I machine inconel 625 at work. I know how nasty that stuff can be. We do large water pumps for various USN submarines and aircraft carriers. The poured inconel is terrible, but the melted powder inconel cuts like butter with the right feeds and speeds. All manual. Kickin' old school, even though I have a degree in CNC. Haha
Used to call that big one the corn cob mill for obvious reasons. It was always a joy to come in after 3rd shift was finished to find 3 good inserts out of 578 were junk and a shit ton of tool offset entered to make up for it. The spend the next 45 minutes explaining to the tool room guy why you need 98 new inserts 10 minutes into your shift then spend the remaining hour and a half changing inserts and fixing the mistakes from 3rd shift. Before running your first batch of bad parts because you forgot to enter tool offset. All in a days work.
Boy am I glad I’m not a machinist anymore! Couldn’t stand the shit and became an engineer. Now I only have to sit in fromt of my computer at home and make documents that tell people what they have to do. All that for double the money and way less hours. I would never go back!
@@useditem_tk It's not millions: bought in bulk they cost $10 for chinesium to $100+ for decent stuff like this. Moreover, this is a PR proof, taken with a grain of salt. I'm still not sure if Kennametal, apparently a precision part producer, bakes their own carbide of the highest difficulty, like these high-performance drill tips. Most decent top brands would perform similarly in this category.
Same, and the noise he makes is beyond perfect. I'm pretty sure that my first time watching that scene is still one of my top 5 hardest laughs in my entire 35 years. I remember absolutely gasping for air while tears streamed down my face 💀
I worked at Kennametal for a little over two years, place sucks. Before I left I knew every job at the plant and was training new temps as a temp. Never got hired in.
@@Frank-os6gq factories in the United States often hire people through "temp services". They are then by law allowed to pay you less than "hired" workers and don't need to provide healthcare or any other benefits since you're "temporary". In reality it's another way to fuck over workers and save money because they have no obligation to ever hire you.
@@josephrasberry3850If he was good enough that they let him *train* others on expensive/dangerous equipment (usually a higher pay-scale foreman/shop manager job) then they def should've put him on the books
@@greeneyesfromohio4103so we're ours, as long as the program didn't take too much off per pass they will last a long time, I've had them last 30 parts and I've seen 3 parts.
As nice as all those tools are, you have to have the machines and fixtures like this to run them on. Back when I was a young fella, and still a machinist, salespersons whould show up and show the boss all the latest and greatest cutters etc, claim a whole lot of figures, the boss would love it and buy them. Of course people like muggins here would havr to use them on really old manual machines that weren't strong enough or rigid enough to do the things they were supposed to do. Guess who got the blame for things breaking and generally not working as advertised?
This is wonderful to witness. Most people including myself have never entered a metal working machine shop like this. that one insert alone is more deadly than any knife made. Most of these machines are honestly kind of scary to me just with the capacity of what they're able to do to metal. Just imagine what could be done to a human being. In fact, no, let's not imagine that I'd rather not think about the kind of horrific mangling that could occur from a massive industrial accident involving one of these machines.😮
Those are the videos that are used as cautionary tales for new machinists. With how much torque, how rigid they are, and how fast those machine go, if you are not being very aware of your surroundings and of what you are doing on a machine, really bad stuff can happen in the blink of an eye. One really easy example would be leaving a chuck key in the chuck on a lathe when starting up the spindle. Same with leaving a mill wrench on the top of the machine when starting it up. This is why there is a very big emphasis on safety in any good machine shop.
Destroying metal with your favorite part is way better than destroying your favorite part with metal, especially since you're not set back a couple hundred bucks for an oddly specific bit.
Do you do much critical thinking in your day job? There is some considerable friction ramming one piece of solid material through another piece of solid metal. So it's seems quite reasonable to give them a drink. ;-)
The nerves+ big material base + creativity + huge piece of god damn money + infinite free time + little piece of "no sense of responsibility" = unstoppable madness😂
That most certainly is an extremely beautiful end mill or indexable drill tool in the cover photo!!!! Would have liked to have had such tooling in my time!!!!! We had something similar but not nearly as aggressive and beautiful!!!! Speaking of which what's the $$$damage$$$ for such a wonderful tool???? I'm guessing $20grand or more????
