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From memory there was a rather large auction of equipment in October of 1991 at the Cockatoo Island shipyards in Sydney. Work on ship's steam turbines was one of the tasks undertaken at the yards, so it is possible it came from there.
My father worked in Switzerland with this machine in the 60s. As someone wrote already, my dad said that it was in a room that was temperature, humidity-controlled and had an operating room level air scrubber. He proudly explained to me how he worked with. Now, 22 years after he passed away, I see this amazing machine. It is touching to me. He would be very interested in your channel. Thank you very much, Mr Korenko.
It makes me watery eyed seeing how well that machine is made, how well its documented, the diagrams, the spares and even how nicely the accessories are all boxed up. Its from an age where engineering seemed to ooze a level of pride that seems to have diminished. Its a large boxy, grey and heavy piece of kit, but its a thing of beauty to my eyes and built to last too!
I wanted to write a similar comment! The care people took when sending the machines out! The shear amount of additional tooling and spare parts that seemed to be standard and the absolutely adorable boxes! Proper hinges, closing mechanisms and the small engraved plate on every single one! It seems like the carpenter who made it really poured his heart into it. And it also shows that it wasn't for nothing, am I right? One of the boxes is in a bit of a rough shape? No problem, hinges and everything else can be nicely replaced and that box and so hopefully the tool inside might last forever. Unlike the plastic rubbish they sell for modern tools...
@@robotkabot7541 God damn right. This thing is dripping with pride. Those people from that era are legendary. They didn't stop at something that worked, they perfected all the details on these old machines. I've owned some older "war" era machines, and it was the same from Cincinnati and Monarch.
I work for Toyota, in one of the US manufacturing plants, and the company that makes the machines we use send schematics and wiring guides and plc program documents with every machine. Wish the machines were as special as this, but even our simplest machines come with 100 pages of documentation, and the complicated ones have entire shelves. I've never seen that level of support before I worked here, and as a mechanic, it is appreciated. My shop services 3 cells in the plant and we have our own library building. Wish more things came with that level of care, it's not common anymore.
I did my toolmaker apprenticeship at Holden in Adelaide (Woodville plant). We had 2 of these machines in a temperature controlled room and I was fortunate enough to be trained on them and work in there on many occasions. These machines are bang on accurate and have no vibration or chatter when machining. Exactly like a Rolls Royce would be if it was a jig borer.
I had the privilege to visit Holden's Melbourne plant as it was closing down, and they had a single SIP Hydroptic-6A there too. From the machine plate, this was a type ARM-67E, serial No 211. A 1964 calendar sticker was stuck on the side of the machine. Had fun taking some beautiful photos of that machine and the supporting vintage control electronics too.
When I was an apprentice machinist in late 60’s General Electric aircraft in Cincinnati, Ohio, USA had one installed. Besides the HVAC control in the room, it had to be put on an isolated floor to keep the vibration of the other machines from affecting it. What I remember most is the Swiss engineer who came over to calibrate it. Wore a suit with white shirt and when he was finished it was still white! Thank you Kurtis for sharing this with us!
Yeah I think your right about these sorts of things. There's a few other vids by Americans with Moore Jig Borers. There's 2 main things about jig borers. 1) How accurate they can move in the X-Y-Z with respect to squareness. 2) How accurate with respect to being parallel to the Z axis they can bore. So not only can you bore a number of holes in a part with great location accuracy but all those holes will be parallel to each other. My bet is this was brought to Australia for the RAAF for making parts for jet engines, where they need high boring accuracy. The few others I have seen with these don't have them out on the general shop floor. Like many high accuracy machines they are located (as you hinted) in purpose built rooms and or floors to keep them free of other influences one of which is temperature change. He's got this in an open workshop in Queensland, which means big temperature swings. But then maybe he doesn't need the really high levels of accuracy it capable of.
Sounds like me...... I always wear white shirts ...even when working on heat treatment plant which used carbon pellets to carbonise steel which afterwards were oil quenched. Hundreds of Tons of steel per...imagine the place as a black hell. Almost never a stain on my shirt.....wearing a white shirt forced you to work accurate and precise. Still do ..... Thnks for the story !!!
This jig borer is one of the wonders of engineering, and your description and explanation was simply a joy to watch and hear. You have a great gift for technical story telling. And the close up cinematography was a joy as well! Thank you both for this episode!!
The history, and the intelligence, and the duty of care that is contained in the development and manufacture of every single part, capacity and feature of machines like these make you proud to be a human. Mostly because they are a monument to applied common sense. And, they can be improved, but first we have to catch up to the people who made these machines.
I work on this exact model every single day and it's rapidly become my favorite machine. I'm glad someone has put out a video on it! Mine has the mechanical rotary table that adds additional two axis movement. We manufacture very very close tolerance space and defense parts with it.
I started my Apprenticeship in '79 as a Fitter and Turner and after completing my trade with the added modules I was a Toolmaker at the Ordnance Factory Maribyrnong in Victoria. In our toolroom we had a Hydroptic 4, 6 and 8 which was beside each other in a controlled atmosphere. The 8 had 2 spindles, a vertical and horizontal which were aligned within 0.0002" so machining holes that were 90 degrees to each other and were aligned was easy. During the 90's we were making gearbox housings for the American Army for the M1 Abrams tank when the Gulf War was in full swing on the Hydroptic 6. At that point in time I was the Toolmaker Checker and so all the housings went through me before being sent to the USA. Unfortunately that meant working 80 hours a week, starting at 5:30 in the morning 7 days a week for 18 months doing 10 and 12 hour days. We worked all holidays except Christmas day and was the first time I earned more than $32,000 as I think the base wage for a toolmaker was around the $22,000ish mark. If the machine is the same as ours they have a glass scale which is where you get the black line that you align the 2 fingers when looking through the optics. The optical centre that goes in the spindle can also be used to pick up an edge. As the machines aged the best thing we did was put a DRO on the 4 and 6 as we were in the phase of going from Imperial to Metric so at the flick or a switch it went from Imperial to Metric and was just as accurate as the optics. The best thing about going to the DRO was you could make your fine adjustments in either direction unlike the optical which has to be done in one direction to maintain accuracy and if you go past you have to back off and start again. They are a great machine but they do suffer from problems you don't have with a normal mill in being able to see what is happening with your cutter as you cant get over the cutter and look down but you get used to it and have to have faith in what your doing. As with all machines they are only as good as the operator but they are great at what they were made for and not everyone I worked with was able to use the Hydroptic's due to the system used to hold a cutting head in the spindle and working out how to works the optics.
I too started my apprenticeship at the Ordnance Factory Maribyrnong in 1980 as a fitter machinist. I remember going into the controlled atmosphere room too.
These SIP machines are indeed the top of the food chain. We had one in a room by itself that was temperature, humidity controlled and had an operating room level air scrubber. Only two operators in the shop were allowed to run it. They had a full service and certification annually. You got a helluva machine there
@@OOpSjm With a machine in an environment like that "I think that is the kind of question where they say we tell you but you know it is permanent nap time" LOL
Hi Curtis, Just found your excellent presentation and I have experience to add to your project. I was a maintenance engineer at the Small Arms Factory where we had two SIP Jig Borers, an old one and one like yours. In 1965 the SAF bought a 7A CN with NC rotary table making it a 4 axis NC machine. I was sent to Geneva for 9 weeks to study all the systems concentrating on the electronics and how to fix it if it fails. At that time GM Fishermans Bend bought a 6A CN and a few years later the Ammunition Factory Footscray bought a 6A CN. I had great experiences associated with this machine and later learned that when the SAF was disbanded, the 7A was auctioned off and went to the USA. What a shame. At this time the 7A with rotary table cost around 250,000 pounds. I recall that the positioning accuracy was +- .0001inch even with up to 1 ton on the table and it would do this on auto (NC), The table moves on very accurate rollers so accurate that SIP had to build their own factory to make them. The factory had isolated foundations to isolate the grinding of the rollers form all sources of vibration. The agent in Sydney was Mechanical Precision Equipment, the owner Cliff Done, the father of Ken Done the artist. Cheers.
nice machine ! Btw. 5:05 is not to set the table, it's to zero the scale to the next full (5-ish) digit. A lot of european machines from that time have the same feature. So its easyer for the operator to calculate long travel distances. You get to do a lot of calculating in your head when working with analog measuring systems. When zeroing, I use the tecnique of zeroing the 1mm scale, zeroing the 0.01mm scale on the handweel and then calculating the travel on the sacle, adding the needed rotations on the fine adjusting weel scale. You can then easely and fast travel your distance routhly by the 1mm scale, for eg. 250.5 mm travel, from 425mm to 675mm, then dialing in the 0.5mm with the fine scale on the handweel. And because all your indicators/scales are on the same zero, it works like a calculator. I also used to mark my "waypoints" with a permanent marker on the 1mm scale, so its easyer to navigate. When you are on 645mm on the 1mm scale, and 0 on the handweel scale, you are exactly at 645.00mm - I hope that makes sense, greetings from switzerland.
