Something a bit different this week being able to get up close to the machine we are making parts for. We hope you enjoy the video 😎👍 Subscribe and hit the bell icon to turn on notifications so you don't miss our weekly uploads. 👇 🤳 Follow us online here: Instagram instagram.com/cutting_edge_engineering Facebook facebook.com/cuttingedgeengineeringaustralia/ Official CEE Merch shop: www.ceeshop.com.au
Really like the work you guys are doing with actually showing the machines and parts in the real world! I really like this channel. Keep up the good work!
I must say, I really enjoyed the intro, with the actual machine - mad props to the Machine owner for letting you do that intro - absolutely fascinating.
Yeah for someone like me who knows little to nothing about big machinery like that, it was great to finally see what and where the piece he is working on goes.
The quality of your videos continues to improve. The effort that's gone into them is really apparent and really appreciated. We know from the outtakes that the narration is far from your favourite part of the work. I just want to express how much, at least this viewer appreciates it.
I spent the majority of my career around large excavators and other equipment. I've been around mechanics and engineers from the majority of the large guys in NA. Your repairs are more of an upgrade than a fix. Your repairs go beyond what a factory mechanic would do in most cases. You go the extra mile. Be proud of that work.
Very well said. I always sub to the channels that go the extra mile to do superb work. Very rare to have the attention to detail this channel has. Eric O and Wes do repair and diagnostics and are great like this channel.
I agree with many of the comments how helpful showing the machine before you made the parts. You don’t realize how big those scrapers are until you see a fully grown man sitting in the belly of one. Great video! Definitely enjoyed watching you do the chamfer cuts.
@@jrpoints Everyone needs a safety supervisor, just make sure you lock them into the office when welding is going on. Rule probably applies for the two legged variety also.
That last bit about you supplying the plug with the locator hole so that the customer can properly remove the old part - that's a huge thing for me. That's such attention to detail - and we don't see that in many places. I'm not a machinist, but I love watching how you approach your work and what you do. Thank you for brightening the day.
Hi from Spain. As I can't do my job anymore (machinist & welder) due to back injury, your videos are a kind of "second life" for me. Thank you for making them. You 3 are a perfect TEAM. I enjoy that also. Stay safe.
A back injury is never fun. It is scary just how straining a muscle or two can "knock the wind right out of your sails", leaving you gasping for air and going cross eyed from the pain. I really hate to think what a permanent career ending back injury would be like, so know that you have my full sympathy and thoughts for at least some sort of recovery. Do they give you the opportunity for hydro therapy in a pool of water so that you can relax and take some time out in a neutral buoyancy environment? Glad that you found CEE to keep your work mind occupied. Thoughts and prayers, Christmas Wishes, Mark from Melbourne Australia
I love it how u Aussies call machining engineering. Albeit This guy blows the doors off most engineers it just seems common in Austrian to call job shops engineering shops. In the US if a machinist or toolmaker said they were engineers the engineers we work with would not agree what so ever.
8 inch rotary table… I’ve got one on my mill. Invaluable when called for. I don’t think I need a dividing head though. Every time I watch one of these videos I learn another little trick of technique. Kati’s. You are another one of my hero’s.
Look forward to new videos every Friday. My uncle ran a machine shop on his property his whole life from his early 20s until he retired from it in his 70s. It has to be the best feeling to be your own boss. Although the real lucky guy is Homeless Everyday is like Christmas for Homeless. Never gets left at home and presents every day.
Love the fact that there's no fuss about using these big machines. I know there are bigger machines about, but they are big in my terms. Well done Kurtis, Mrs Kurtis and the safety officer.
I want to say thank you for continuing to show the importance of keeping the shop and tools clean as you go. That's something I still struggle to do because I'm just damn lazy.
Again, I can't thank Kurtis and Karen enough for taking the time to share all of this with us. It's such a brilliant education for those of us eager to learn, but not in the industry. Also fun to see Homie every video. :) Thanks again guys, ya'll are the best.
