The first video back from a much needed break and I'm up and running again. This was a fun little project that's been on my project list for a long time. I'm really pleased with the design, I reckon it looks pretty cool and it's another handy tool for the workshop. :) If you'd like to make one the same as mine you can find the dimensions here paskmakes.com/free-plans/ As I mention in the video Corin from Niroc Tools plans on making a run of these. If you'd like to get hold of one you can reach him here www.niroc.com.au/product/optical-center-punch-expression-of-interest/
A lovely little project. One of the difficulties in using these accurately is that you need to be starting straight down from the top. If you add a ring to the crosshair, it will allow better centring by eye to the bore of the tool.
Nice project! One suggestion though. Might be an idea to install an O ring on the bottom surface of the punch body to make sure it doesn’t slide on the workpiece while you’re replacing the lens piece with the punch. Just a thought. Keep up the good work! Cheers! D’ohh!! Should have watched the whole video before commenting! 😂
I like to watch videos that feel like I'm visiting a friend in the shop. All of your videos feel this way. So thank you so much for inviting us in to spend a great time. 😊
@@locked01 Ciao! i better let you know, this comment of mine is very 'Australiana' I indeed understand Neil perfectly. I was having a bit of fun. Neil is from the other side of Australia to me, so his accent is slightly different. which gives good reason to "tease" in good fun. it's the Australian thing to do. Cheers.
If you want the ultimate accuracy, create and sharpen the punch first, then bore the block. After creating the clear rod, slide it half way down one end of the block and slide the point end of the punch down the other end. Lightly tap the punch, so it leaves a point mark on the face of the rod. The mark is precisely concentric with the bore, rod, and punch. You can use this method to also confirm your cross hairs are centered.
Great idea, though it would compound any error if the tip of the punch isn't spot on. If your punch and magnifier were shaped so they could only be inserted one way it would eliminate that error.
@@bobweiram6321 if your punch point is a half a millimetre to one side of axis then your mark on the lens will be as well. When you put them back in the round hole later, because you can't guarantee they go back in the same way the lens could have the offset to the opposite side, potentially doubling the error. If your lens and punch were pentagon shaped, or a cylinder with a flat on one side, so they were always put back in the same orientation, you'd eliminate that error.
It looks like grinding with the jig with collar and air-tight fit couldn't miss making a perfectly centered point. To verify this place both parts as described above but rotate either one under slight pressure. If anything is off center, this will scribe a circle.
The angled cut on the oring groove shows his thinking ahead a few more steps. Need to cut an oring groove, but also need it to stay in place but make is simple to replace if it gets chewed up over time. That angled cut for the groove was smart. Have the oring stretch a bit to clear the outer edge, but snaps and stays in place in the groove. And you know he got the depth of cut just perfect so it's sitting just a touch proud of the face. Great video. Conventional machining keeps you on your toes and keeps you sharp. Miss doing that work!
I'm not a machinist, but I was mesmerized by this video, you explained every step very well, thank you for my introduction to this skill. I was brought here via a laser engraving group I'm in. You have a new subscriber, I'm gonna watch more of your channel, thank you very much!
Ohio, USA again. I made 2 of these per your instructions and they work great! What a useful tool. I made my punches out of A2 drill rod that I then hardened and tempered. Thanks again.
These are gorgeous. I love the concentric circles on top. I also like learning the pros and cons of each metal type as you went through the process. Gave me a better understanding why you select different metals in past videos.
Your videos are always so great! You show your techniques in great detail, telling us your thought process and showing different ways of doing the same thing. Plus you just have a great perspective on how to get things done. Like using the spray paint lid for a little paint tray. Genius! Thank you for sharing.👍💪
i like how Neils confidence has grown with all the metal working , i been playing with wood work for years i am now tempted to take look at metal working :) , thanks Neil your an inspiration to us all :D
Thanks - you should definitely give it a go if you're tempted. I reckon all materials have their separate challenges which makes them interesting to work with. :)
Seems like an interesting challenge to make a punch that doesn't need the optic removed. Also to make the bottom somehow conform to curved or uneven surfaces, which is the time I most often need a punch.