Used kennametal bits for continuous mining machines in a salt mine that I worked in. Things are seriously tough, one got stuck so bad once they had to melt it out with an acetylene torch.
How can I become a titan the this you guys do are amazing I hope to be a part or build something similar to what you do.. keep up the amazing work it motivates me
I always wanted to get into machine work but never had the time or place to do it as a hobby if I had started out my career as as a machinist, I would probably still be doing it as it is a fascinating trade., for income and hobby.
The last piece being inconel....thats pretty damn impressive. Not sure if youre familiar with that material but its incredibly hard. Say if youre using an .045 wheel to cut a half inch piece of carbon steel itll whiz thru it pretty easy. A half inch of inconel would probably take like 30-60 minutes to cut thru with .045 wheel. Usually ceramic inserts are needed to cut that stuff.
@@tommys2979 I'm a machinist myself and dont get me wrong, i know what theyre are trying to show as i said, i personally dont do a lot of inconell but all i was saying was that after one cut through inconell your drill shouldnt been destroyed. of course after a few parts it will show significant wear its just the way he said "its still in one piece" after one cut.. maybe i didnt write it the right way. i love titan and his passion of teaching stuff but english is not my first language
@@basqir i gotcha. I didnt mean that comment in a nasty way just some people dont know what inconel is. I work in a machine shop but im not a machinist, im transitioning from a deburr guy to a welder right now but i love making stuff on a bridgeport and learning machining stuff too just for the know how of how things are made.
I like to think of it as creating and not destroying, nothing more satisfying than seeing a gleaming new beautiful piece of machined metal leaving the workshop.
Hell yeah, I didn't realize people in the cnc machining bubble used spiral cutters? Only ever seen them used in high speed spindle moulders. Makes sense that they would haul ass on metals too.
I used to work for Peddinghaus as an install tech and I would refuse to guarantee the proper operation of our machines if the customer did not buy Kennametal drill bits Awesome video Kennametal is the best!
oh sht, Kennametal is a terrible company lol it shocked the hell out of me when I saw their name pop up, the owners bought another successful fab shop then purposefully ran it almost completely out of business, they used it as a tax right off for years and sent 100+ people out of work... 8 years later, we're just now getting back on our feet after they sold us to Madison, lol. went from 100m a year business to 15m in 2 years under kennametal.
The Colonel taking a hit to the head was a perfect addition 😂
I loved it too, I hate blatant kkk sponsored food.
Bash the fasc, literally!!!
Zalupko
Took me off guard 😅. But just freaking awesome 😎. Always wondered what happened to the Colonel Sanders 👻.
....know what, I'm not even going to say it.
That is one of my favorite Waterboy scenes.
I machine inconel 625 at work. I know how nasty that stuff can be. We do large water pumps for various USN submarines and aircraft carriers. The poured inconel is terrible, but the melted powder inconel cuts like butter with the right feeds and speeds. All manual. Kickin' old school, even though I have a degree in CNC. Haha
Just saw this and wondering if you ever cut inco fill the weld fill metal that stuff was a nightmare
😮😮😮
Tell me about it more...@@kenjohnson5382
Inconel.
Short for: In colonel Sanders' head
Thats confidential information
Used to call that big one the corn cob mill for obvious reasons. It was always a joy to come in after 3rd shift was finished to find 3 good inserts out of 578 were junk and a shit ton of tool offset entered to make up for it. The spend the next 45 minutes explaining to the tool room guy why you need 98 new inserts 10 minutes into your shift then spend the remaining hour and a half changing inserts and fixing the mistakes from 3rd shift. Before running your first batch of bad parts because you forgot to enter tool offset. All in a days work.
Damn sounds like my last employer to a T
I would kill myself 😂 👏
Boy am I glad I’m not a machinist anymore!
Couldn’t stand the shit and became an engineer.
Now I only have to sit in fromt of my computer at home and make documents that tell people what they have to do.
All that for double the money and way less hours.
I would never go back!
Did you work for one of Greenbrier Companies cause that sounds like some Greenbrier shit
Damn, you guys should some sort of pass down information from shift to shift.