Kurtis I AM LOVING YOU EVEN MORE, to go on site, just to make your show more EXCITING is just FANTASTIC!! u remind me of Steve Irwin. I miss him a lot and loved his show. GREAT JOB ONCE AGAIN BRO!!
Loved the visual and explanation at beginning as well as the explanations of each step. That scraper is a monster. The pig is a hit and Homeless does a great impression. :)
I never tire of learning from the weekly display of fascinating and impressive skills in the shop, but please consider adding one or two more brief little clips of Homey going about his busy day. For being a destructive child, he's quite charming.
Another great video. Took me back to my very early days fueling and greasing a fleet of scrapers and dozers turning old pit stacks into a golf course. Karen's cinematography gets better and better. The time lapse shots with the slow zoom in/zoom out are getting seriously technical. Hopefully one more before Crimbo, but if not seasons greetings to you both.
Fascinating job. It is so interesting learning the different ways to machine things that aren't the obvious ways. I love every episode. As a side note, I love the outtakes at the end of all your vids. Curtis struggling with the dialog is all of us. It makes it more personable in my opinion.
I must say that is the first time that I saw a 45 degree put on a radius on the milling machine. Our machine shop never did that , that I know of. Thank you I saw something new !!
As always, love the video. I especially appreciate how you put in the extra time to finish each piece with finer grinding paper, chamfered holes, deburring, wire wheel. You take great pride in your work and it shows. Keep ‘em coming. Safety Officer has quite an assortment to choose from. 👍🏼
Hello from Miami. This brings back memories of when I worked on scrapers and other heavy equipment back in my twenties. Today I’m in Aviation working for a Maintenace, Repair and overhaul shop selling the Sevices. Big difference, but still the same quality of work required.
An air line with a "y" splitter and about 3 or 4 feet of hose on each side of the "y" is very handy when using multiple air tools. Saves all the connecting and disconnecting. Same idea with extension cords, I often added a multi-outlet box on one end of the cords. Love these vids. Cheers and Happy Holidays!!
I'm glad you added in the shots of clean up and prep between the tasks. Showing the care and cleanliness required to maintain a precise machine adds to "story" of each job.
I love this channel SO much. I always watch a little before bedtime. I think my dog Muji and Homeless would get along fine - they both like tearing the stuffing out of pigs.
As a machining student, I find these videos interesting and enlightening. It's so cool seeing the stuff I'm getting lectured about applied in it proper setting. Also, doggo mail is the best. Hello from San Diego, CA, USA
Tramming the tilt with setup blocks...that's going to save me hours of my life, it's the little things you learn from the professional!!! Thanks as always!
Good video, love the close-up shots and slow motion. I remember replacing those with pieces from a local machinery dealer and they weren't made as nice or precise, it would take an hour to bevel the edges with an angle grinder and the whole time the boss screaming "just weld it in" he was a jackass. The plug to guide the torch is brilliant
I appreciate how you explain even some of the simplest things for us non machinists types. I have never done machining, never will, it find the whole process of machining fascinating. Thanks.
That was really great getting to see the "internal" workings of the machine. Most of us will oro ably never see one of those in person, let alone the mechanicals of it. Thanks for sharing 🇨🇦
I absolutely love this channel. I have no experience with machining or welding, but I know a guru when I see one. This guy would be the ace in any shop. Advice for bosses: if have you a bloke like this guy in your shop…pay him whatever he wants, and make sure he stays happy. They don’t come around very often.
I'm thinkin EVERY time package is delivered, Homeless thinks it's another toy he can Destroy!! BTW, Love the work you do and [Especially!] the out-takes!
You put alot of thought into your videos even though there work related! Even the fact you went to the scraper to show your audience what your talking about shows just how much affordable you pair put into everything! Want more bloopers to!
Karen’s videographer skills increase with each passing week. Have you upgraded the camera equipment at all. Great color contrast makes everything pop. And her skills at various angles, slow mo, speed up etcetera make for a lively presentation. Well done again you guys.
Thank you for noticing! I upgraded my phone about 6 months ago, went from Samsung S8 to an S10 which does have better quality video and I am also uploading the files with higher bitrate/frames per second I think that has helped with the quality as well 😄
So many explanations- from the initial look at the machine to the centering device to getting the hole positioned properly during boring- this was a real 7 course meal, especially for a non-machinist (or machinist wannabe) like me. Thank You!