That would probably be a super custom thing, which will involve something like a love child between a profiling tool and a needle gun with rounded needle tips that are either gravity fed or have light spring compression, where one can float the body on a non-flat surface to center it in such a way that the needles are all making contact, then twist tighten a collar to lock the needles in place before swapping the optic with the punch. More tedium but gets it done.
@@PaskMakes For uneven surfaces you could drill and tap three holes into the bottom surface of the block to screw in three legs, ideally with rubber tips.
I really enjoyed the video and learned a lot!! I especially appreciate the instructions at the end for those of us who don't have a milling station. You think of everything!
Fantastic video as always! I love the addition at the end showing how it can be made with cheaper tools for us that don't have access to proper machining equipment.
This is a really great idea. I actually made one using a hand drill and an $8 drill guide block, as I don't own a drill press. While far from perfect, I tested it against my standard punch on a series of target-centers, trying my best to get perfect centers using both tools. My homemade magnifying punch worked better 9 times out of 10. Thanks for this video, especially the quick/easy method you show at the end.
Another great project! I really like and appreciate how you often show how to make a high-end piece and a simpler one for those of us who don't have all the tools you do. But, no matter what you're making, watching you go through all the steps of making and thinking your way through something is always great. For the cutout pieces, I think they'd make cool inserts/inlays for another project.
Excellent work. A design feature that I used, and works well, is to use a 6mm thick clear acrylic base with an inset LED. This provides good illumination in less than ideal lighting conditions.
You can also center drill a perpendicular hole on the side of the base. It effectively turns the acrylic rod into a light pipe letting in ambient or led light.
@@danceswithaardvarks3284 As an alternative to turning your own base, you can up cycle or purchase a solid metal knob and bore it out for the acrylic rod.
That magnet/digital angle gauge indexing trick on your lathe is genius. So clever and simple. Looking forward to trying it on my wood lathe. Another awesome video man.
Man, I love coming here seeing what weirdly interesting thing you've decided to make. You, This Old Tony and only a few others really set the bar for professional amateurs.
Greetings from Ohio USA. What a great video. I’m going to make a couple of these. Some of your machining tips and tricks are truly inspired. I can use this. Thanks.
Just stumbled upon this channel. Gives a real insight on how precise the milling process is. As a furniture design and make student one of these would level up my work!
I love the project. I noticed it because I’ve done something similar. I’ll pass on a couple of suggestions, not to say mine are better but more to just pass on ideas. As someone else pointed out, an easy way to index the flat end of the acrylic to the punch is to drill a fairly precisely matched hole in a block of scrap, I used hardwood😊, feed the punch in one end and the unmarked flat end of the acrylic into the other. Another suggestion is that the flat end of the acrylic can be pretty dark in use so can be a little difficult to align properly with the mark on the flat surface of the material to be center punched. I found that making the acrylic rod longer than the holder lets it the rod act as a light pipe significantly brightening the distal end of the acrylic rod when being used. To make a nice lens, I cut a 2.5 inch diameter hole in a piece of wood. Next I cut the wood to expose the semicircular inside of the hole. Next I used that inside diameter to hold sandpaper and then applied that curved sandpaper to the lens end of the rod as I spun the rod in the drill press. You can control the magnification of the lens by varying the size of the hole in the wood. Next I started making the holder blocks from acrylic, so the holder allows light in as well. That worked very well. I used a layer of 800 grit sandpaper instead of the rubber rings. I found that the rubber rings could sometimes slip a little between aligning the acrylic rod and the steel punch. I glued that sandpaper to the bottom of the block, that seems to eliminate all slippage. I initially 😊used water hardening drill rod as my punch. When applied to steel, depending on the hardness of the steel, it could dull my punch. I found some replacement center punch pins on line, they were cheap, $3 or so for a dozen. I drilled an acrylic spacer for the punch pins so can use that spacer with one of the pins inserted to mark harder materials. If it dulls, I can simply replace it with a new one.
Instead of trying to sand and polish everything for a really nice finish on the perspex, you have use a flame. It works really really quickly too. When Ive cut perspex, even with a saw, you can take the saw marks out with flame alone, but if its a bit a rough cut, a quick sand with a flat block helps get a more level surface. Flame will turn acrylic/perspex back to being like glass.