After watching that every day for 45 years I don't miss it.
for real
Haha 😂
That insert is still going strong. You should try make a series of seeing how much it takes to mess it up if you have the money for another.
Lol ain't nobody risking millions to make this kinda series. Just that one mistake in this video! That's gonna cost so much money!
@@useditem_tk It's not millions: bought in bulk they cost $10 for chinesium to $100+ for decent stuff like this. Moreover, this is a PR proof, taken with a grain of salt. I'm still not sure if Kennametal, apparently a precision part producer, bakes their own carbide of the highest difficulty, like these high-performance drill tips. Most decent top brands would perform similarly in this category.
@@dannydetonator не братан, ты не прав.
どれだけチップを強くしても鋳物の鋳肌面は無理やわ。巣があると簡単に破損するし条件落として早めにチップ交換するしかない。
欧州の図面やとびっくりする加工工数にする鋼材削り出ししてて…やっぱ自動化したい国の図面はそういう発想になるんやなと。
That professor getting hit from Waterboy gets me every time
Same, and the noise he makes is beyond perfect. I'm pretty sure that my first time watching that scene is still one of my top 5 hardest laughs in my entire 35 years. I remember absolutely gasping for air while tears streamed down my face 💀
The KFC guy
Well Mama is wrong!
@@bigtuna45 No Colonel Sanders, you're wrong... Mama's right 😂
"Heearegh!"
The bit going thru all the plates then finishing on inconel is impressive thats some rugged stuff
WASTE OF METALL!!! BETTER TO DO IT LIKE OUR GRAND DADA WITH SAW, YOU CANT COLLECT METAL DUST. GOD HELP US IN THIS DEVOLUTION AND IDIOTISM
Your caps lock button was on@@rtsrt165
@@rtsrt165 You better be trolling
@@rtsrt165 you do know that you can melt metals and cast them right lol
@@Hardworking_Man bro said the most righty conservative "back in my day" take what do you mean lefty 😭😭
The spiral tool path is great if you have a large workpiece with limited machine travel.
Hello, first semester machinist student here, that piece of metal flinging off like that almost made me hit the deck.
The waterboy scene fuggin killed me😂😂🤣
718 inco is seriously tough stuff.
I like to destroy tools with my favorite metals.
For a while i used to think that it was my profession..
I have very little experience with milling equipment, but i have enough to be absolutely shaken to my core by the second part of this video
It's in one piece because you know how to use your machine. Kudos to you
I feel like I just watched the Machinist version of a Maxor video.
Damn through all that and then down to the 718 Inconel.. jeeeezz
I worked at Kennametal for a little over two years, place sucks.
Before I left I knew every job at the plant and was training new temps as a temp.
Never got hired in.
Sounds like you did get hired. How does that work?
@@Frank-os6gq factories in the United States often hire people through "temp services".
They are then by law allowed to pay you less than "hired" workers and don't need to provide healthcare or any other benefits since you're "temporary".
In reality it's another way to fuck over workers and save money because they have no obligation to ever hire you.
@@Frank-os6gqhe was a temp, training temps
Probably a reason he never got hired in don’t ya think.
@@josephrasberry3850If he was good enough that they let him *train* others on expensive/dangerous equipment (usually a higher pay-scale foreman/shop manager job) then they def should've put him on the books
Copper:mmm gooie
Cast iron: mmm gritty
1018: boring
304: just dont stop
Titanium: not bad not bad
Inconel: woah
So many inserts. I need a small bank loan for all those shiny inserts
Inserts are like 2 dollars each. 😂
Highest I've seen at my job is like 7 a pop.
$32 each 😮😮
My job uses inserts that cost $10 each….10 inserts per container, 5 containers per box. That’s $500 a box. Not cheap! 😂
@@greeneyesfromohio4103so we're ours, as long as the program didn't take too much off per pass they will last a long time, I've had them last 30 parts and I've seen 3 parts.
I read that as destroying tools with our favorite metal.
"That insert is still in one piece."
My immature dirty mind.
damn those bits must be incredibly expensive.