I must say Kurtis, the way you explain why you are doing what you are doing, is brilliant ! For those people who have never seen these processes, or for people like me, who are many, many years away from a machine shop, it’s extremely helpful. I would also imagine that , even for those currently in the business, it is very educational. It probably also causes a fair bit of. “ hey boss! You know what I saw last night? ………..we need one of those!”
I just love the effort both you two put in these videos. You literally showed us on a FREAKIN site where these part comes from it is 🤯 and the skilled machining that we see, oh and dont even mention that really neat editing of the videos. Love you and wish you only the best, waiting for more awesome vids have a good one from Slovakia.
The knowledge you possess of the machines in your shop and the care you take of them is an example that any machinist would be wise to mimic. Makes me want to apply for an apprentice position and I live in the US and am 70 years old, I would be honored to learn from you. Definitely and advantage to a one-man shop because you know the machine will be right every time.
Gday Kurtis and Karen, this turned a really interesting job and one I throughly enjoyed watching as normal, I’ve never been around a scraper before and didn’t quite understand how the bowl worked, I had a rough idea, the mill does a bloody awesome job, have a great weekend mate, Cheers
Hey Matty yeah they're pretty awesome bits of machinery, great way to move dirt quickly. We're going to start winding down soon hopefully get a few workshop projects done while we are closed for holidays. Enjoy the weekend too mate 😎👍
CNC Aerospace programmer. In it for 24 years. You know your stuff but I have to admit. I'm totally here for the dog ! I used to run the identical Toshiba cnc mill, nice to see the old girl.
Great channel, glad you were able to show in the field where those parts were going to go. I had never considered how a lot of the larger construction and mining equipment was maintained and repaired. The shop dog is awesome too. Thanks for your videos it gives me another reason to love Fridays.
You should consider a raise for the "giggler", she's doing an excellent job. And, I love the out takes, they just show you're human like the rest of us. I really enjoy your videos!
I have to say Curtis it is fascinating to watch tou using all the different machines and from a lump of ugly steel to a precision engineered bracket is amazing. Keep it up mate from a loyal watcher in the UK.
I’ve purchased and installed parts like these many times over the years from various manufacturers. Honestly, I never stopped and thought about how much personal touch goes into them until now. Thanks for the new perspective and kudos on the attention to detail and quality of your work.
You Aussies show us Yanks here in the States...A quality of ingenuity and work that we have lost over the last Forty or Fifty years!!! Keep it up it up Mate!!! Kudos to you!!!
We so rarely get to see so much milling machine action. Even things like hole boring you can do on a mill, you often do on your very boss lathes. I love milling machine work. Wish you had more of it.
I guess "Homeless" is even more favored than my own "shop dog". He's clearly "boss of the shop floor" with all those toys in his toy bin! He's also clearly a happy dog. Thanks!
This is easily one of my favorite channels, not only for the machining work but for the video quality also. Thank you for all the time and effort you guys put into every video.
It is good to see Homeless healthy and happy. I also have a "homeless" found abandoned in the crime riddled part of town and took him home last year. He and I are getting along very well but he does seem to have one problem. He is having trouble training his "bearded monkey", me. Now we are both homeless living in our car, an old motorhome, but we are happy and enjoying retirement together. 😅😅😅😅 As always I enjoy these videos.
Sou do Brasil, parabéns por seu trabalho. Desde criança, tenho admiração por mecânica. Hoje com 74 anos, deficiente físico, ainda fascinado por mecânica, seu canal tornou-se meu passatempo favorito. Parabéns.
I'm from Brazil, congratulations on your work. Since I was a child, I have an admiration for mechanics. Now 74 years old, handicapped, still fascinated by mechanics, his channel has become my favorite pastime. Congratulations.
The onsite intro sent my PTSD into overdrive, spent more hours under those things than I care to remember, gives a perspective to those lucky enough to never having the displeasure. Merry Christmas guys keep up the good work.