Thery are a lovely looking tool, and thanks for coming up with and videoing a good alternative for those of us without lathe and milling machine. Really appreciate it, and i learnt some nice tricks too!
Brilliant, just brilliant! I always enjoy your videos, and this was no exception. I like the tool's usefulness, and I love the idea of creating your own from wood. However, if I had the means, I would absolutely want to be able to make one from brass, as it looks amazing! Well done as usual, and thanks for sharing with us!
Just wanted to say, the detail with the rings although you say is unnecessary, the devil is in the detail and little things like that make a tool more than just a functional object. Therefore things like this should be encouraged! Whoever ends up having these I hope use them extensively while treasuring them for the beautiful things they are. Well done, sir.
What a nice practical tool Pask. Well done. After spending my life turning and milling I'm now too old to do anything but if I were able to put my hands on machines, I'd have loved to give it a go.
Very cool project. As far as the acrylic stock polishing, I've sanded it out to 1500 grit and then used a light pass with a medium heat propane torch. It works well in most plastics shine it. I'm not sure for your needs. It could be a short cut. Cheers.
Hey Pask, you're going to want to change out that grinding wheel on your surface grinder. Never grind on the side of a grinding wheel. It creates a thin spot in the wheel, which causes a stress riser. The face of the wheel can come off. It has killed people before.
Nice. Thanks for showing the simple wood one. I don't have access to a machine shop so that wood one is right up my alley ad definitely doable in a very short time.
Very cool Pask ,I will be making one because I often have trouble leaning the centre punch into the right spot Thanks for the video Cheers from down south
I will say this brought back a memory from school, when the tool shop gave me a piece of extruded acrylic rod instead of the cast. It did make quite a boom when it popped on that lathe.
Gosh I love watching you work. The crosshair setup was SO SATISFYING. You’re always so brilliantly clever. On a side note I watched your old bucket videos a couple days ago, but turned them upside down to make an old fashioned butter churn 😅
Non seulement ce pointeur optique est une très belle idée mais la méthode pour le réaliser est aussi pleine de bonnes idées. Le fruit de l’expérience sans doute.
Nice project with lots of good ideas. Very cool touch at the end using more average hobby workshop tools. For the last one an alternative to the center spot is a center ring. Same setup but with an off center drill bit.
I've seen these before and thought they were so cool. I love how you made them and the careful thought behind your design and creation. While you were making them, I wondered if you were going to give one to your mate, Corin. As soon as I had the thought, you said it.😁They are lovely, Neil. The recipients will cherish them. Thanks for sharing this.
Loved the video mate, nice work. And also loved the simple version on the drill press, I might just need to make one of these now. Didn't know these even existed before the video, almost went and bought one before that last part of the video...
All hail, the “king of jigs”! I need to really work on my patience for developing jigs for my work. I see how much better the work comes out, but my need to get done usually wins out.
The first video back from a much needed break and I'm up and running again. This was a fun little project that's been on my project list for a long time. I'm really pleased with the design, I reckon it looks pretty cool and it's another handy tool for the workshop. :)
If you'd like to make one the same as mine you can find the dimensions here paskmakes.com/free-plans/
As I mention in the video Corin from Niroc Tools plans on making a run of these. If you'd like to get hold of one you can reach him here www.niroc.com.au/product/optical-center-punch-expression-of-interest/
Great video, concept, and method ! Thanks. How about another series of 'scrapwood challange'? Those are really awesome too.
@@harindergill7221 Thanks very much! I may do a scrapwood challenge next. :)
A lovely little project. One of the difficulties in using these accurately is that you need to be starting straight down from the top. If you add a ring to the crosshair, it will allow better centring by eye to the bore of the tool.
@PaskMakes you're not late, you're exactly where you're supposed to be.
Thanks for sharing
Nice project! One suggestion though. Might be an idea to install an O ring on the bottom surface of the punch body to make sure it doesn’t slide on the workpiece while you’re replacing the lens piece with the punch. Just a thought. Keep up the good work! Cheers!
D’ohh!! Should have watched the whole video before commenting! 😂
Saw the shirt and I gotta say, as much as I enjoy your videos I miss the scrap wood challenges.