Colonel Sanders getting beaned was the best part! way worth it 🤣👍
What is that tío made of ?? Going threw everything
As nice as all those tools are, you have to have the machines and fixtures like this to run them on. Back when I was a young fella, and still a machinist, salespersons whould show up and show the boss all the latest and greatest cutters etc, claim a whole lot of figures, the boss would love it and buy them.
Of course people like muggins here would havr to use them on really old manual machines that weren't strong enough or rigid enough to do the things they were supposed to do.
Guess who got the blame for things breaking and generally not working as advertised?
This is wonderful to witness. Most people including myself have never entered a metal working machine shop like this. that one insert alone is more deadly than any knife made. Most of these machines are honestly kind of scary to me just with the capacity of what they're able to do to metal. Just imagine what could be done to a human being. In fact, no, let's not imagine that I'd rather not think about the kind of horrific mangling that could occur from a massive industrial accident involving one of these machines.😮
Those are the videos that are used as cautionary tales for new machinists. With how much torque, how rigid they are, and how fast those machine go, if you are not being very aware of your surroundings and of what you are doing on a machine, really bad stuff can happen in the blink of an eye. One really easy example would be leaving a chuck key in the chuck on a lathe when starting up the spindle. Same with leaving a mill wrench on the top of the machine when starting it up. This is why there is a very big emphasis on safety in any good machine shop.
Feels like I had a fever-dream of a profession ive never even tried
That edit caught me off guard and was the perfect addition
This is a hard hat zone colonel.
Omg that escalated quickly 😂
I’m pretty sure my dentist uses that exact same drill.
Экстремальное сверление. Деда реально жаль...
По факту
Dobry dzien z Amerika
“WaII Strt & The BoIshevik Revolution” book/interviews
“Under The Sign of The Scorpion” book/documentary.
Are worth your time.
As a person who finally knows how these machines work, can confirm this is real
More like destroying our tools with our favorite metals lmao
As a retired CNC operator I loved this. Miss it greatly.
Even the sound it made is straight out of a horror movie 😂
That scientist that designed the CNC contraption gets punished.
You literally made the perfect drill bit
Wait. We need more destruction footage.
I also love to use the term "destroying metal" when people ask me about my job xD
I always laugh so hard when I see that scene from The Waterboy
I was just watching in mute horror and appreciation during that … MAULING … I witnessed.
That corn cob mill bit is gorgeous
Hey Titan, time to index the cutters
I will forever owe a debt to the amazing individual who decided to add colonel sanders to this video 🙏
I work on automatic lathes for a living and watching that one get messed up was really cool lol
As a tool-machinist..... That's so beautiful 😭😭😭
Aztec death whistle in a mill is crazy 💀
The medulla oblongata!
I used to be a CNC programmer 22 years ago. Brings back memories
I may sound boring but i could watch cnc machines doing their remarkable and fascinating thing for hours. They make blocks of metal look like butter 👌
Holy shit dude, you guys are fucking killing it
The definition of turning your passion into a career into a hobby into a youtube career.... beautifully done!
Destroying bitrate with your favourite tools!
It's even more impressive when they use a ceramic bit to cut steel.....like chopping through a sauce pan with a dinner plate!
The waterboy clip had me fukn WEAK 🤣
It's amazing that water is the most powerful cutter.
Destroying metal with your favorite part is way better than destroying your favorite part with metal, especially since you're not set back a couple hundred bucks for an oddly specific bit.
If the drill bit has to spray water to get through things, I would trust it with my LIFE.
Do you do much critical thinking in your day job? There is some considerable friction ramming one piece of solid material through another piece of solid metal. So it's seems quite reasonable to give them a drink. ;-)
Why is this video SUDDENLY so chaotic
The nerves+ big material base + creativity + huge piece of god damn money + infinite free time + little piece of "no sense of responsibility" = unstoppable madness😂
That most certainly is an extremely beautiful end mill or indexable drill tool in the cover photo!!!! Would have liked to have had such tooling in my time!!!!! We had something similar but not nearly as aggressive and beautiful!!!! Speaking of which what's the $$$damage$$$ for such a wonderful tool???? I'm guessing $20grand or more????
