Stepped V - Pulley . Part 2 .

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024

Комментарии • 94

  • @andrewdolinskiatcarpathian
    @andrewdolinskiatcarpathian 2 года назад +2

    Hi Max. This is the perfect 3 part series for me. I have a need to turn a smaller 3 step pulley in aluminium. Now I know how to approach it. Many, many thanks. Andrew in the UK. 👏👏👍😀

  • @jagboy69
    @jagboy69 3 года назад +1

    Max thanks for that little pearl of wisdom about spring cuts. I did not know that.👍🍺

  • @billstanley4819
    @billstanley4819 3 года назад +2

    Thanks for the heads up on the spring pass direction. I never considered carriage wear in the spring pass depth of cut. Cheers from West Virginia!

  • @johnambler3107
    @johnambler3107 3 года назад +1

    Great job on the stepped V-Pulley Max 👍 the tool you made did an awesome job and left a fantastic finish on the pulley grooves 👍 good tip too on not to take a cut out with a boring bar 😎👍👍👍

  • @MattysWorkshop
    @MattysWorkshop 3 года назад +1

    Gday Max, you can’t ask for much better with the bore, the idea of a dro is something that’s on the cards here to do, big time saver, have a great weekend mate, cheers

    • @swanvalleymachineshop
      @swanvalleymachineshop  3 года назад +1

      Cheers Matty . It will be a while before i can afford one , as i need a hardness tester first !

  • @fishermanyt8187
    @fishermanyt8187 3 года назад +4

    Thanks Max a few more tips added, really appreciate some of those notes from you guys that have been doing this for a while, what seems natural or obvious is not so much for us newbies. The carriage wear note doing a spring pass great info.

  • @adamkenworthy2421
    @adamkenworthy2421 3 года назад +1

    Tw****ng about with knobs and dials. Pretty much sums up my time in the shed.
    Fantastic channel max 👍

  • @joell439
    @joell439 3 года назад +1

    👍😎👍 …. Thanks for the whole ride that clearly demonstrates that precision takes time …… there are no shortcuts …… measure, measure, repeat 🤘

  • @jdmccorful
    @jdmccorful 3 года назад +2

    Love watching you work the tolerances. Thanks for the look.

  • @DudleyToolwright
    @DudleyToolwright 3 года назад +1

    Fun project to watch. Your homemade tools are amazingly sharp. I was really impressed at how nice a finish you were getting from a hand fed compound. Cheers Max.

  • @kentuckytrapper780
    @kentuckytrapper780 3 года назад +2

    I make a pulley every now and then but I'd rather watch you make one, it's alot less stressful. Lol, great video max.

  • @Warped65er
    @Warped65er 3 года назад +1

    Always a pleasure to watch.

  • @TrPrecisionMachining
    @TrPrecisionMachining 3 года назад +1

    good job max..the pure art machining off old school

    • @swanvalleymachineshop
      @swanvalleymachineshop  3 года назад +2

      Thanks . The only cnc machines i have used were at trade school back in the mid 1980's , they had computer punch cards that you typed with a special type writer & then inserted the card into the machine ! Cheers .

    • @TrPrecisionMachining
      @TrPrecisionMachining 3 года назад +1

      friend max ... the knowledge of the old school is still very necessary no matter how much cnc they come to use ... the parts and what to fix them ... position them and a long etc of operations that the operator must know and follow to the letter ... and oh that's where the old school knows all the lessons .. a greeting and good health @@swanvalleymachineshop

    • @swanvalleymachineshop
      @swanvalleymachineshop  3 года назад

      @@TrPrecisionMachining Thanks .

  • @theeddies
    @theeddies 3 года назад +1

    Thanks Max, great stuff as always!
    All the best!
    Eddie

  • @hmw-ms3tx
    @hmw-ms3tx 3 года назад +1

    That's a nice looking pulley Max. The western world electric motor industry must have went through all kinds of mergers before everything starting being made in China. You said your motor was a Brook Crompton Betts (made in Australia), I have a Parkinson-Crompton motor on my Fobco 10-eight drill press (Made in England) and my Elliot Shaper has a Brook motor on it (also made in England). My other English motor is an English Electric on my Broadbent Schofield lathe. These three motors are by far the smoothest running of all the motors I have and the Brook is the smoothest of them all. Ken

    • @captcarlos
      @captcarlos 3 года назад +1

      @hmw....
      Good to hear you, I'm awaiting news of that big horizontal borer being ready for work.
      Cheers.