Your explanation makes sense.. but it's still mind boggling how it works. I wish I could be taught to run one of these incredible machines by one of the master machinist who runs them daily. Or just getting to talk to someone who engineered/manufactured these machines would be awesome These machines are incredible feats of engineering and precision machining
Hi Kurtis, I seem to recall, as an apprentice at Borg Warner in Fairfield Sydney in the 1960’s, we had a Societe Genevoise jig borer in the air conditioned tool room. There was one skilled operator and no one else was allowed to use this machine. Hope to see you run the machine soon.
As a skilled tradesman I'm amazed at how much you know about so many different machines and mechanisms. Your understanding of systems and way of explaining them is the best I've come across
WOW!!...So good to know that smart people still cherish these mastepieces of mechanical technology. I bought one myself 3 years ago from an aerospace firm in Italy, and incredibly enough a game changer for my workshop even in the cnc era!
I recall one of these at Hawker-Siddeley (the Harrier maker) in Kingston, London in early 70's. It could be "programmed" with punch cards. It was a sackable offence to cross the yellow line near it on the shop floor if you were an apprentice.
We had one at HSA Hamble too. I worked in the jig boring shop as an apprentice in 1969 and was only allowed to use the mechanical forerunner of this with Vernier scales.
Congratulations! I used to work on a SIP 6 35yrs ago at our federal aviation company nowadays known as RUAG here in Switzerland. The machine was in a 20° conditioned glass box with ALL the tool options from the SIP catalogue. Until today this work experience remains as my personal TOP in terms of precision and smoothness. Just a dream for any passionate machinist. As you said correctly it's the Holy Grail in our machinist world imo.
Farking wow, life goals right there mate. I'm not sure how many people will truly be able to appreciate the design and capability of this machine. Love your work CEE!
Just found your channel, love it. This takes me back, I'm 80 and I have retired quite a few years ago but being a machinists was one of the happiest times being on the machines was better than being a supervisor. Thank you for this channel, I'd love to be in your workshop. I would think that if I had the money I'd have a little workshop in my back yard just to play with.
A very impressive machine you have bought there 👌 ,back in my days(1970's) the reason there were 2 identicle books was that one was with the operator (always dirty ) the other (very clean ) was in the office and never ever allowed onto the shop floor.When trying to repair the machines the operators book was often unreadable because of the dirty fingerprints left by the previous repair guy.You then had to beg the office manager to allow you to have acess to his clean copy,easier said than done.Grovelling comes to mind and being told wash your bloody hands and wipe your boots.Good old days when working class knew blue collars workers were better than them.😂The spares you found brought back memories of when all machines came like this, the manufacturer provided wear items that would need replacing under about 2 years of use .I remember they were also wrapped in waxed paper to protect them.👴Your videos always bring back memories that are locked away in the old vault,thanks Kurtis.😊
Hey mate that is brilliant and definitely make sense for why there are two books, Karen says she will now keep the "new" manual with her in the office and I must go grovel to her if I ever need it LOL
Wow what gem. I served my apprenticeship at NSWGR workshop at Cardiff near Newcastle,starting in 1963. In a controlled atmosphere room was the "Genevoise Jig Borer". I'm not sure what size it was but to a 15yo apprentice it looked huge. I remember the operator showing me the optical centre finder, at the time I was totally amazed. What an absolute goldmine of tooling and accesories and that documentation is worth its weight in gold, priceless. In this day of CNC, machines like this are cast aside, I'm glad to see it go to someone who appreciates quality machinery Phil from EVLE
Hey Phil thanks for sharing that bit of history mate, we would have loved to know the provenance and story behind what our Jig borer used to do before we got it
I have been in metrology for over 50 years recently retired. We rated the Sip as the best machine of its kind in the world. 30 years with Starrett; 10 with Mitutoyo and 10 in other areas of metrology. I believe the plug in scope is an auto Collimator to check flatness. We used them to measure surface plate flatness. Great video, and happy to be retired. Keep up the great job as you enter into real accuracy in machining. My best sir.
wow thanks mate, we know from comments and views how much they are enjoyed. Would be funny to see a "reaction" sort of thing from viewers when they first see a new video and what they think while watching
That is a stunning piece of equipment that you have found. The condition that it is in, all the tooling, manuals and all the electrical spares that have come with it. There was a machine works somewhere in Aus That had really cared and maintained for it as its over 60 years. And with your TLC I'm sure that it will give another 60 years of service. Thanks for a relaxing start to the weekend with a few cold beverages. Stay dry.
Awesome! I spent the bulk of my machining career running two different SIP jig borers. The statements to that you made about how accurate they are and how nice they are to operate are accurate. Thankyou for sharing. This channel always brings me joy to watch.
I've been in Precision Engineering for 35 years now, the jig-borers fascinated me. The tooling that came with them was pure quality. They were always off limits to most people. Only the privileged few were allowed to go anywhere near them! Very rare to see a Sip these days. Great video.
Hi Curtis, I was in Geneva a couple of days ago and found this information about the SIP Company - Geneva Physical Instruments Society (SIP) Company founded by the physicist Auguste De la Rive and the botanist Marc Thury with the aim of manufacturing devices and instruments necessary for research and scientific and scientific experiments. In 1870, the engineer Theodore Turrettini joined the management of the company. It expanded into the machine tool and precision mechanics sectors. and precision mechanics. The company has become famous for the production of high-precision heel rolls. The company has up to 1400 employees at its two sites in Plainpalais and Chatelaine. In 1990, SIP moved to Satigny. In 2006, it was bought by the StarragHeckert group. The Satigny plant closed in 2016. Kind regards, Jim - Brussels - Belgium 😉
What a trip down memory lane! What a treasure! I worked on one just like that in the mid-60's with a major aerospace company here in the U.S. I apprenticed in tool & die and wound up working on the SIP. Truly amazing machines. When you get everything cleaned up and sorted out, you'll have a VERY valuable piece of equipment for your company but remember... they're built like a tank, but treat them gently. I was young then and now I'm old, but I clearly remember what a joy they were to work with. Treasure it and take care of it.
Wow, that brought back memories. I worked on one occasionally for a couple of years over 50 years ago about that size. I was told it was recovered from a salt mine somewhere in Europe after the end of World War 2 as part of war reparations! It had a direct reading optical scale system different to yours, you looked through an eyepiece similar to the one on the optical center finder, it was in the same position to your measuring setup. It had the same on the cross head. SIP really wanted to get hold of it to upgrade! I worked as a civilian for a British military establishment at that time. We had several pieces of interesting machinery including an extremely accurate thread grinder. A metric machine but an imperial leadscrew. The leadscrew was 'borrowed' by a machine tool company to cut another master! as it was so accurate! Enjoy your machine I did!!
Speaking on precision this video was uploaded at 12:01am Pacific Standard time. Curious as to how much time the Mrs. has put into making sure that the video is edited and ready to upload at such a precise time. It is actually incredible how hard you guys work towards the “Under promise, Over deliver” part. Thank you for your precision.
hey mate, Karen gets the video uploaded ahead of time (usually the day before) and can actually schedule them to go up at the same time each week. She likes to do that, less stress 🤣
I used to work with these fabulous machines in the late 70s here in the UK. We did work for the aerospace(RR) and nuclear industries among others. I imagine most of my old workmates are now in that big workshop in the sky bless 'em. Won't be long before I'm joining them lol. What fantastically skilled people they were. For me this video was a wonderful trip down memory lane. Thank you.
Brought back happy memories of learning to use our SIP#1 jig borer as an apprentice. It lived in its own quiet and clean room and had a great stool to sit on whilst working it. It had a magnificent selection of tools and accessories and was treated with such reverence!
OMG x 1319! What an absolutely amazing machine, from a 'proper' company, AND a time when companies had genuine pride in what they were producing. All those standard, and spare parts included. Oh my heart just melts. Totally excellently described principles of operation too. You (and machine) are a credit to each other. Regards Mark in the UK
Just going through some of your back catalogue, and realizing more and more what a treasure you, your shop, and your equipment (especially the classics like this beauty) are. It’s such a joy for me to watch your episodes.