I always look forward to this time of day knowing another video will be posted. Thank you to both of you and have a Great Christmas and Better New Year!!!
As a former motorcycle mechanic that declined the invitation to train as a heavy goods vehicle mechanic because I enjoyed working on compact components and engines, I am in awe at the projects that you undertake and the size of the parts you work with and the huge machines they fit on to! Literally everything is super scale, and that includes the calibre of the Engineers that make it happen. Much respect to you for the phenomenal work you do. Let's not forget the sweetest workshop dog, too!
The first time I've seen the milling machine used like that. Really smart and really cool. Thanks, man. The poor pig's fate was sealed when it entered the building. haha. You guys are great together. Thanks for what you do and hope you have a peaceful Christmas and summer holiday. Cheers.
Kurtis, you are amazing. But Karen, you are SPECTACULAR! I have gone back and watched all the vids from the beginning of your channel. You have simply turned into an astounding vidiographer. You just keep getting better and better. Your shots, editing, and content are simply excellent. God, you have a gift. Now a quarter million subscribers. Kurtis, i'm sure she gets in your way but i think it is so worth it. Karen has made you an internet sensation. Please keep up the great work. I know new content must be difficult. I have watched and rewatched so many of your vids and enjoy them every time. They are the best i've seen - just great. I had to chuckle at Homeless opening the mail on his own now. Not too spoiled. :-) Love the outtakes. Brave of you, Kurtis. Great work, you guys. I'd definitely keep the 'giggler'. In fact, i think she deserves a big raise. 500K on the way. You deserve it.
One cool thing about your way of working is you don't waste your time being precise where precision isn't required, you are allways fast, efficient and straight forward with your aproach. No bullshit, no filler, just substance. Where someone across the ocean would go mad over a few tenths on a completely unnecesary detail. This is the reason I stopped following him and I started following you guys. You get more done in a video than he does in a quarter year.
hey mate thanks for sharing your feedback, we wanted our channel to be about real life in a real workshop and don't have the time to make 16 episodes of 1 job 🤣👍
Love your work, and your wife is a BRILLIANT editor!! About the time I think... hmm, I've seen this before, I might FF through this... she does her slo-mo, or change of orientation, or before/after... and I'm hooked again!!! what a great Gal you got there buddy!
This is even nicer to watch than Clickspring... ;-) Big thanks for sharing your knowledge and showing your skills! I'll pass it through to my students Mechanical Engineering. They'll love it! If our workshop with the tiny machinery doesn't impress them enough, then it's nice to have some heavy duty backup over here. You just got a new subscriber ;-)
“Extremely sharp and terrifying tinsel!” - classic. Really enjoyed the on-site intro as well. It’s fun to get the scale of some of these machines. Shame you couldn’t tolerate a little bevel on the closing end corners and do the boring and beveling on a lathe. I have to say I was amazed how well that wonky 45 degree setup worked. :) Any particular reason you couldn’t just run an 8mm end-mill to make the slots? Slower I’d imagine, but with the changeover to horizontal and back, for four parts, one wonders.
The introduction was nice. We know that you don't have a chance to bring the whole machine to the shop. But the chance to see what you have made will be used for was great.
Thanks for the detailed explanation of where the parts are and their function, very informative and appreciated. Been meaning to ask for a long time - what cutting fluid do you use for your drills? Homey sure loves all the toys, I definitely would NOT want him latching onto my leg (or any other body part)!
Great to see the part on the machine before we start the machining process.Brilliant. Great video work. You could even hear the ping at 27:33 as the machining stresses suddenly released. Question please: How come the large diameter drill didn't try and walk as it exposed half its' diameter when drilling air in the clamp hole, especially as it was sharper on the one flute?
That was one heck of a slit to do with a milling cutter! It did a nice job of it, though. Loved seeing all of the machining, and also really appreciated the on-site views of the machine. Cudos to the machine owner for letting you show it to us. Loved the video as always. The sound is almost studio quality, too. All-in-all, a great treat for a Friday. Wishing you all a pleasant weekend.