    • @swanvalleymachineshop
      @swanvalleymachineshop  3 года назад

      The English made some of the best products back in the day compared to the cheap & nasty chinese garbage that's out now . I wonder what their submarines are like !!!
      Cheers Ken .

  • @Just1GuyMetalworks
    @Just1GuyMetalworks 3 года назад +1

    Looking good, Max! You remind me of one of my first mentors when I first started welding. He had very much the same demeanor you do when you break out those teaching moments 😊. Like you, he also taught me a great deal. Thanks for the vid! Cheers! 😁

  • @kennyrmurray
    @kennyrmurray Год назад +1

    I love making pulleys. Nice job as usual. I don’t comment much because I watch you on roku on my tv in the garage. BTW an old worn out shaft is never good! Ha

  • @eyuptony
    @eyuptony 3 года назад +1

    Most enjoyable Max watching you check each finished dimension very carefully numerous times by feel along with some more good useful tips. Tony

    • @swanvalleymachineshop
      @swanvalleymachineshop  3 года назад

      Thanks Tony . Check & double check is quicker than what you have to do if you over bore the hole ! Cheers .

    • @eyuptony
      @eyuptony 3 года назад +1

      @@swanvalleymachineshop lol Max got the tee shirt.

  • @TheKnacklersWorkshop
    @TheKnacklersWorkshop 3 года назад +1

    Hello Max,
    Very nice work... See you on the next one...
    Cheers.
    Paul,,

  • @wayneacaron8744
    @wayneacaron8744 3 года назад +1

    max, i was glad to see you do a "one chucking operation" on this part. so many of the people on utube take things out of the chuck/vise when they dont have to. then they spend 3/4 of their time readjusting the part! bravo poppy's workshop says HI

    • @swanvalleymachineshop
      @swanvalleymachineshop  3 года назад

      For a one off part Poppy , that's the best way to do it . If i had several to do in a centre lathe , they would be in and out several times using block turning methods & soft jaws bored to the correct size . Cheers .

  • @TedRoza
    @TedRoza 3 года назад +1

    G'day Max. Very nice piece of machining, & the broaching insert fits snug as a bug in a rug 😇😇😇 . Waiting for next Installment

    • @swanvalleymachineshop
      @swanvalleymachineshop  3 года назад

      Cheers Ted . I still have to drop in & see how your new lathe is going when i have time !

    • @TedRoza
      @TedRoza 3 года назад +1

      @@swanvalleymachineshop anytime Max ... lol you will have to show me how to use it ... lol .. maybe some of your Expertise will rub off on me ... lol

  • @hilltopmachineworks2131
    @hilltopmachineworks2131 3 года назад +1

    On the home stretch. Those white erase boards are super handy. The one I got from Aaron I use at the mill.

  • @bulletproofpepper2
    @bulletproofpepper2 3 года назад +1

    Thanks Max! Looking good!!!

  • @RalfyCustoms
    @RalfyCustoms 3 года назад +1

    G'day Max, seriously good work my mate.
    Best thing I did was fitting the dro to mine, I still don't quite trust it tho lol
    The tool grinder is a god send, I see you making some wonderful tooling with it
    Thank you for sharing 👍

    • @swanvalleymachineshop
      @swanvalleymachineshop  3 года назад +1

      Cheers Ralfy . The tool grinder will be great when i get it fully set up . Cheers .

  • @jonsworkshop
    @jonsworkshop 3 года назад +1

    Excellent work Max, not easy without a DRO, lots of opportunities for balls ups reading off dials but you have made a great job of keeping it all together. Well done. Cheers, Jon

  • @graedonmunro1793
    @graedonmunro1793 3 года назад +1

    always informative max cheers

  • @pgs8597
    @pgs8597 3 года назад +2

    G’day Max. Good tutorial. I appreciate your efforts as it’s a lot less stressful watching you than making one myself although I may be up for three 2 step pulleys myself soon:-(
    Cheers
    Peter

  • @mikekrening7327
    @mikekrening7327 3 года назад +1

    Max enjoyed the video. Thanks for the tip on the spring pass! Curious about the accuracy of that reamer... Chears!

  • @markfoster6110
    @markfoster6110 3 года назад +1

    Nice free machining alloy .. another good job

  • @OldtimeIronman
    @OldtimeIronman 2 года назад +1

    I must be strange, I have only a thread chart, no calendar girl. I'll have to thread a calendar girl someday, always been a do-it-yourselfer...