Almost 9ton fine ass machinery. They where really able to produce high tolerence stuff back then only using their brains and calculations on a paper. Impressive!
I nearly wet myself, as an apprentice we were using a SIP model 5E. What a lovely machine to use and the parts were spot on too. How lucky were you to get all that awesome tooling with it, mind you the SIP system, as you said, would not fit the "run of the mill" machines. After leaving the company after a few years, I never worked on a SIP jig borer again. A Japanese one I worked on, but never was the same as the 5E. They still produced a good product though, just not the silky smooth SIP. I never saw the front lifting holes on the 5E, but I just loved seeing the fantastic hidey hole for the electric spares, a great Aladdin's cave you found. Thanks once again for making us old engineers happy.
Good day. I'm a retired Mould-Maker Plastics in Canada. In my humble opinion you, sir, have scored a priceless machine-tool & accessories. Great video, mate! Bravo!
Love the video! One can clearly see that you are very excited about that machine. My grandpa worked at SIP in the sixties as a machinist priducing parts for machines. I do not know if there are any parts from him on this exact machine, but he would certainly be proud that these machines are still used today.
That’s an amazing piece of equipment. I love that it’s 60 years old and still more precise than some of todays CNC. Your explanation was great and when you pulled all the tool boxes out I got really excited. Can’t wait to see it in action.
The thing is, the techniques that make for an accurate machine tool were the same back then as they are now, so being from the 1960's is really irrelevant. For example they still make POS machines today, even though it is 2022.
I've heard of jig borers for 35 years, but never seen one much less a tutorial. I guess it's because I've always worked in job shops where most jobs only needed +/-.001 banana tolerance with an occasional venture into the string bean scale which is 35/64 of banana.
LOVING YOUR CHANNEL,I SPEND HRS WATCHING, BACK IN MY DAY WE DIDNT HAVE INSERTS,WE GRINDED OUR TOOLS, MISS THE SMELL OF MACHINE SHOP ,THANKS GOES TO YOUR MRS, FOR HER OUT STANDING AN CREATIVE FILMING.
Got my dream job as an industrial mechanic here in norway yesterday! Learnd alot from your videos and even though im not gonna be working on any big equipment, i learnd alot of tips and tricks from your videos! keep it up
Wow I love old machinery, how freaking accurate is that thing! amazing, with a bonus of a time capsule inside as well. As always, I love the work you two share with us. 👍
Been selling Industrial Tools for 43 Years and knew NOTHING about Jig Boring until now. I just spent 30 Minutes with my mouth open out of pure amazement..! Thank you for this very educational video. 👍
This video is a masterpiece for presenting so many of the nearly endless functions of that stunning machine! I'm delighted that someone had the foresight to keep all of the accessories and tooling with it and that it got into your hands! With all of the comments here anything I would write would be redundant. My great grandfather and grandfather were Swiss engineers, so this machine is so I am especially attracted to this machine. Thanks for the wonderful presentation and perfect videography, as always.
Hey mate, one of the things we enjoy most about reading comments is when viewers can relate, have memories or history they can share. So thanks for sharing some of yours!
I'm not an engineer but this machine is beautiful Swiss engineering and it might be an elder statesman now but it can clearly still produce the precision you require in your work. This is a video you and Karen should be proud of, you both put in a lot of work on this one
This stuff is fascinating - I'm not a tradesman but have always been interested in machining, lathes and mills etc. The equipment and skills you have accumulated are impressive !
I love the bloopers at the end, but I must say as a young fella who worked as a appy fitter at an abattoir and is now a fabrication appy I love seeing a tradesman with actual tradesmen quality nowadays it seems like a dying bread. Love learning from your vids and look forward to learning more from a proper trady 💙
I am absolutely blown away by that machine! Looking forward to seeing it in action at some point. The accessories and spares are amazing, too. You can't just go down to your local hardware store and buy those! Thank you for sharing!
Thankyou so much! Years ago I studied machine alignment and restored my first cnc that I still use today (scrape, measure, scrape...). I cant imagine how such a machine could be made to such exacting tolerances. I would bet that today it would be financially unrealistic. Take good care of it. That machine belongs in a museum.
Kurtis, you and your wife and safety officer have a very special place here on planet earth. You guys are so dedicated to your craft and to each other. Keep up the solid work for your customers and us that vicariously live a life of “pretend machining” through your channel. I love watching your content and the antics and happy times from Mr Safety. (Lol) I mentioned to my wife that if we visit Australia in our retirement years (10 more years) that I’d like to goto a machine shop in the Gold Coast and visit a pay respects to a real machinist doing heavy machining on mining equipment. Her eyes glazed and she fell ill…(lol) …anyway by then you’ll be a multi millionaire having several million subs and views on each video. Thanks again for your content and please keep everyone’s finger’s and toes happy..
These machines were used in Europe in specially air conditioned closed room in order to maintain a very high precision degree and repeatability.It was dedicated to special work like tools or molds and operated by highly skilled professionals (only one or two).
I just love it been watching American youtubers but very happy to see this Australian post. I used to ( have to ) work with my dad, when not in school in Switzerland and one of the things that has stuck with me forever is precision and nothing less.
Pretty amazing that there is 150 km between the SIP company from Genève, Switzerland, and the Opinel knife conpany from Saint Jean de Maurienne, France ! The machine and the knife has made nearly the same travel to your shop !
Awesome acquisition! I'm fairly confident there was one of these at Ruston Bucyrus in Lincoln UK. It was in the Tool Room in it's own purpose built dust free room, operated by Len. Out of bounds for the likes of a 16 yr old me!
Amazing piece of machinery! You are one lucky dude. Just watching this video was like being there and actually owning it with you. I live in Seattle and was fortunate to have a grandfather and father that had both a metal shop and wood shop that I grew up with. I was operating a 9” South Bend engine lathe since I was 13 years of age. I ended up being a plumber so I didn’t have a chance to continue with machining metal, but I did get into wood working and ended up making 500 pens after I retired from Home Depot. Now that I’m retired I’m able to watch these RUclips videos on machining and in my estimation you are one of the best. Along with your wife/photographer and doggie, Homeless. Keep up the great videos. I enjoy every one of them. And please get the feed handle on the boring machine fixed and show us what it can do. Thanks, Larry Ferrari from Seattle.
Fascinating, hope you find out the back story. There was a lot of cutting edge engineering (!) going on in Australia in the 1960's. My dad was an engineer and spent some happy years commuting from Adelaide to Woomera working on inertial navigation systems for the Blue Steel cruise missiles. Keep up the good work Kurtis and greatly appreciate the videos you and your good lady put out each Friday.
What an incredible piece of machinery! The precision they were able to achieve over half a century ago is beyond impressive. Overall it looks to be in pretty good shape aside from the broken pieces!
Magnificent machine... Absolutely the pinnacle of pre-digital equipment.. Can't wait to see it in action. Wish my dad was alive.. He would LOVE to have seen this...
It's amazing to see,despite so much parts,fixtures and adjustments this machine is brilliantly accurate and precise ! ! ! Swiss engineering is marvelous.
Enjoyed the video on the jig borer but realized while watching out-takes that you and Karen do put lots of effort into a smooth video production. It's to our benefit and I thank you both!
What an amazing machine. Just proves they don’t build them like they used to. You will make a fantastic custodian of this machine. Hope it serves you well. Great content as always.
I can't remember the last time I've enjoyed a RUclips video so much! Can't wait for you to work on that marvel of a human engineering! Said it before and I'll say it again - THANK YOU SOOOOO MUCH for these videos!!! God bless you both and hopefully you'll give us many, many more videos to cherish and enjoy... 🙂
I am living in the town where this machine was built : Geneva. And I know where the factory building is, It's now turned into an art centre. (your pronunciation "sociétè genevoise" was good). Thank for the videos It's always a pleasure to watch.
It always amazes me when a place of industry is turned into an art gallery. It happens a lot. The people who worked in those places produced things like that machine that helped to give us all that we have now. I think there is a large amount of irony there. Jeff
Awesome new machine! You were very thorough in describing how it works and it’s various uses and functions. And as always, love seeing the out takes and the love that Homeless gets!
What a great piece of fine engineering kit! Beautifully engineered and made, the quality can be see in the detail of the boxes for accessories as well as the machine itself. Swiss watch type quality for a heavy engineering machine. Great find young man and a very interesting video too. Well done CEE, I look forward to seeing more of this fine machine. Top regards to all!
The Company I used to work for had 6 of these same machine tools lined up side by side in a wood planked, air conditioned, humidity controlled room. The outside wall that faced the street was glass so if you passed by you could see all the Master Machinists in white coats making parts on the SIPs. Yes those were the days.....