+1
Amen
+2
+1000000
@ConcreteLand we all need to buy the scrap wood challenge shirts. It'll force Neil's hand. (I think it wood make his day)
I like to watch videos that feel like I'm visiting a friend in the shop. All of your videos feel this way. So thank you so much for inviting us in to spend a great time. 😊
You're very welcome! Glad you enjoyed it! :)
As a West Australian, even with the language barrier, i always find your problem solving inspirational, Neil.
Thanks mate! :)
Holy shit! You literally speak the same language!! Anyways, I speak proficiently only Italian, and this channel is indeed inspirational.
@@locked01 Ciao! i better let you know, this comment of mine is very 'Australiana' I indeed understand Neil perfectly. I was having a bit of fun. Neil is from the other side of Australia to me, so his accent is slightly different. which gives good reason to "tease" in good fun. it's the Australian thing to do. Cheers.
@@locked01
@@warpo007 To be fair his accent also appears to have significant British influences, I'd guess Midlands somewhere.
If you want the ultimate accuracy, create and sharpen the punch first, then bore the block. After creating the clear rod, slide it half way down one end of the block and slide the point end of the punch down the other end. Lightly tap the punch, so it leaves a point mark on the face of the rod. The mark is precisely concentric with the bore, rod, and punch. You can use this method to also confirm your cross hairs are centered.
That's an awesome idea Bob, I like it! :)
Great idea, though it would compound any error if the tip of the punch isn't spot on. If your punch and magnifier were shaped so they could only be inserted one way it would eliminate that error.
@@geoffcapper5025 Don't get it. Insert one way?
@@bobweiram6321 if your punch point is a half a millimetre to one side of axis then your mark on the lens will be as well. When you put them back in the round hole later, because you can't guarantee they go back in the same way the lens could have the offset to the opposite side, potentially doubling the error. If your lens and punch were pentagon shaped, or a cylinder with a flat on one side, so they were always put back in the same orientation, you'd eliminate that error.
It looks like grinding with the jig with collar and air-tight fit couldn't miss making a perfectly centered point. To verify this place both parts as described above but rotate either one under slight pressure. If anything is off center, this will scribe a circle.
A great project, particularly the "basic workshop" variant as a project for those of us without larger machine tools.
Thanks Dominic! I reckon the basic one is a nice little afternoon project. :)
Came to write exactly that! Great idea, nice project, looks accessible, even without a drill press.
I love how you used the digital angle finder to make the crosshairs, super cool solution!
Thanks very much! As I said, it worked well for one but easier with the other method on the mill. :)
Great video as usual! Your ability to problem solve never ceases to amaze me.
Glad you enjoyed it Nick! That was the best bit of the project. :)
Your level of skill and attention to detail, never ceases to amaze. Well done, sir.
Thanks very much Stephen! :)
There's a lot to like in this tool. The o-ring at the bottom is a brilliant touch!
Glad you like it Jason! :)
The angled cut on the oring groove shows his thinking ahead a few more steps. Need to cut an oring groove, but also need it to stay in place but make is simple to replace if it gets chewed up over time. That angled cut for the groove was smart. Have the oring stretch a bit to clear the outer edge, but snaps and stays in place in the groove. And you know he got the depth of cut just perfect so it's sitting just a touch proud of the face. Great video. Conventional machining keeps you on your toes and keeps you sharp. Miss doing that work!
I'm not a machinist, but I was mesmerized by this video, you explained every step very well, thank you for my introduction to this skill. I was brought here via a laser engraving group I'm in. You have a new subscriber, I'm gonna watch more of your channel, thank you very much!
You're very welcome - Glad you enjoyed it! :)
Ohio, USA again. I made 2 of these per your instructions and they work great! What a useful tool. I made my punches out of A2 drill rod that I then hardened and tempered. Thanks again.
These are gorgeous. I love the concentric circles on top. I also like learning the pros and cons of each metal type as you went through the process. Gave me a better understanding why you select different metals in past videos.
