Making a Lathe Gouge from a Shock Absorber
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- Опубликовано: 2 окт 2024
- Bill makes lathe gouge using upcycled materials that he had laying around (AKA junk). He takes a rear strut from a Nissan 280ZX, cuts it up, grinds on it, and emerges in the end with a very handy tool. As a finishing touch, he uses the bare piece of steel to turn it’s own pallet-sourced hardwood handle. Don’t worry, the car was euthanized humanely in order to improve the braking of a Datsun 510, and parts from it have gone on to help other cars in need. The gouge, on the other hand, will be used in more than one upcoming project from Tiny Little Workshop. Shock absorber shafts are generally hard chrome surface plated, so only more use will show how long the inner steel is capable of holding a nice, sharp edge.
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Bill presents in this video. He can be found at renderanything
Enjoyed the video keep up the good work be blessed
I have that same lathe. I spend most of my time fixing it.
Muito bom,
Não precisa temperar a ponta???
Learned many years ago to retap holes and replace all hardware wiith better quality stuff after buying an item from H.F. Makes a world of difference.
Very nice build but the handle is way too short. For that size tool I would think you are looking at a 14-17 inch long handle to give you the proper balance for the tool and prevent problems with it flying out of your hands with a catch. But brilliant on the reuse of a shock!! Gonna be looking for some! And I would guess that the steel is plenty hard and tough.
I like the video and everything but I'll have to agree, a long handle would be my preference. I'm even tossing around the idea of putting a little weight in the end of my handle too. Not much, just until I like the balance.
Super job once again!
Your channel is awesome!
Opens Snap-On toolbox, pulls out Harbor Freight Tool :) I have plenty of those and that spring compressor too. Nice tool you made. Heat treating it somehow might make the edge hold up longer.
sweet build on the gouge Bill. keep up the good stuff.
Nice build. You made it look so easy.
Thank-you!
Great video. I like the idea you gave us. Thank you
Are shocks made of good material? I've thrown away 8 and I wish I hadn't now.
It is hard to know for sure what is inside any of them. The metallurgy would certainly be different from manufacturer to manufacturer. I mentioned in the video that most of them are likely to be softer on the inside with a hard plating on the exterior.
Tiny Little Workshop soft and only shallow hardening makes sense. If your tool stays hard and didn't become easier to grind in the center it could be hard all the way through. I wish I had some to play with to see how it cuts on a lathe with hss and carbide
From what I've been searching and reading, the piston rods seem to be made of chrome plated steel... 42CrMo4 among others (not that good to breathe fumes if welding on it)
The tubes might be made out of some regular carbon steel alloy (safe enough to weld).
Dude really a chop saw the whole time let me guess u have a angle gri........yep why didn't u just cut the damn spring
Same question
Don't be a douche. If you don't like it, move on. Try making your own video. 😆😆😆😆😆. Not!
Handle needs a ferrule