"It just needs to make sense.. And sometimes it's hard making you make sense." As an IT nerd that also builds random shit, welds, and can run a mill.. I felt this. I've watched my wife's eyes just gloss over trying to listen to me lmao
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering I'm actually going to be back in the Philippines here in a few months, was thinking about running South to the underdown, don't know if y'all do fan meets or not though
Every bodies eyes gloss over when you start to to talk about engineering 99.9% of people have absolutely no concept of how tings are really made. I was a Jig Borer on mainly SIP machines for over thirty years, on Press Tools -one off MOD -Aircraft and Marine parts and some jobs were zero tolerance. I was on holiday this guys wife asked me what I did for a living I said I was a jig borer, she said what is that, I said I drill holes in bit of iron,her husband replied it is a bit more complex than that and when I picked myself off the floor I replied " you must be one of the chosen few to know what a jig borer is.
It always fascinates me how much precision they were able to get, even 100 years ago. We really do have an engineering debt to the pioneers of the industrial revolution.
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering that section where you found the tin of Spare Parts, all wrapped in paper, really reminded me of how my Grandad used to store his model trains. Some real nostalgia moments for mem
Talk about all the bells and whistles. That's a beautiful big machine. You find some of the most amazing treasures in your acquisitions. What an incredible asset for your business. I am so looking forward to seeing this in action.
That's just a beautiful piece of machinery and must have been incredibly expensive when made. It was a pleasure just to see it and for you, actually laying your hands on it must be fantastic. Thanks for showing it, I look forward to seeing it doing some useful work. All the best, Mart in England.
as a now retired machinist, years ago for a long time I used a Devlieg jig borer. incredibly accurate, robust, a delight to use and 1950's vintage. most work was measured in tenths of a thou.
This absolutely awesome machine found the right new home - your workshop! Thank you for all the explanations and for revealing the beauty of this masterpiece of engineering. Even watching your video was like birthday and Christmas together when you opened all these boxes. I also appreciated all the comments from you guys who shared stories from the old days. Greetings from Germany!
What an awesome machine. The thing that amazes me is, the people that designed it and the accuracy of the machinery that built the parts.... and the people/machinery prior etc etc.
What a great find. Lovingly used for years and the saga continues. The tooling was a great score. Was not long ago that rooms full of engineers created our world. I built a shop for a company for 30 years. Sadly that too went by the wayside. Great to see a real connoisseur of the trade. Keep up the good work young man.
I guess you are going for a working/producing museum , I am glad you got this machine and I know it will be put to good use. Great video as always, I like seeing old machinery being brought back and used.
I was a machinist toolmaker for Aerojet General for 32 years in Folsom, California. We had two SIP'S identical to what you now own. One of my most favorite machines to operate in the shop. Extreme accuracy doesn't even come close to what those machine's are capable of. You are fortunate to own one. All the wear marks on the paint of that machine look so familiar. Wouldn't it be something if that machine was purchased at the plant closure in Folsom .
Wow, thanks! I used to work one of these in the uk making titanium rotor heads for Sikorsky helicopters. Awesome machine, so smooth and accurate. The rolls royce of machines.
I congratulate you on this machine. As a Swiss, it makes me very proud to see this on the other side of the world in the hands of a very skilled mechanic
Bravo! This is first time i think something is bit too accurate for practical use and i use machinist tolerances of ten microns 0.01 to nearly everything. Wonderful machine and rare, never heard about it before!
As my non machinist friends would say "that is quite a effing fancy drill press!!" That is a builtiful machine you have. Great that you got all the bits and pieces with it. At my last place of work they always got two copies of all the manuals and parts books etc. One for on the factory floor and one for the engineering office. Cheers for the overview
That thing is so freaking cool. They really thought of everything with this machine. There’s one other thing that this comes with that no new equipment has and that is a life and history behind it! I love old stuff because of that reason. Can’t wait to see it put to use!
Let me get this straight, to get her going you have to flip some switches, activate the lubricant fluid, flip a travel lever to the correct speed, move a lever forwards and back, turn some big knobs, smaller knobs, and finally some knobs under a hood which is difficult to reach, then move some other smaller levers, unlock the spindles and axis, rotate a wheel, hit 2 more levers, set the speed rate and finally hit the start button. Where as to get him going you just need to flip his switch and blow a little?
This is the 'history' of machines that have already seen a few days. The older the machines are, the more people (operators) were necessary and also the more handles to operate the machines. This 'reduction' of hand movements to start processes was only really started with the 'digital age'. But, the mechanical effort to start this machine with a (mechanical) switch would simply not be possible. That's where the 'digital age' scores with its possibilities.
Yes, a lot of knobs and levers... But after 30 minutes of watching Kurtis' video, I'm sure, I can drill my first 10mm hole. Try that with a modern CNC machine after a 30 minutes briefing... This kind of operating philosophy has one great advantage: the knobs and levers don't move away or hide in a labyrinth of submenues :-)
Nice presentation of a complicated machine, also great photography and editing! And great that the machine has found a good home! Looking forward to seeing it in action.
It is definitely a privilege to have this amazing piece of machinery in our workshop and we hope you enjoy seeing it as much as we do! 😎👍
P.S. Our LIMITED hats are back in stock grab yours from our Official CEE Merch shop: www.ceeshop.com.au
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Have a great weekend Kurtis, Karen and Homeless 🍻🥂
From memory there was a rather large auction of equipment in October of 1991 at the Cockatoo Island shipyards in Sydney. Work on ship's steam turbines was one of the tasks undertaken at the yards, so it is possible it came from there.
17:33 that looks like a end stop switch.
Hmmmm has someone finely sent in undies for old homie big nutz
The grey part you mention, not knowing what is...That is a capacitor of 1 microfarad (uF).
My father worked in Switzerland with this machine in the 60s. As someone wrote already, my dad said that it was in a room that was temperature, humidity-controlled and had an operating room level air scrubber.
He proudly explained to me how he worked with. Now, 22 years after he passed away, I see this amazing machine. It is touching to me.
He would be very interested in your channel.
Thank you very much, Mr Korenko.
Great story, thanks for sharing!
That's a lovely story. I hope Kurtis sees your comment.
Hey mate, it's always really amazing when a viewer can relate or have memories from the videos we share, thanks for watching and commenting
This is the best machine I have seen in my life……🥹
It makes me watery eyed seeing how well that machine is made, how well its documented, the diagrams, the spares and even how nicely the accessories are all boxed up. Its from an age where engineering seemed to ooze a level of pride that seems to have diminished. Its a large boxy, grey and heavy piece of kit, but its a thing of beauty to my eyes and built to last too!
absolutely agree with your sentiments!
Same here!
I wanted to write a similar comment! The care people took when sending the machines out! The shear amount of additional tooling and spare parts that seemed to be standard and the absolutely adorable boxes! Proper hinges, closing mechanisms and the small engraved plate on every single one! It seems like the carpenter who made it really poured his heart into it. And it also shows that it wasn't for nothing, am I right? One of the boxes is in a bit of a rough shape? No problem, hinges and everything else can be nicely replaced and that box and so hopefully the tool inside might last forever. Unlike the plastic rubbish they sell for modern tools...
@@robotkabot7541 God damn right.
This thing is dripping with pride.
Those people from that era are legendary. They didn't stop at something that worked, they perfected all the details on these old machines. I've owned some older "war" era machines, and it was the same from Cincinnati and Monarch.
I work for Toyota, in one of the US manufacturing plants, and the company that makes the machines we use send schematics and wiring guides and plc program documents with every machine. Wish the machines were as special as this, but even our simplest machines come with 100 pages of documentation, and the complicated ones have entire shelves. I've never seen that level of support before I worked here, and as a mechanic, it is appreciated. My shop services 3 cells in the plant and we have our own library building. Wish more things came with that level of care, it's not common anymore.
I did my toolmaker apprenticeship at Holden in Adelaide (Woodville plant). We had 2 of these machines in a temperature controlled room and I was fortunate enough to be trained on them and work in there on many occasions. These machines are bang on accurate and have no vibration or chatter when machining. Exactly like a Rolls Royce would be if it was a jig borer.
That's probably one of them.
I had the privilege to visit Holden's Melbourne plant as it was closing down, and they had a single SIP Hydroptic-6A there too. From the machine plate, this was a type ARM-67E, serial No 211. A 1964 calendar sticker was stuck on the side of the machine. Had fun taking some beautiful photos of that machine and the supporting vintage control electronics too.