This is why you need to get your CNC up and running. At least 3/4 of the work you needed to do on these can be automated, allowing you to do other things. And if these are a common item for you, it just amplifies the reason you need it. Don't worry that you can't tilt the head on the CNC; a bull nose cutter head using round inserts will cut the weld prep bevels, as well as rough out the bores for the pins as well. These can be done completely in the CNC with the correct tooling, and with almost the same fixturing you just used.
Yeah just great! CNC does everything...........but who programs the CNC? Personally I'd rather spend time actually machining that sitting in a stuffy office fart arsing around with a bloody computer!
It can be done, but all the setup for handful of those parts a year. CNC repeatability is more of an serial production thing. He could make them in advance once set up, but who wants to carry stock nowdays?
@@goodiezgrigis I work for a small shop where we program stuff like this all the time, ON THE FLOOR, at the control. And as for machining stock ahead, why??? As long as he has the setup details and the program, he can just order the material as needed and machine the parts when called for.
Two things I enjoyed about this video, the happy butt four legged supervisor, makes me miss my staffy, and the fact you explain everything but without going into the unnecessary things.
Your dog is like mine, He loves to get gifts in a bag. Thank You for the videos on your work, You have given me a lot of tips too on how to do something.
Curtis, having studied the female component of the species for nigh onto 80 years, be advised that Karen is what is known as "a Keeper". You are one lucky man. Keep your Man Card up to date, do lot's of anniversaries, birthdays, and no reason days to take her out and wine and dine her. Heck, sometimes a Happy Meal as a surprise can turn into a romantic dinner date.
Something a bit different this week being able to get up close to the machine we are making parts for. We hope you enjoy the video 😎👍
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@@importanttingwei7747 thanks for watching
Really like the work you guys are doing with actually showing the machines and parts in the real world!
I really like this channel. Keep up the good work!
Thanks for you . I like you job brother.
Pretty soon you’re going to have more homeless toys there than Kurtis toys haha
Seeing where the finished part goes is awesome.
I must say, I really enjoyed the intro, with the actual machine - mad props to the Machine owner for letting you do that intro - absolutely fascinating.
Glad you enjoyed that part 😎👍
Would it be possible to go back and see the difference between stock and your part in the machine
Agreed, that takes the brilliant approach of showing which part we are actually looking one more step further. Very good idea!
Yeah for someone like me who knows little to nothing about big machinery like that, it was great to finally see what and where the piece he is working on goes.
@@truey90s It was in metric millage.. sounds like the machine is a long distance away .. I could be wrong
who the heck needs Hollywood when we have real entertaining and educational videos like these? thanks Curtis and Karen
The quality of your videos continues to improve. The effort that's gone into them is really apparent and really appreciated. We know from the outtakes that the narration is far from your favourite part of the work. I just want to express how much, at least this viewer appreciates it.
Hey mate thanks very much for this comment we both appreciate that and glad the videos are enjoyed 😎👍
Second
Third 👍🏽
Ditto from Canada's banana belt 🤞🇨🇦👍 and have a Merry down under Christmas.🌟🌲✨
Top class/notch engineering works.
I spent the majority of my career around large excavators and other equipment. I've been around mechanics and engineers from the majority of the large guys in NA. Your repairs are more of an upgrade than a fix. Your repairs go beyond what a factory mechanic would do in most cases. You go the extra mile. Be proud of that work.
thank you mate appreciate it
Very well said. I always sub to the channels that go the extra mile to do superb work. Very rare to have the attention to detail this channel has. Eric O and Wes do repair and diagnostics and are great like this channel.
I wonder if your customers ever watch the videos and see how much care and attention goes into every part of the job? Absolutely top class!
Works of art love it J.H .UK. Thanks
I agree with many of the comments how helpful showing the machine before you made the parts. You don’t realize how big those scrapers are until you see a fully grown man sitting in the belly of one. Great video! Definitely enjoyed watching you do the chamfer cuts.
hey mate thanks for watching and sharing the feedback it's appreciated
Constantly amazed that you and your wife do all this by yourselves. Merry Christmas!
