a T shirt for sure.
Adam you have the coolest job! I am so envious.
Awesome piece of work Adam! Thanks for sharing.
I made pump shafts and gear box shafts for 30 yrs. Would grind them all. I guess he does not have a cylindrical grinder.
I guess you do the best with what you have.
That is a beefy shaft but those long keyways could have relieved some stress when they were cut in and the shaft could have moved.
I would grind between centers after keys were cut in.
Probably good enough for a big old gear box.
You could check this shaft by making a set of wooden v blocks rough sawn out of 2x4s.
Sounds crazy but they work well when you oil them.
Set them at the bearing journals and indicate the rest of the shaft.
When i was shown the wooden V blocks for the first time i was skeptical but after using them for years i started calling them high precision wooded V blocks.
I guess i really liked my job. I could not stop watching and had to comment. Thanks
+Tony Crisci I know that's how many manufacturers build them but I work with the tools they have.
I worked in repair shop then refinery machine shop.
It is great that people can learn from your videos.
In the old days we would do something the same way for 10 yrs and a new hire would come in and do it a better way and you would say Dan that's a good idea.
Just like the wooded V blocks to check runouts on shafts.
I'm going to watch you other videos. Thanks
Beautiful factory and machine
I like watching the chips. Especially how they change all their temper colors from plane metal right when they fall off, all the way to blue as they rest in the chip trey.
Nice work man. A lot of guys get in trouble because they indicate by the chuck and then the steady rest. They get it zeroed out but the tail end is low or high in relation to the lathe bed and the cuts are tapered.
Awesome job Adam some beautiful chips buddy. seeing you work on those bigger job's is inspiring
Looks like a shaft out of a mud pump.
Awesome work.
Great set of videos. I can't wait for the last video!!! You have an awesome setup and do very fine work my friend. Thanks for sharing your incredible skills!
Try to find any youtube video where theres not someone disliking it. This was cool. Adam you are a nice bloke. Ten out of ten for this.
I have learned so much from watching your videos. Most importantly to be patient, measure 3 times and not to rush the job.
Double checking measurements are important
On many of our steady rests we ground clearance under the shoulder to prevent the chips from bulking up and pushing without losing the integrity of the steady rest. Also used second spray lube, (empty of course), to blow out accumulated chips. What was Rc of shaft? Loved machining 4150....get glass finishes taking .050" at .025" feeds final cut......great teaching videos...keep it up.....from a retired job shop machinest and still missing it after ten years!
2 great videos too watch with Sunday breakfast.
I watch you a lot of time you work so wonderfully
Adam, This country needs folks like you. Have you had your blood sugar levels checked?
Just what I needed to round off this evening (no pun intended).
Congratulatins Adam!, very nice channel, very well explained. goob job!!
Always a pleasure watching a craftsman! Absolutely beautiful! I know, your thinking, "AIN"T NO THING" Well I was nervous for you! Razor!
Thanks Ray
Part 2 finally there! I love the coloring of these heavy chips.
I use to use old Printing Shop rubber pieces for the guard on the steady rest, it is very heavy duty rubber on one side, cloth on the back, could actually stretch it over the diameter, it wouldn't even let coolant get into the rollers.
Print shops use to throw that stuff away, I don't know if they still do that now.
Was wondering when we're gonna see part 2, very glad you got arround to it!
39:20 "It's on there!" I think you read my mind, it did look tooo smooth, nice vid Adam and that big lathe sure runs nice and smooth i might add. Very good shot of adjusting the centre .
Finally part 2! Guess it's not so bad, I only saw part 1 last week! I do miss this stuff, I'm a fitter and turner by trade, used to teach it while I was in the Navy. Keep up the great videos mate!
You got lucky, most others been waiting 6 months. BUT, you may have to do your share of waiting for part 3 now! LOL
Speaking of being nervous: I once scrapped a 10 ft x 30 inch by 8 inch thick piece of titanium while operating an abrasive waterjet machine. My supervisor accepted the responsibility for the error as I followed his orders despite my warning that IMHO it was being undercut. It was.
It’s so cool when what comes off the insert looks like a metal tape.
man I work in a large job shop called Everett engineering in Everett WA, and a lot of our turning tools use the cnmg 64x tools like that. I absolutely love them, especially the CNMG643MT. keep up the nice work brother. if you ever take a pnw vacation, holler my way
Yes that 600 size insert is really nice for the big boy turning jobs.
this is art.i got chills by watching this
Outstanding work Adam!
Always enjoy seeing you at Motion working, some cool stuff going on there. the 120fps shots were cool!
Yes I was trying to get a good slow mo, but it doesn't seem to come out to well in the shop. Probably better for outdoors shot with lots of sunlight.