@@SamPinchesMakerShop I hope Kurtis has seen your comment. I expect he’ll be in touch for the photos if it’s his one.🇬🇧
@@SamPinchesMakerShop 😭
except the RR would break down every 5th job ;)
When I was an apprentice machinist in late 60’s General Electric aircraft in Cincinnati, Ohio, USA had one installed. Besides the HVAC control in the room, it had to be put on an isolated floor to keep the vibration of the other machines from affecting it.
What I remember most is the Swiss engineer who came over to calibrate it. Wore a suit with white shirt and when he was finished it was still white!
Thank you Kurtis for sharing this with us!
That rocks! Respect.
Yeah I think your right about these sorts of things.
There's a few other vids by Americans with Moore Jig Borers. There's 2 main things about jig borers.
1) How accurate they can move in the X-Y-Z with respect to squareness.
2) How accurate with respect to being parallel to the Z axis they can bore.
So not only can you bore a number of holes in a part with great location accuracy but all those holes will be parallel to each other. My bet is this was brought to Australia for the RAAF for making parts for jet engines, where they need high boring accuracy.
The few others I have seen with these don't have them out on the general shop floor. Like many high accuracy machines they are located (as you hinted) in purpose built rooms and or floors to keep them free of other influences one of which is temperature change.
He's got this in an open workshop in Queensland, which means big temperature swings. But then maybe he doesn't need the really high levels of accuracy it capable of.
#OnlyTheSwiss 😃
@@tonywilson4713 For his work, all it has to do is match the accuracy of his custom yellow calipers.
Sounds like me...... I always wear white shirts ...even when working on heat treatment plant which used carbon pellets to carbonise steel which afterwards were oil quenched. Hundreds of Tons of steel per...imagine the place as a black hell. Almost never a stain on my shirt.....wearing a white shirt forced you to work accurate and precise.
Still do .....
Thnks for the story !!!
This jig borer is one of the wonders of engineering, and your description and explanation was simply a joy to watch and hear. You have a great gift for technical story telling. And the close up cinematography was a joy as well! Thank you both for this episode!!
Thanks very much for this feedback mate, it was not easy to get all those specs and info on video 😅 so very glad it was enjoyed. Cheers 😎👍
All that and I love the bloopers, somehow reminds me of myself
The history, and the intelligence, and the duty of care that is contained in the development and manufacture of every single part, capacity and feature of machines like these make you proud to be a human. Mostly because they are a monument to applied common sense. And, they can be improved, but first we have to catch up to the people who made these machines.
Mrs Cutting Edge is becoming a video editing genius!!!
Yea, mad props to the giggler.
I work on this exact model every single day and it's rapidly become my favorite machine. I'm glad someone has put out a video on it! Mine has the mechanical rotary table that adds additional two axis movement. We manufacture very very close tolerance space and defense parts with it.
Same for me but without rotary table 😊
I started my Apprenticeship in '79 as a Fitter and Turner and after completing my trade with the added modules I was a Toolmaker at the Ordnance Factory Maribyrnong in Victoria. In our toolroom we had a Hydroptic 4, 6 and 8 which was beside each other in a controlled atmosphere. The 8 had 2 spindles, a vertical and horizontal which were aligned within 0.0002" so machining holes that were 90 degrees to each other and were aligned was easy. During the 90's we were making gearbox housings for the American Army for the M1 Abrams tank when the Gulf War was in full swing on the Hydroptic 6. At that point in time I was the Toolmaker Checker and so all the housings went through me before being sent to the USA. Unfortunately that meant working 80 hours a week, starting at 5:30 in the morning 7 days a week for 18 months doing 10 and 12 hour days. We worked all holidays except Christmas day and was the first time I earned more than $32,000 as I think the base wage for a toolmaker was around the $22,000ish mark. If the machine is the same as ours they have a glass scale which is where you get the black line that you align the 2 fingers when looking through the optics. The optical centre that goes in the spindle can also be used to pick up an edge. As the machines aged the best thing we did was put a DRO on the 4 and 6 as we were in the phase of going from Imperial to Metric so at the flick or a switch it went from Imperial to Metric and was just as accurate as the optics. The best thing about going to the DRO was you could make your fine adjustments in either direction unlike the optical which has to be done in one direction to maintain accuracy and if you go past you have to back off and start again. They are a great machine but they do suffer from problems you don't have with a normal mill in being able to see what is happening with your cutter as you cant get over the cutter and look down but you get used to it and have to have faith in what your doing. As with all machines they are only as good as the operator but they are great at what they were made for and not everyone I worked with was able to use the Hydroptic's due to the system used to hold a cutting head in the spindle and working out how to works the optics.
"vertical and horizontal which were aligned within 0.0002"". Holy Cow.
I love reading stories like that just casually being under some of the YT videos!
I too started my apprenticeship at the Ordnance Factory Maribyrnong in 1980 as a fitter machinist. I remember going into the controlled atmosphere room too.
@Arctic Miner Have another drink.
Highly likely you started your apprenticeship the same week as me(here in the uk).
Good luck with the last five years.
These SIP machines are indeed the top of the food chain. We had one in a room by itself that was temperature, humidity controlled and had an operating room level air scrubber. Only two operators in the shop were allowed to run it. They had a full service and certification annually. You got a helluva machine there
bloody awesome!
What were they making?
@@OOpSjm With a machine in an environment like that "I think that is the kind of question where they say we tell you but you know it is permanent nap time" LOL
@@yeagerxp Or if any answer is given at all, they had to kill you afterwards...
:-D
@@horstszibulski19 what I meant by permanent nap time" LOL
Hi Curtis, Just found your excellent presentation and I have experience to add to your project. I was a maintenance engineer at the Small Arms Factory where we had two SIP Jig Borers, an old one and one like yours. In 1965 the SAF bought a 7A CN with NC rotary table making it a 4 axis NC machine. I was sent to Geneva for 9 weeks to study all the systems concentrating on the electronics and how to fix it if it fails.
At that time GM Fishermans Bend bought a 6A CN and a few years later the Ammunition Factory Footscray bought a 6A CN.
I had great experiences associated with this machine and later learned that when the SAF was disbanded, the 7A was auctioned off and went to the USA. What a shame. At this time the 7A with rotary table cost around 250,000 pounds.
I recall that the positioning accuracy was +- .0001inch even with up to 1 ton on the table and it would do this on auto (NC),
The table moves on very accurate rollers so accurate that SIP had to build their own factory to make them. The factory had isolated foundations to isolate the grinding of the rollers form all sources of vibration.
The agent in Sydney was Mechanical Precision Equipment, the owner Cliff Done, the father of Ken Done the artist.
Cheers.
nice machine ! Btw. 5:05 is not to set the table, it's to zero the scale to the next full (5-ish) digit. A lot of european machines from that time have the same feature. So its easyer for the operator to calculate long travel distances. You get to do a lot of calculating in your head when working with analog measuring systems. When zeroing, I use the tecnique of zeroing the 1mm scale, zeroing the 0.01mm scale on the handweel and then calculating the travel on the sacle, adding the needed rotations on the fine adjusting weel scale. You can then easely and fast travel your distance routhly by the 1mm scale, for eg. 250.5 mm travel, from 425mm to 675mm, then dialing in the 0.5mm with the fine scale on the handweel. And because all your indicators/scales are on the same zero, it works like a calculator. I also used to mark my "waypoints" with a permanent marker on the 1mm scale, so its easyer to navigate. When you are on 645mm on the 1mm scale, and 0 on the handweel scale, you are exactly at 645.00mm - I hope that makes sense, greetings from switzerland.
You should get in contact with them. I'm sure they would appreciate the info and help!
Your explanation makes sense.. but it's still mind boggling how it works. I wish I could be taught to run one of these incredible machines by one of the master machinist who runs them daily.
Or just getting to talk to someone who engineered/manufactured these machines would be awesome
These machines are incredible feats of engineering and precision machining
Hi Kurtis, I seem to recall, as an apprentice at Borg Warner in Fairfield Sydney in the 1960’s, we had a Societe Genevoise jig borer in the air conditioned tool room. There was one skilled operator and no one else was allowed to use this machine. Hope to see you run the machine soon.
As a skilled tradesman I'm amazed at how much you know about so many different machines and mechanisms. Your understanding of systems and way of explaining them is the best I've come across
job shoppers are a treasure to us all
WOW!!...So good to know that smart people still cherish these mastepieces of mechanical technology. I bought one myself 3 years ago from an aerospace firm in Italy, and incredibly enough a game changer for my workshop even in the cnc era!