Hey mate yeah we both put in a lot of effort definitely keeps us busy thanks for watching
None of it would be possible without the top notch supervision from the dog.
@@jrpoints Everyone needs a safety supervisor, just make sure you lock them into the office when welding is going on. Rule probably applies for the two legged variety also.
That last bit about you supplying the plug with the locator hole so that the customer can properly remove the old part - that's a huge thing for me. That's such attention to detail - and we don't see that in many places. I'm not a machinist, but I love watching how you approach your work and what you do. Thank you for brightening the day.
Hi from Spain. As I can't do my job anymore (machinist & welder) due to back injury, your videos are a kind of "second life" for me. Thank you for making them. You 3 are a perfect TEAM. I enjoy that also. Stay safe.
Hey mate we hope that you can keep enjoying the videos and take care over there in Spain
Hi...I am 10-months out from a spine fusion. Doc said I'd have another 20-years to work. Maybe something to consider also to get away from pain meds.
A back injury is never fun. It is scary just how straining a muscle or two can "knock the wind right out of your sails", leaving you gasping for air and going cross eyed from the pain. I really hate to think what a permanent career ending back injury would be like, so know that you have my full sympathy and thoughts for at least some sort of recovery. Do they give you the opportunity for hydro therapy in a pool of water so that you can relax and take some time out in a neutral buoyancy environment? Glad that you found CEE to keep your work mind occupied.
Thoughts and prayers, Christmas Wishes,
Mark from Melbourne Australia
Best doggie channel on the internet. Love the clips of machining in between
You two make a great team! Kurtis's Engineering skills & Karen's Film production make for a great show!
amen
Dont forget Doggie
I love it how u Aussies call machining engineering. Albeit This guy blows the doors off most engineers it just seems common in Austrian to call job shops engineering shops. In the US if a machinist or toolmaker said they were engineers the engineers we work with would not agree what so ever.
8 inch rotary table… I’ve got one on my mill. Invaluable when called for. I don’t think I need a dividing head though.
Every time I watch one of these videos I learn another little trick of technique. Kati’s. You are another one of my hero’s.
Love the onsite part, really puts things into perspective
Yeah we thought that would be something different and pretty cool
Do they ever tap you to do the repair welding on the "pillow blocks" that you make in this video!!!
Look forward to new videos every Friday. My uncle ran a machine shop on his property his whole life from his early 20s until he retired from it in his 70s. It has to be the best feeling to be your own boss. Although the real lucky guy is Homeless Everyday is like Christmas for Homeless. Never gets left at home and presents every day.
I've been a machinist/toolmaker for 36 years and the scale and quality of your work is impressive.😃
thanks for saying so!
Love the fact that there's no fuss about using these big machines. I know there are bigger machines about, but they are big in my terms. Well done Kurtis, Mrs Kurtis and the safety officer.
I want to say thank you for continuing to show the importance of keeping the shop and tools clean as you go. That's something I still struggle to do because I'm just damn lazy.
Paid a lot of money for the tools and equipment so I like to look after it
There are some gifted guys on earth... This is one of them...
Thanks mate
I get a rediculous ammount of enjoyment out of watching a shell mill do its thing.
Shell mills and fly cutters are super satisfying for some reason.
After watching this video, I then had to go back to the first part and watch it again to get the complete understanding. Thanks for a fine video.
Again, I can't thank Kurtis and Karen enough for taking the time to share all of this with us. It's such a brilliant education for those of us eager to learn, but not in the industry. Also fun to see Homie every video. :) Thanks again guys, ya'll are the best.
Hey mate thanks for the great comment we are glad the vids are both educating and entertaining
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering absolutely! The outtakes are also great too, lol. :)
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering because of you "fuckin' munted' is a regular part of my vocabulary now haha.
Kurtis I AM LOVING YOU EVEN MORE, to go on site, just to make your show more EXCITING is just FANTASTIC!! u remind me of Steve Irwin. I miss him a lot and loved his show. GREAT JOB ONCE AGAIN BRO!!
wow thanks mate, Steve was a legend
Loved the visual and explanation at beginning as well as the explanations of each step. That scraper is a monster. The pig is a hit and Homeless does a great impression. :)
Hey mate glad you enjoyed that and the different perspective of the machine 😎👍
I never tire of learning from the weekly display of fascinating and impressive skills in the shop, but please consider adding one or two more brief little clips of Homey going about his busy day. For being a destructive child, he's quite charming.