  • @joeziegler9054
    @joeziegler9054 3 года назад +1

    Good job sir! I really enjoyed seeing this one. You are a very talented machinist.

  • @smalltownmachineshop6860
    @smalltownmachineshop6860 3 года назад +1

    Very nice work

  • @markshort9098
    @markshort9098 3 года назад +1

    My lathes don't have graduations all the way around either, my small lathe has a mark on the back of the compound so i can always use the graduations even when it's past the front reference mark and with my big lathe i just stamped in my own marks so i had references marks to use the graduations at any position.. saves cracking out the protractor and accurate enough for pulleys etc

  • @captcarlos
    @captcarlos 3 года назад +1

    You will seriously not know your self with a DRO fitted to your lathe Max.
    I've got metal hoses, plastic clip together copper pipe and hinged sections of pipe styles of coolant gizmos.
    They have All got there advantages, aaaand disadvantages!

    • @swanvalleymachineshop
      @swanvalleymachineshop  3 года назад

      They do . The old English made telescopic ones are amongst the best as well ! Cheers .

  • @donmittlestaedt1117
    @donmittlestaedt1117 3 года назад +1

    Thanks Max.

  • @stevewilliams2498
    @stevewilliams2498 2 года назад +1

    Hi Max.
    Why didn't you plunge in with the 3.63 angle cut ?
    That tool was working so well.

    • @swanvalleymachineshop
      @swanvalleymachineshop  2 года назад +1

      Hi . I did not plunge cut the angles like with cast iron so there would be minimal chance of any aluminium build up on the tool damaging the finish .

  • @willemvantsant5105
    @willemvantsant5105 3 года назад

    Hi Max, I have always machined my A, B, C section pulleys at an included angle of 40 degrees, hope I got it right.
    Considering a DRO for my Lathe but the problem is I will lose tailstock travel up to the saddle with the scale mounted on the tailstock end.

    • @willemvantsant5105
      @willemvantsant5105 3 года назад +1

      Hi Max, went to the Fenner website, 32 degrees under 1 1/2 inches , 38 degrees larger than 1 1/2 inches, learn something everyday.
      Understand the wedging action now to stop slip!

    • @swanvalleymachineshop
      @swanvalleymachineshop  3 года назад

      @@willemvantsant5105 Yes , different angles according to the diameters .

  • @weaponduck2547
    @weaponduck2547 3 года назад +1

    I’d like to see how you have the dial gauge on there , I have an AL960b and it vibrates the dial way more than yours but I’m using a Noga and suspect that probably isn’t rigid at all

    • @swanvalleymachineshop
      @swanvalleymachineshop  3 года назад +1

      A Noga , i should think would have no troubles if it is a genuine one . I have never used a Noga though . Check to make sure the base has no burr's .

    • @weaponduck2547
      @weaponduck2547 3 года назад +1

      @@swanvalleymachineshop thanks Max I will check it out cheers

  • @ianbertenshaw4350
    @ianbertenshaw4350 3 года назад +1

    Always amuses me when someone drills a hole through something in the lathe then reams it only to find out the hole no longer runs true , some go to the extent of skimming with a boring bar after drilling then ream it and I think to myself WTF??? You already have the boring bar set up just bore it to size and be bloody done with it !

    • @markfoster6110
      @markfoster6110 3 года назад +1

      Flash Max makes it look way to easy..

    • @swanvalleymachineshop
      @swanvalleymachineshop  3 года назад

      That's right Ian . But if your lathe has a lot of wear in it , boring then reaming is the only way to get a parallel hole . Cheers .

    • @ianbertenshaw4350
      @ianbertenshaw4350 3 года назад +1

      @@swanvalleymachineshop
      True and I have used a few machines that were so flogged out that on longer sections I had to finish every diameter with a file then emery cloth to take the taper out ! On those machines the compound was dialled in to machine short journals and bores and it was punishable by death to move it 🤣. So happy those days are gone I can tell ya 🤣

    • @swanvalleymachineshop
      @swanvalleymachineshop  3 года назад

      @@ianbertenshaw4350 I have used some where i have had to adjust the cross slide a thou every couple of inches whils't taking cuts !

  • @somebodyelse6673
    @somebodyelse6673 3 года назад +1

    Would you do anything differently if you were making a cast iron version?

  • @ccbproductsmulti-bendaustr3200
    @ccbproductsmulti-bendaustr3200 3 года назад +1

    👍👌