Brilliant mate glad to hear that
I recall one of these at Hawker-Siddeley (the Harrier maker) in Kingston, London in early 70's. It could be "programmed" with punch cards. It was a sackable offence to cross the yellow line near it on the shop floor if you were an apprentice.
😂 luddite apprentices
We had one at HSA Hamble too. I worked in the jig boring shop as an apprentice in 1969 and was only allowed to use the mechanical forerunner of this with Vernier scales.
Congratulations! I used to work on a SIP 6 35yrs ago at our federal aviation company nowadays known as RUAG here in Switzerland. The machine was in a 20° conditioned glass box with ALL the tool options from the SIP catalogue. Until today this work experience remains as my personal TOP in terms of precision and smoothness. Just a dream for any passionate machinist. As you said correctly it's the Holy Grail in our machinist world imo.
I can almost feel the generations of hands that have touched those controls! What a legacy you've found!
Farking wow, life goals right there mate. I'm not sure how many people will truly be able to appreciate the design and capability of this machine. Love your work CEE!
Next on the wish list is the hydroptic no 8 🤣👌
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering mine goes to 11 !
@@gogoubai ...Your "what" goes to 11?
@@paulcopeland9035 He probably meant that his (wish list) is to own a Sip No. 11 jig borer.
@@ellieprice363 Don't panic.. I hear there is a cure for Elevendonitis these days.. Not so much for the eyesight. :D
Just found your channel, love it. This takes me back, I'm 80 and I have retired quite a few years ago but being a machinists was one of the happiest times being on the machines was better than being a supervisor. Thank you for this channel, I'd love to be in your workshop. I would think that if I had the money I'd have a little workshop in my back yard just to play with.
Hey mate welcome to the channel!
A very impressive machine you have bought there 👌 ,back in my days(1970's) the reason there were 2 identicle books was that one was with the operator (always dirty ) the other (very clean ) was in the office and never ever allowed onto the shop floor.When trying to repair the machines the operators book was often unreadable because of the dirty fingerprints left by the previous repair guy.You then had to beg the office manager to allow you to have acess to his clean copy,easier said than done.Grovelling comes to mind and being told wash your bloody hands and wipe your boots.Good old days when working class knew blue collars workers were better than them.😂The spares you found brought back memories of when all machines came like this, the manufacturer provided wear items that would need replacing under about 2 years of use .I remember they were also wrapped in waxed paper to protect them.👴Your videos always bring back memories that are locked away in the old vault,thanks Kurtis.😊
Hey mate that is brilliant and definitely make sense for why there are two books, Karen says she will now keep the "new" manual with her in the office and I must go grovel to her if I ever need it LOL
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering ..... Well Curtis, groveling could be fun. Let us know how that bit works out.....☺️
Wow what gem.
I served my apprenticeship at NSWGR workshop at Cardiff near Newcastle,starting in 1963.
In a controlled atmosphere room was the "Genevoise Jig Borer".
I'm not sure what size it was but to a 15yo apprentice it looked huge.
I remember the operator showing me the optical centre finder, at the time I was totally amazed.
What an absolute goldmine of tooling and accesories and that documentation is worth its weight in gold, priceless.
In this day of CNC, machines like this are cast aside, I'm glad to see it go to someone who appreciates quality machinery
Phil from EVLE
Hey Phil thanks for sharing that bit of history mate, we would have loved to know the provenance and story behind what our Jig borer used to do before we got it
I have been in metrology for over 50 years recently retired.
We rated the Sip as the best machine of its kind in the world.
30 years with Starrett; 10 with Mitutoyo and 10 in other areas of metrology.
I believe the plug in scope is an auto Collimator to check flatness.
We used them to measure surface plate flatness.
Great video, and happy to be retired.
Keep up the great job as you enter into real accuracy in machining.
My best sir.
This has legitimately become my favorite channel, you guys do a better job on these videos than I think you realize.
wow thanks mate, we know from comments and views how much they are enjoyed. Would be funny to see a "reaction" sort of thing from viewers when they first see a new video and what they think while watching
That is a stunning piece of equipment that you have found. The condition that it is in, all the tooling, manuals and all the electrical spares that have come with it. There was a machine works somewhere in Aus That had really cared and maintained for it as its over 60 years. And with your TLC I'm sure that it will give another 60 years of service. Thanks for a relaxing start to the weekend with a few cold beverages. Stay dry.
Hey Aaron glad you enjoyed seeing this beauty, we are very happy with it and looking forward to getting it working on jobs! Have a good weeekend
Awesome! I spent the bulk of my machining career running two different SIP jig borers.
The statements to that you made about how accurate they are and how nice they are to operate are accurate. Thankyou for sharing. This channel always brings me joy to watch.
I've been in Precision Engineering for 35 years now, the jig-borers fascinated me. The tooling that came with them was pure quality. They were always off limits to most people. Only the privileged few were allowed to go anywhere near them! Very rare to see a Sip these days.
Great video.
Hi Curtis, I was in Geneva a couple of days ago and found this information about the SIP Company - Geneva Physical Instruments Society (SIP)
Company founded by the physicist Auguste De la Rive and the botanist Marc Thury with the aim of manufacturing devices and instruments necessary for research and scientific and scientific experiments. In 1870, the engineer Theodore Turrettini joined the management of the company. It expanded into the machine tool and precision mechanics sectors.
and precision mechanics. The company has become famous for the production of high-precision heel rolls. The company has up to 1400
employees at its two sites in Plainpalais and Chatelaine. In 1990, SIP moved to Satigny. In 2006, it was bought by the StarragHeckert group. The Satigny plant closed in 2016.
Kind regards, Jim - Brussels - Belgium 😉
What a trip down memory lane! What a treasure! I worked on one just like that in the mid-60's with a major aerospace company here in the U.S. I apprenticed in tool & die and wound up working on the SIP. Truly amazing machines. When you get everything cleaned up and sorted out, you'll have a VERY valuable piece of equipment for your company but remember... they're built like a tank, but treat them gently. I was young then and now I'm old, but I clearly remember what a joy they were to work with. Treasure it and take care of it.
Wow, that brought back memories. I worked on one occasionally for a couple of years over 50 years ago about that size. I was told it was recovered from a salt mine somewhere in Europe after the end of World War 2 as part of war reparations! It had a direct reading optical scale system different to yours, you looked through an eyepiece similar to the one on the optical center finder, it was in the same position to your measuring setup. It had the same on the cross head. SIP really wanted to get hold of it to upgrade! I worked as a civilian for a British military establishment at that time. We had several pieces of interesting machinery including an extremely accurate thread grinder. A metric machine but an imperial leadscrew. The leadscrew was 'borrowed' by a machine tool company to cut another master! as it was so accurate!
Enjoy your machine I did!!
This is amazing, we love reading the memories that our viewers have from watching the videos, thanks for sharing some of yours!
Speaking on precision this video was uploaded at 12:01am Pacific Standard time. Curious as to how much time the Mrs. has put into making sure that the video is edited and ready to upload at such a precise time. It is actually incredible how hard you guys work towards the “Under promise, Over deliver” part. Thank you for your precision.
hey mate, Karen gets the video uploaded ahead of time (usually the day before) and can actually schedule them to go up at the same time each week. She likes to do that, less stress 🤣
When you upload a video to RUclips you can set the time you want the video to be aired so it's not hard to air a video to a specific time.
I used to work with these fabulous machines in the late 70s here in the UK. We did work for the aerospace(RR) and nuclear industries among others.
I imagine most of my old workmates are now in that big workshop in the sky bless 'em. Won't be long before I'm joining them lol. What fantastically skilled people they were.
For me this video was a wonderful trip down memory lane. Thank you.
Brought back happy memories of learning to use our SIP#1 jig borer as an apprentice. It lived in its own quiet and clean room and had a great stool to sit on whilst working it. It had a magnificent selection of tools and accessories and was treated with such reverence!
OMG x 1319! What an absolutely amazing machine, from a 'proper' company, AND a time when companies had genuine pride in what they were producing. All those standard, and spare parts included.
Oh my heart just melts.
Totally excellently described principles of operation too. You (and machine) are a credit to each other.
Regards Mark in the UK
Thank you mate glad you enjoyed it!
That was when human brains were at work. It is a master piece
Just going through some of your back catalogue, and realizing more and more what a treasure you, your shop, and your equipment (especially the classics like this beauty) are. It’s such a joy for me to watch your episodes.
Almost 9ton fine ass machinery. They where really able to produce high tolerence stuff back then only using their brains and calculations on a paper. Impressive!
Very impressive!