Thanks very much Tricia - glad you found it helpful. :)
Your videos are always so great! You show your techniques in great detail, telling us your thought process and showing different ways of doing the same thing. Plus you just have a great perspective on how to get things done. Like using the spray paint lid for a little paint tray. Genius! Thank you for sharing.👍💪
Again a clever solution for an every-day-problem, that ends up becoming a piece of art. Thanks, Neil
Glad you like it - I have to say, I'm very happy with the design. :)
i like how Neils confidence has grown with all the metal working , i been playing with wood work for years i am now tempted to take look at metal working :) , thanks Neil your an inspiration to us all :D
Thanks - you should definitely give it a go if you're tempted. I reckon all materials have their separate challenges which makes them interesting to work with. :)
Your extra effort to show the low tech version is appreciated
Seems like an interesting challenge to make a punch that doesn't need the optic removed. Also to make the bottom somehow conform to curved or uneven surfaces, which is the time I most often need a punch.
That would probably be a super custom thing, which will involve something like a love child between a profiling tool and a needle gun with rounded needle tips that are either gravity fed or have light spring compression, where one can float the body on a non-flat surface to center it in such a way that the needles are all making contact, then twist tighten a collar to lock the needles in place before swapping the optic with the punch.
More tedium but gets it done.
I don't have any ideas but would be cool! :)
the solutions for using precision optics in an extreme-acceleration environment are probably ITAR items lmao
Diamond tip optic with a metal sleeve to handle the g-forces?
@@PaskMakes For uneven surfaces you could drill and tap three holes into the bottom surface of the block to screw in three legs, ideally with rubber tips.
Lord of the rings 😊
Great tools anyone would enjoy working with. Well done my friend
I really enjoyed the video and learned a lot!! I especially appreciate the instructions at the end for those of us who don't have a milling station. You think of everything!
Glad you enjoyed it June and glad you found that bit helpful. :)
Lovely stuff mate! I had Corin around the workshop this morning he mentioned he was batching these out. I hope you get a commission! 😅
Awesome result Neil! Another very handy tool for the workshop.
Thanks very much Dan! :)
Fantastic video as always! I love the addition at the end showing how it can be made with cheaper tools for us that don't have access to proper machining equipment.
Loved the video. Especially the heat treatment at the end , something I’ve failed many times but now I think I know why. Many Thanks
Thanks very much Jeff! glad it was helpful. :)
Beautiful optical center punch. We shared this video on our homemade tool forum last week 😎
It's a very cool looking and functional tool. Nice one 🙂
Oh, gosh.. these are gorgeous.. such simple lines, and I'll bet they feel *great* in hand!
This is a really great idea. I actually made one using a hand drill and an $8 drill guide block, as I don't own a drill press. While far from perfect, I tested it against my standard punch on a series of target-centers, trying my best to get perfect centers using both tools. My homemade magnifying punch worked better 9 times out of 10. Thanks for this video, especially the quick/easy method you show at the end.
My favourite channel by far. Love your work blue. Cheers
Another great project! I really like and appreciate how you often show how to make a high-end piece and a simpler one for those of us who don't have all the tools you do. But, no matter what you're making, watching you go through all the steps of making and thinking your way through something is always great.
For the cutout pieces, I think they'd make cool inserts/inlays for another project.
Excellent work. A design feature that I used, and works well, is to use a 6mm thick clear acrylic base with an inset LED. This provides good illumination in less than ideal lighting conditions.
You can also center drill a perpendicular hole on the side of the base. It effectively turns the acrylic rod into a light pipe letting in ambient or led light.
@@bobweiram6321 Genius. Wish I had thought of that. Might be time to make another as I just got some nice acrylic rod blanks. Thanks Bob.
@@danceswithaardvarks3284 As an alternative to turning your own base, you can up cycle or purchase a solid metal knob and bore it out for the acrylic rod.
Thanks very much! I honestly don't think it's needed though, the illumination is amazing It blew me away just how bright it is. :)
What a precise tool you made and it looks really good. I really enjoyed watching you doing it.
That magnet/digital angle gauge indexing trick on your lathe is genius. So clever and simple. Looking forward to trying it on my wood lathe. Another awesome video man.
Man, I love coming here seeing what weirdly interesting thing you've decided to make.
You, This Old Tony and only a few others really set the bar for professional amateurs.
