Making Wooden Nuts & Bolts
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- Опубликовано: 7 окт 2017
- Some people have accused me of being nuts, in this video I show you how to screw around with wood.
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Broke a couple of ribs myself. You have my full sympathy. Nice thing is they tell you what your ready to do. Going to make one of those bolts just to set on the bench. Thanks for all the great tips.
Sorry to hear about your ribs. I would hope you are better by now. That happened to me when I used to wrestle in college a few decades ago-- it sucks.
Great video btw. Thanks for the time and effort, and great input.
Where to buy or how to make the router threading jig? Anyone who knows please tell?
That vice, with wooden screws is exactly like a bookbinding tool I want to make. tapered middle and wooden screws to hold, in my case, a book to be finished. Will look at your other projects but thank you for showing this.
From the photo i thought they would be small.
But glad to see you back
No use for wooden thread at the moment, but now I know how. It must of taken quite a while to design that custom push stick for the band saw ;0, glad to have you back, but take it easy. Health before your public. We can wait.
I hope you get to feeling better take care of yourself and look forward to your next session, take career
Wow, awesome! I saw a tail vise kit a while ago and wondered what several thousand dollar CNC machine they mustve used to make them. Didn't know a small router tool was the answer. Cool to see it in use and that friction fit was very satisfying :) Hope you're recovering well.
If you are doing production, using a CNC lathe makes a lot of sense. It can get it to *very* precise dimensions, add in grooves for garters, and thread it all on one machine. With a CNC lathe you can also go for a larger pitch - I think this one is a 3 or 4mm pitch. Big wood screw vices can be 6 to 8mm pitch, much faster to open/close!
Just found a full kit at an auction for $2! Thanks for the video, I appreciate your work.
$2?! We are no longer friends!
Hi my first time watching found the way you teach very relaxing,
Great work
You should make a special push block with a “boot heel” to control the back of your stock when routing with the 3/4” bit.
Short and nice ... thanks.
All the best to get healthy again :)
greetings from germany munich, Arne
Original work!
Question for you... i got my kit in and I bought some 1 inch dowels from Home Depot Pine and Oak well the Pine is to big and won't fit the inserts but the Oak does.. I have a big plunge dewalt router but it won't work so I used my Ryobi trim battery router and I get a ton of chipping with no perfect threads, You think its due to my trim router not begin strong enough for the oak dowel?
+David Moss not 100% sure. The oak dowel may not be round (more oval), you could be feeding too fast, or just oak being more porous and prone to splintering. Shoot Beall an email, they will have more advice (I've never worked with US Oak)
Salut,super vidéo ,j'adore les vis en bois ,je trouve ca cool et c'est très beau une très grosse vis en bois et sur un établi ca rend super bien.
👍👍👍 hi, could you better explain how you threaded with the milling machine? have you built a special tool? thank you
Like I said in the video, and in the comments, it's the Beall threading jig.
After mastering the smaller threads I bought the big 1 1/2 threader and tap and it's about to whoop me. It goes so for and then get's stuck. I had to get some channel locks to get it out so i figure my bit was to for down but once i get it out the threads are pretty good. You had this happen ever?
The tolerances are pretty tight on what goes smoothly and what doesn't. 38mm works slightly better than 38.1mm (1.5"), but you've also gotta make sure its perfectly round.
It could be that dust was getting jammed in - is the hole on the "outfeed" side nice and clear?
Do you use a handle to turn it, or just twisting by hand? A handle/crank makes it much easier to power through if its just a slight dust jam
Yea i'm using my hand... I didn't even think to look at the outfeed shoot. I guess I could have my dust collection going while I'm tuning it huh... thanks for the quick reply
Paul, beautifully done ! I think the jig is sold by Veritas (not sure if the spelling is correct ) a company in Canada:-)
Thanks for sharing .
Mahendra Tiwari you got a link I can buy it?
Yup, Lee Valley (Veritas is their hand tool brand) sell it. Be prepared for an awful website and painful shipping if you're outside of north america!
Paul Jenkins I can’t find the jig or the thread setter on Lee valley site
Just search for 'beall' or clicky the link www.leevalley.com/us/wood/page.aspx?p=41791&cat=1,43000)
Search for beal tools .com
www.bealltool.com/products/threading/threader.php
Do you ever sell these? I would be so interested in purchasing one!
I don't, sorry. If you search on Etsy for "wood nut bolt", you'll find a few people who do. "PerfectFiveWoodworks" makes some very pretty sets!
@@TheWoodKnight thanks!
heya... was meaning to ask you what jig you used to make threads and nuts?
Beall's Big Threader
@@TheWoodKnight thank you!
you have the cleanest shop I have ever seen, but I can not understand why you want a wooden worm threaded vice
Coarser thread is faster than all thread, and cheaper than buying the metal version by a magnitude or more. More than strong enough
@@TheWoodKnight As far a wood shops go, you and i are in different universes. A wood thread vice would not last a month in my shop
What to do to use for the tap and die set
It's a Beall Big Threader Kit. Veritas took over Beall once Jim retired and will be continuing manufacturing www.leevalley.com/en-ca/tools/beall-tools/beall-wood-threaders
Do you have a link to the jig you used?
You can get it from Beall or a few other vendors, depending on where in the world you are www.bealltool.com/products/threading/threader.php
Now you have it David :-) I was trying to search for the video which I had saved couple of years back ,Paul has expressed his expereince with them and he has given u other options :-)
I found the link to the video ruclips.net/video/UCLGCzOqjv8/видео.html
Paul Jenkins thanks
You can buy the threader kit directly from Beall (www.bealltool.com/products/threading/threader.php ), Amazon (amzn.to/2y9e96b), or Lee Valley (www.leevalley.com/us/wood/page.aspx?p=41791&cat=1,43000). I'm sure other places sell it, I bought mine through Lee Valley. Shipping was painful.
Note: Beall are not a sponsor, I don't get anything out of it if you buy it or not.
the link to bealltools doesnt seem to work, just thought I would let you know.
Excellent Video Paul , heal fast and be carefull on those Ribs it’s way too easy to think your okay to do whatever but in reality you are not allowing things to heal properly i know from experience as i stumbled into my Doctor one Monday after Water skiing all weekend ! the Doctor wanted to beat me up for being that stupid ? and she told me after looking at the Xrays that i must have one of the highest tolerances of pain she has ever seen ! as well as letting me know if i was to fall the wrong way on the water i could puncture a Lung resulting in possible death ?
Wouldn't it be easier to make the dowel on a lathe?
Accuracy and consistency is the problem with doing it on the lathe. The threading jig really wants results consistent otherwise it binds and ruins the threads. On a lathe, getting it dead straight takes too much time for a single bolt, for my skill level.
Paul Jenkins I think it would be doable for shorter pieces, just mounting it between centers, roughing it sown with the spindle roughing gouge, and then using the skew chisel as a scraper to surface it and get it dead straight. I don’t think it would take much time, but certainly a bit of lathe skill.
For some reason you look taller. Either you're standing straighter due to your injury or your lens choice and/or tripod height has changed a wee bit in the shot starting around 2:25. Or I guess I should entertain the possibility that your feline overlord has a torture rack.
I've had an easier time with a tap handle. I've had a hard time with an adjustable wrench.
Sell these?
Máster
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I fell asleep after 2 mins
less talking, more working...
Talking way too much
Original work!