Coincidence, I said that exact thing as a pick up line to a girl once... of course it didn't work, she's still my girlfriend......
I nearly wet myself, as an apprentice we were using a SIP model 5E. What a lovely machine to use and the parts were spot on too. How lucky were you to get all that awesome tooling with it, mind you the SIP system, as you said, would not fit the "run of the mill" machines. After leaving the company after a few years, I never worked on a SIP jig borer again. A Japanese one I worked on, but never was the same as the 5E. They still produced a good product though, just not the silky smooth SIP. I never saw the front lifting holes on the 5E, but I just loved seeing the fantastic hidey hole for the electric spares, a great Aladdin's cave you found. Thanks once again for making us old engineers happy.
Good day. I'm a retired Mould-Maker Plastics in Canada. In my humble opinion you, sir, have scored a priceless machine-tool & accessories. Great video, mate! Bravo!
Love the video! One can clearly see that you are very excited about that machine.
My grandpa worked at SIP in the sixties as a machinist priducing parts for machines. I do not know if there are any parts from him on this exact machine, but he would certainly be proud that these machines are still used today.
that's awesome mate, always interesting to know if viewers can reate to the videos. Thanks for watching
*YOU WERE VERY WISE TO PURCHASE THIS INCREDIBLE PRECISION MACHINE...WOW...CONGRATS!!*
That’s an amazing piece of equipment. I love that it’s 60 years old and still more precise than some of todays CNC. Your explanation was great and when you pulled all the tool boxes out I got really excited.
Can’t wait to see it in action.
The thing is, the techniques that make for an accurate machine tool were the same back then as they are now, so being from the 1960's is really irrelevant. For example they still make POS machines today, even though it is 2022.
I've heard of jig borers for 35 years, but never seen one much less a tutorial. I guess it's because I've always worked in job shops where most jobs only needed +/-.001 banana tolerance with an occasional venture into the string bean scale which is 35/64 of banana.
Could be worse, could be in plantains…Heaven only knows what THEY are.
Check out suburban tools, they show a Moore jig grinder in action in one of their video's making precision sine plates for surface grinders
Was a grinder for years, never heard of banana term for tolerances
I just won an ebay auction for a 35/64" Endmill.... I was thinking, wow that's an odd size
@@eddiekulp1241 It’s a snide throw off on the Imperial (inch) system of measurement. The jig borer uses the (monkey) system.
LOVING YOUR CHANNEL,I SPEND HRS WATCHING, BACK IN MY DAY WE DIDNT HAVE INSERTS,WE GRINDED OUR TOOLS, MISS THE SMELL OF MACHINE SHOP ,THANKS GOES TO YOUR MRS, FOR HER OUT STANDING AN CREATIVE FILMING.
Got my dream job as an industrial mechanic here in norway yesterday! Learnd alot from your videos and even though im not gonna be working on any big equipment, i learnd alot of tips and tricks from your videos! keep it up
that is awesome mate congrats on the dream job!
Wow I love old machinery, how freaking accurate is that thing! amazing, with a bonus of a time capsule inside as well. As always, I love the work you two share with us. 👍
Glad you enjoyed it!
Been selling Industrial Tools for 43 Years and knew NOTHING about Jig Boring until now. I just spent 30 Minutes with my mouth open out of pure amazement..!
Thank you for this very educational video. 👍
A joy to see the beauty of old machinery still being used i love watching them being used
Me too mate
This video is a masterpiece for presenting so many of the nearly endless functions of that stunning machine! I'm delighted that someone had the foresight to keep all of the accessories and tooling with it and that it got into your hands! With all of the comments here anything I would write would be redundant. My great grandfather and grandfather were Swiss engineers, so this machine is so I am especially attracted to this machine. Thanks for the wonderful presentation and perfect videography, as always.
Hey mate, one of the things we enjoy most about reading comments is when viewers can relate, have memories or history they can share. So thanks for sharing some of yours!
Love the 3 minutes of outtakes at the end of the video - gave me a good giggle.
Made in 60s, and still works like Swiss watch, incredible!
I'm not an engineer but this machine is beautiful Swiss engineering and it might be an elder statesman now but it can clearly still produce the precision you require in your work. This is a video you and Karen should be proud of, you both put in a lot of work on this one
Thank you mate we appreciate you saying so!
I’ve been operating a jig borer for a few years now and it’s a fantastic machine to use, I love the accuracy it can achieve
Wow Kurtis that is one helluva piece of equipment, looking forward to seeing it in use. Many a fine tune played on an old fiddle 🎻 👌
This machine with all the documentation is a real treasure. Love to see such a fantastic old machine.
This stuff is fascinating - I'm not a tradesman but have always been interested in machining, lathes and mills etc. The equipment and skills you have accumulated are impressive !
I love the bloopers at the end, but I must say as a young fella who worked as a appy fitter at an abattoir and is now a fabrication appy I love seeing a tradesman with actual tradesmen quality nowadays it seems like a dying bread. Love learning from your vids and look forward to learning more from a proper trady 💙
I am absolutely blown away by that machine! Looking forward to seeing it in action at some point. The accessories and spares are amazing, too. You can't just go down to your local hardware store and buy those! Thank you for sharing!
Thankyou so much! Years ago I studied machine alignment and restored my first cnc that I still use today (scrape, measure, scrape...). I cant imagine how such a machine could be made to such exacting tolerances. I would bet that today it would be financially unrealistic. Take good care of it. That machine belongs in a museum.
Kurtis, you and your wife and safety officer have a very special place here on planet earth. You guys are so dedicated to your craft and to each other. Keep up the solid work for your customers and us that vicariously live a life of “pretend machining” through your channel. I love watching your content and the antics and happy times from Mr Safety. (Lol) I mentioned to my wife that if we visit Australia in our retirement years (10 more years) that I’d like to goto a machine shop in the Gold Coast and visit a pay respects to a real machinist doing heavy machining on mining equipment. Her eyes glazed and she fell ill…(lol) …anyway by then you’ll be a multi millionaire having several million subs and views on each video. Thanks again for your content and please keep everyone’s finger’s and toes happy..
These machines were used in Europe in specially air conditioned closed room in order to maintain a very high precision degree and repeatability.It was dedicated to special work like tools or molds and operated by highly skilled professionals (only one or two).
I just love it been watching American youtubers but very happy to see this Australian post. I used to ( have to ) work with my dad, when not in school in Switzerland and one of the things that has stuck with me forever is precision and nothing less.
From back when being a machinist meant something! Can't wait to see these machines in action! 😁👍
Pretty amazing that there is 150 km between the SIP company from Genève, Switzerland, and the Opinel knife conpany from Saint Jean de Maurienne, France ! The machine and the knife has made nearly the same travel to your shop !
did not think about that, pretty bloody awesome!
I really do appreciate the extra info on the "new" machines in the videos
Good to know and thanks for watching 👍
Awesome acquisition! I'm fairly confident there was one of these at Ruston Bucyrus in Lincoln UK. It was in the Tool Room in it's own purpose built dust free room, operated by Len. Out of bounds for the likes of a 16 yr old me!
Amazing piece of machinery! You are one lucky dude. Just watching this video was like being there and actually owning it with you. I live in Seattle and was fortunate to have a grandfather and father that had both a metal shop and wood shop that I grew up with. I was operating a 9” South Bend engine lathe since I was 13 years of age. I ended up being a plumber so I didn’t have a chance to continue with machining metal, but I did get into wood working and ended up making 500 pens after I retired from Home Depot. Now that I’m retired I’m able to watch these RUclips videos on machining and in my estimation you are one of the best. Along with your wife/photographer and doggie, Homeless. Keep up the great videos. I enjoy every one of them. And please get the feed handle on the boring machine fixed and show us what it can do. Thanks, Larry Ferrari from Seattle.
Fascinating, hope you find out the back story. There was a lot of cutting edge engineering (!) going on in Australia in the 1960's. My dad was an engineer and spent some happy years commuting from Adelaide to Woomera working on inertial navigation systems for the Blue Steel cruise missiles. Keep up the good work Kurtis and greatly appreciate the videos you and your good lady put out each Friday.
Oh yeah! We had those in the early part of my career. Sadly, 40 years later they were rusting in a warehouse out back.
😢 and probably end up in the scrap heap such a waste
So sad. That should be delictive...
What an incredible piece of machinery! The precision they were able to achieve over half a century ago is beyond impressive. Overall it looks to be in pretty good shape aside from the broken pieces!
Magnificent machine... Absolutely the pinnacle of pre-digital equipment.. Can't wait to see it in action. Wish my dad was alive.. He would LOVE to have seen this...