Thanks very much - Glad you enjoyed it! :)
I learned a lot watching this! So much that I’ll need to watch it again and take notes. Thanks for the more basic tools version at the end.
The piston fit of this product is amazing! And it sounds great too!
Greetings from Ohio USA. What a great video. I’m going to make a couple of these. Some of your machining tips and tricks are truly inspired. I can use this. Thanks.
Neil thank you for this beautiful project. I had great time while watching
Just stumbled upon this channel. Gives a real insight on how precise the milling process is. As a furniture design and make student one of these would level up my work!
I love the project. I noticed it because I’ve done something similar. I’ll pass on a couple of suggestions, not to say mine are better but more to just pass on ideas. As someone else pointed out, an easy way to index the flat end of the acrylic to the punch is to drill a fairly precisely matched hole in a block of scrap, I used hardwood😊, feed the punch in one end and the unmarked flat end of the acrylic into the other. Another suggestion is that the flat end of the acrylic can be pretty dark in use so can be a little difficult to align properly with the mark on the flat surface of the material to be center punched. I found that making the acrylic rod longer than the holder lets it the rod act as a light pipe significantly brightening the distal end of the acrylic rod when being used. To make a nice lens, I cut a 2.5 inch diameter hole in a piece of wood. Next I cut the wood to expose the semicircular inside of the hole. Next I used that inside diameter to hold sandpaper and then applied that curved sandpaper to the lens end of the rod as I spun the rod in the drill press. You can control the magnification of the lens by varying the size of the hole in the wood. Next I started making the holder blocks from acrylic, so the holder allows light in as well. That worked very well. I used a layer of 800 grit sandpaper instead of the rubber rings. I found that the rubber rings could sometimes slip a little between aligning the acrylic rod and the steel punch. I glued that sandpaper to the bottom of the block, that seems to eliminate all slippage. I initially 😊used water hardening drill rod as my punch. When applied to steel, depending on the hardness of the steel, it could dull my punch. I found some replacement center punch pins on line, they were cheap, $3 or so for a dozen. I drilled an acrylic spacer for the punch pins so can use that spacer with one of the pins inserted to mark harder materials. If it dulls, I can simply replace it with a new one.
Awesome idea. Nicely made and very inspiring, as always!
Beautiful work! You’re a wizz mate. A pleasure to watch as always!!
They look great! I love how you experiment with different materials and processes
Amazing project Neil and really good of you to show how to do it without fancy tools too
Brilliant. Perfect for precision and looks really clear neil, great video 😉
Instead of trying to sand and polish everything for a really nice finish on the perspex, you have use a flame.
It works really really quickly too.
When Ive cut perspex, even with a saw, you can take the saw marks out with flame alone, but if its a bit a rough cut, a quick sand with a flat block helps get a more level surface.
Flame will turn acrylic/perspex back to being like glass.
Great project, they look fantastic! Thanks for the tip on the drill bit in the chuck transferred to the vice, very clever!
Great job once again. I love your videos, thanks for all the inspiration and entertainment❤
Thery are a lovely looking tool, and thanks for coming up with and videoing a good alternative for those of us without lathe and milling machine. Really appreciate it, and i learnt some nice tricks too!
The concentric rings are an excellent idea. So impressed with your milling machine and lathe.
Brilliant, just brilliant! I always enjoy your videos, and this was no exception. I like the tool's usefulness, and I love the idea of creating your own from wood. However, if I had the means, I would absolutely want to be able to make one from brass, as it looks amazing! Well done as usual, and thanks for sharing with us!
Just wanted to say, the detail with the rings although you say is unnecessary, the devil is in the detail and little things like that make a tool more than just a functional object. Therefore things like this should be encouraged!
Whoever ends up having these I hope use them extensively while treasuring them for the beautiful things they are.
Well done, sir.
That is a piece of art. Useful and beautiful at the same time. I really want one though I have rerely use for it.
Cool, that was neat! Very nice work!❤️👍
Hail my friend Pask, your arsenal of tools is simply wonderful, congratulations on the excellent work (JOÃO BRAZIL)
Excellent job. I've had thoughts of purchasing one of these for a long time. Just never done that.
I enjoyed the video, thanks again.