Such is the power of carbide inserts
When I was hanging Steel we would use gun oil whenever we were using reamer bits or the rarely used mag drill definitely saved alot of bits
The sound effects for inconnel is 100% fact.
colonel had me dyin
Used kennametal bits for continuous mining machines in a salt mine that I worked in. Things are seriously tough, one got stuck so bad once they had to melt it out with an acetylene torch.
Idk wtf I just watched, but I loved it. Ty
The drill looks absolutely cursed but I see the upside of it
I used to use a cob mill that took 140 incerts.
That giant tool still being in... seemingly one piece? Is fucking impressive
How can I become a titan the this you guys do are amazing I hope to be a part or build something similar to what you do.. keep up the amazing work it motivates me
you guys hired the right editor for sure
I always wanted to get into machine work but never had the time or place to do it as a hobby if I had started out my career as as a machinist, I would probably still be doing it as it is a fascinating trade., for income and hobby.
The Waterboy cut is perfect
If you were wondering how the Titanium rods, pins and screws in my arms and legs were made…
USMC Ret. 🇺🇸👍
I like how you guys push it till you have to replace a spindle that's really cost effective
The sfm was ripping for that size of indexable endmill, dial it back until the deflection is minimal son.
Personally I like watching the metal strike back.
The tool salesmans dream. Look at all those inserts
No idea what I just watched, but you guys are fucken' rad.
No way bro fit a 12-15 minute video into 1 minute
I mean, you would be doing something wrong if that insert was already worn out after like 6 cuts. But i get your point
The last piece being inconel....thats pretty damn impressive. Not sure if youre familiar with that material but its incredibly hard. Say if youre using an .045 wheel to cut a half inch piece of carbon steel itll whiz thru it pretty easy. A half inch of inconel would probably take like 30-60 minutes to cut thru with .045 wheel. Usually ceramic inserts are needed to cut that stuff.
@@tommys2979 I'm a machinist myself and dont get me wrong, i know what theyre are trying to show as i said, i personally dont do a lot of inconell but all i was saying was that after one cut through inconell your drill shouldnt been destroyed. of course after a few parts it will show significant wear its just the way he said "its still in one piece" after one cut.. maybe i didnt write it the right way. i love titan and his passion of teaching stuff but english is not my first language
@@basqir i gotcha. I didnt mean that comment in a nasty way just some people dont know what inconel is. I work in a machine shop but im not a machinist, im transitioning from a deburr guy to a welder right now but i love making stuff on a bridgeport and learning machining stuff too just for the know how of how things are made.
@@tommys2979we cut in our job on cnc turn inconell 718 with tools for Steel and it just works... not that hard to cut tho...
The first one sounded melodic.
I like to think of it as creating and not destroying, nothing more satisfying than seeing a gleaming new beautiful piece of machined metal leaving the workshop.
Hell yeah, I didn't realize people in the cnc machining bubble used spiral cutters? Only ever seen them used in high speed spindle moulders. Makes sense that they would haul ass on metals too.
Why did the colonel sound just the Peter Griffen. I lost it at that part.. haha 😂
That second tool is freaking brutal!
_”No Colonel Sanders you’re wrong. Mama’s right!”_
I looked up the price on the seller website for the bit. $13,000. Pretty neat!
I used to work for Peddinghaus as an install tech and I would refuse to guarantee the proper operation of our machines if the customer did not buy Kennametal drill bits Awesome video Kennametal is the best!
POV: every robber when they enter a rich house and see a vault
The Colonel got bonked!
i dont know what i just watched but it was awesome!!
I'm curious what exactly did it make those inserts out of if it can cut you like anything😅
The KFC guy got hit hard.🍗🤣👋
If I destroy metals like that, I get the "you're wasting money" lecture
oh sht, Kennametal is a terrible company lol it shocked the hell out of me when I saw their name pop up, the owners bought another successful fab shop then purposefully ran it almost completely out of business, they used it as a tax right off for years and sent 100+ people out of work... 8 years later, we're just now getting back on our feet after they sold us to Madison, lol. went from 100m a year business to 15m in 2 years under kennametal.
That hp water saw could cut a battleship in half with the right jigs
That second one needs more inserts.
Some sounds in this are just the gates of hell being opened with the army of Satan coming through