It's amazing to see,despite so much parts,fixtures and adjustments this machine is brilliantly accurate and precise ! ! ! Swiss engineering is marvelous.
Enjoyed the video on the jig borer but realized while watching out-takes that you and Karen do put lots of effort into a smooth video production. It's to our benefit and I thank you both!
What an amazing machine. Just proves they don’t build them like they used to. You will make a fantastic custodian of this machine. Hope it serves you well. Great content as always.
Yeah what happened to the world? I always thought progress was supposed to go forwards. We should be making better things today.
Thank you for being the custodian of wonderful machines, seriously it is beautiful, love your work.
The project of organizing, learning, rapairing, and setting up this machine, is like a dream come true.
I can't remember the last time I've enjoyed a RUclips video so much! Can't wait for you to work on that marvel of a human engineering! Said it before and I'll say it again - THANK YOU SOOOOO MUCH for these videos!!! God bless you both and hopefully you'll give us many, many more videos to cherish and enjoy... 🙂
I am living in the town where this machine was built : Geneva. And I know where the factory building is, It's now turned into an art centre. (your pronunciation "sociétè genevoise" was good). Thank for the videos It's always a pleasure to watch.
It always amazes me when a place of industry is turned into an art gallery. It happens a lot. The people who worked in those places produced things like that machine that helped to give us all that we have now. I think there is a large amount of irony there. Jeff
Now SIP machines are built in Vuadens since SIP is part of the Starrag Group. ruclips.net/video/vcTE7nAj_CM/видео.html&ab_channel=Bumotec
The optical centering instrument really got me. What a nice way to find centers precisely and fast. Super cool!
Awesome new machine! You were very thorough in describing how it works and it’s various uses and functions. And as always, love seeing the out takes and the love that Homeless gets!
Hey Greg well thanks for taking time to watch it!
What a great piece of fine engineering kit! Beautifully engineered and made, the quality can be see in the detail of the boxes for accessories as well as the machine itself. Swiss watch type quality for a heavy engineering machine. Great find young man and a very interesting video too. Well done CEE, I look forward to seeing more of this fine machine. Top regards to all!
The Company I used to work for had 6 of these same machine tools lined up side by side in a wood planked, air conditioned, humidity controlled room. The outside wall that faced the street was glass so if you passed by you could see all the Master Machinists in white coats making parts on the SIPs. Yes those were the days.....
And collar and tie on as well i bet
@@billyhepburn854 you don't wear a tie near rotating machinery
What a beautiful piece of gear. I didn’t see an E stop anywhere. I guess you have to set that up yourself.
"It just needs to make sense.. And sometimes it's hard making you make sense."
As an IT nerd that also builds random shit, welds, and can run a mill.. I felt this. I've watched my wife's eyes just gloss over trying to listen to me lmao
🤣👍
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering I'm actually going to be back in the Philippines here in a few months, was thinking about running South to the underdown, don't know if y'all do fan meets or not though
Every bodies eyes gloss over when you start to to talk about engineering 99.9% of people have absolutely no concept of how tings are really made. I was a Jig Borer on mainly SIP machines for over thirty years, on Press Tools -one off MOD -Aircraft and Marine parts and some jobs were zero tolerance. I was on holiday this guys wife asked me what I did for a living I said I was a jig borer, she said what is that, I said I drill holes in bit of iron,her husband replied it is a bit more complex than that and when I picked myself off the floor I replied " you must be one of the chosen few to know what a jig borer is.
It always fascinates me how much precision they were able to get, even 100 years ago.
We really do have an engineering debt to the pioneers of the industrial revolution.
Really does blow the mind what they achieved without all the fancy tech and computers we have in today's age
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering that section where you found the tin of Spare Parts, all wrapped in paper, really reminded me of how my Grandad used to store his model trains.
Some real nostalgia moments for mem
Especially when you see someone checking their DRO accuracy with a micrometer or dial gauge.
I ran one of these back in 97'/98'
Absolutely awesome beautiful machine. One of my favorite experiences in my career 🥰
Talk about all the bells and whistles. That's a beautiful big machine.
You find some of the most amazing treasures in your acquisitions. What an incredible asset for your business. I am so looking forward to seeing this in action.
We are very happy to have this machine in the workshop, equally looking forward to getting a job setup and working!
That's just a beautiful piece of machinery and must have been incredibly expensive when made. It was a pleasure just to see it and for you, actually laying your hands on it must be fantastic. Thanks for showing it, I look forward to seeing it doing some useful work. All the best, Mart in England.
as a now retired machinist, years ago for a long time I used a Devlieg jig borer. incredibly accurate, robust, a delight to use and 1950's vintage. most work was measured in tenths of a thou.
What a machine!
Suddenly my 3D Printer feels really small...
This absolutely awesome machine found the right new home - your workshop! Thank you for all the explanations and for revealing the beauty of this masterpiece of engineering. Even watching your video was like birthday and Christmas together when you opened all these boxes. I also appreciated all the comments from you guys who shared stories from the old days. Greetings from Germany!
What an awesome machine. The thing that amazes me is, the people that designed it and the accuracy of the machinery that built the parts.... and the people/machinery prior etc etc.
What a great find. Lovingly used for years and the saga continues. The tooling was a great score. Was not long ago that rooms full of engineers created our world. I built a shop for a company for 30 years. Sadly that too went by the wayside. Great to see a real connoisseur of the trade. Keep up the good work young man.
we are very happy to have this machine in the workshop and looking forward to getting it going!
I guess you are going for a working/producing museum , I am glad you got this machine and I know it will be put to good use. Great video as always, I like seeing old machinery being brought back and used.
hahaa no joke we have talked about starting a machinery museum one day
I was a machinist toolmaker for Aerojet General for 32 years in Folsom, California. We had two SIP'S identical to what you now own. One of my most favorite machines to operate in the shop. Extreme accuracy doesn't even come close to what those machine's are capable of. You are fortunate to own one. All the wear marks on the paint of that machine look so familiar. Wouldn't it be something if that machine was purchased at the plant closure in Folsom .
Wow, thanks! I used to work one of these in the uk making titanium rotor heads for Sikorsky helicopters. Awesome machine, so smooth and accurate. The rolls royce of machines.
I congratulate you on this machine. As a Swiss, it makes me very proud to see this on the other side of the world in the hands of a very skilled mechanic
Thank you very much!
@@michaelrice500 ....... Or the beer!
@@johndonlan5956 That's IT!
Bravo! This is first time i think something is bit too accurate for practical use and i use machinist tolerances of ten microns 0.01 to nearly everything. Wonderful machine and rare, never heard about it before!
As my non machinist friends would say "that is quite a effing fancy drill press!!"
That is a builtiful machine you have.
Great that you got all the bits and pieces with it.
At my last place of work they always got two copies of all the manuals and parts books etc. One for on the factory floor and one for the engineering office.
Cheers for the overview
You have amazing talents, you know your way around such old machines as if you had always worked with them.
That thing is so freaking cool. They really thought of everything with this machine. There’s one other thing that this comes with that no new equipment has and that is a life and history behind it! I love old stuff because of that reason. Can’t wait to see it put to use!
ah yes the value of provenance!
Imagine the parts that machine has seen and made...🤗 It would be fascinating to see the jig-borers memory.
Let me get this straight, to get her going you have to flip some switches, activate the lubricant fluid, flip a travel lever to the correct speed, move a lever forwards and back, turn some big knobs, smaller knobs, and finally some knobs under a hood which is difficult to reach, then move some other smaller levers, unlock the spindles and axis, rotate a wheel, hit 2 more levers, set the speed rate and finally hit the start button. Where as to get him going you just need to flip his switch and blow a little?
Sounds about right 🤣👌 don't forget to say a few sweet words to her
Don't forget to add a couple of bananas.
heh - this made my day :D
This is the 'history' of machines that have already seen a few days.
The older the machines are, the more people (operators) were necessary and also the more handles to operate the machines. This 'reduction' of hand movements to start processes was only really started with the 'digital age'.
But, the mechanical effort to start this machine with a (mechanical) switch would simply not be possible. That's where the 'digital age' scores with its possibilities.
Yes, a lot of knobs and levers... But after 30 minutes of watching Kurtis' video, I'm sure, I can drill my first 10mm hole. Try that with a modern CNC machine after a 30 minutes briefing... This kind of operating philosophy has one great advantage: the knobs and levers don't move away or hide in a labyrinth of submenues :-)
Nice presentation of a complicated machine, also great photography and editing! And great that the machine has found a good home! Looking forward to seeing it in action.