Excellent video, been looking for a machining project for my A-Level engineering students. I'm totally stealing this idea 👍 thank you
What a nice practical tool Pask. Well done. After spending my life turning and milling I'm now too old to do anything but if I were able to put my hands on machines, I'd have loved to give it a go.
These are really cool mate! Satisfying build and super useful.
Very cool project.
As far as the acrylic stock polishing, I've sanded it out to 1500 grit and then used a light pass with a medium heat propane torch. It works well in most plastics shine it. I'm not sure for your needs. It could be a short cut. Cheers.
Very nice and I really appreciate you showing a low tech build even I can do.
What a lovely project!
Although I really missed your woodwork projects ... But you are turning out to be a very good machinist ... Great job as always 👍
Thanks very much! I still love working with wood and weighing up whether my next project will be a woodwork one. :)
As an apprentice I was told it takes a few years to drill a hole in the right place and a lifetime to learn to draw the lines in the right place
Cool tools. The brass one is my favorite. Fine job my friend.
I would absolutely love to see you explore more luthier work! Love your videos as always!
I believe that you may be one of the best craftsmen I've ever seen
Hey Pask, you're going to want to change out that grinding wheel on your surface grinder. Never grind on the side of a grinding wheel. It creates a thin spot in the wheel, which causes a stress riser. The face of the wheel can come off. It has killed people before.
Very nice work sir. That looks like a handy tool
Thanks Pask, once again a great project, my old eyes could really use one of these and I'll give it a go.
0:24 such a satisfying sound
that's one the prettiest tools I've seen in a while.
Great idea, Neil, and well executed.
That's a awesome job👍🏻
I always love your hand tool versions. Those are more my level 😅
Fantastic work....like always 🤩 cheers from Germany. Ralf
Nice. Thanks for showing the simple wood one. I don't have access to a machine shop so that wood one is right up my alley ad definitely doable in a very short time.
You got skills, lad. Beautiful piece!
Very cool Pask ,I will be making one because I often have trouble leaning the centre punch into the right spot
Thanks for the video
Cheers from down south
Very cool! I'd never heard of one of these before, but it is fantastic!
I will say this brought back a memory from school, when the tool shop gave me a piece of extruded acrylic rod instead of the cast. It did make quite a boom when it popped on that lathe.
Great little project.
I'd put a cross hair on the top and on the bottom, to ensure you're looking straight down, and avoid parallax error.
Great! At age 74 and having some exposure to mechanics I have never come across this before and may try this idea out.
Gosh I love watching you work. The crosshair setup was SO SATISFYING. You’re always so brilliantly clever.
On a side note I watched your old bucket videos a couple days ago, but turned them upside down to make an old fashioned butter churn 😅
Love these, specially when you can’t see well like me, great idea.😊
Non seulement ce pointeur optique est une très belle idée mais la méthode pour le réaliser est aussi pleine de bonnes idées. Le fruit de l’expérience sans doute.
These are lovely! I've not seen my commercial version for a while, so I'll have to make one, following your plan.
Nice project with lots of good ideas. Very cool touch at the end using more average hobby workshop tools. For the last one an alternative to the center spot is a center ring. Same setup but with an off center drill bit.
That brass one is a thing of beauty 💚🇬🇧🌱
Beautiful design!
I've seen these before and thought they were so cool. I love how you made them and the careful thought behind your design and creation. While you were making them, I wondered if you were going to give one to your mate, Corin. As soon as I had the thought, you said it.😁They are lovely, Neil. The recipients will cherish them. Thanks for sharing this.
Wonderful project thank you for sharing. Have a wonderful weekend and everyone stay safe, happy and healthy. From Henrico County Virginia
Wow, that’s a sweet little project.
Love design choices
Mr. Pask is the definition of clever!
Not sure about that but thank you! :)
Loved the video mate, nice work. And also loved the simple version on the drill press, I might just need to make one of these now. Didn't know these even existed before the video, almost went and bought one before that last part of the video...
A splendid little tool!
1:25 so satisfying!
All hail, the “king of jigs”! I need to really work on my patience for developing jigs for my work. I see how much better the work comes out, but my need to get done usually wins out.
Spectacular!!