Another great video. Took me back to my very early days fueling and greasing a fleet of scrapers and dozers turning old pit stacks into a golf course.
Karen's cinematography gets better and better. The time lapse shots with the slow zoom in/zoom out are getting seriously technical.
Hopefully one more before Crimbo, but if not seasons greetings to you both.
Hey mate thanks for watching and the great comment. You enjoy your Chrissy and end of year 😎👍
Fascinating job. It is so interesting learning the different ways to machine things that aren't the obvious ways. I love every episode.
As a side note, I love the outtakes at the end of all your vids. Curtis struggling with the dialog is all of us. It makes it more personable in my opinion.
I must say that is the first time that I saw a 45 degree put on a radius on the milling machine. Our machine shop never did that , that I know of. Thank you I saw something new !!
As always, love the video. I especially appreciate how you put in the extra time to finish each piece with finer grinding paper, chamfered holes, deburring, wire wheel. You take great pride in your work and it shows. Keep ‘em coming.
Safety Officer has quite an assortment to choose from. 👍🏼
Hello from Miami.
This brings back memories of when I worked on scrapers and other heavy equipment back in my twenties.
Today I’m in Aviation working for a Maintenace, Repair and overhaul shop selling the Sevices.
Big difference, but still the same quality of work required.
An air line with a "y" splitter and about 3 or 4 feet of hose on each side of the "y" is very handy when using multiple air tools. Saves all the connecting and disconnecting. Same idea with extension cords, I often added a multi-outlet box on one end of the cords. Love these vids. Cheers and Happy Holidays!!
Great idea! Another of those "Why didn't I think of that?" moments.
I'm glad you added in the shots of clean up and prep between the tasks. Showing the care and cleanliness required to maintain a precise machine adds to "story" of each job.
That's a really slick way of making a bevel, never seen a rotary table used like that. Gonna have to steal that method....
Go for it 😎👊
I love this channel SO much. I always watch a little before bedtime.
I think my dog Muji and Homeless would get along fine - they both like tearing the stuffing out of pigs.
As a machining student, I find these videos interesting and enlightening. It's so cool seeing the stuff I'm getting lectured about applied in it proper setting. Also, doggo mail is the best.
Hello from San Diego, CA, USA
Great to hear! Keep at it mate
Tramming the tilt with setup blocks...that's going to save me hours of my life, it's the little things you learn from the professional!!! Thanks as always!
Good video, love the close-up shots and slow motion. I remember replacing those with pieces from a local machinery dealer and they weren't made as nice or precise, it would take an hour to bevel the edges with an angle grinder and the whole time the boss screaming "just weld it in" he was a jackass. The plug to guide the torch is brilliant
I could watch your videos all day long, I work in an office but am practically minded so what you do is my dream vocation in the next life
I appreciate how you explain even some of the simplest things for us non machinists types. I have never done machining, never will, it find the whole process of machining fascinating.
Thanks.
Just got home from work and finished watching. Great fix for a sticky problem... no pun intended. Your enginuity amazes me. Homeless is a beast
That was really great getting to see the "internal" workings of the machine. Most of us will oro ably never see one of those in person, let alone the mechanicals of it.
Thanks for sharing 🇨🇦
glad it was enjoyed!
I absolutely love this channel. I have no experience with machining or welding, but I know a guru when I see one. This guy would be the ace in any shop. Advice for bosses: if have you a bloke like this guy in your shop…pay him whatever he wants, and make sure he stays happy. They don’t come around very often.
I'm thinkin EVERY time package is delivered, Homeless thinks it's another toy he can Destroy!! BTW, Love the work you do and [Especially!] the out-takes!
The outro always brings a smile to my face! I think it is the blank frustrated look on Kurtis's face. The tensil line was hilarious as well!
14:00 clean shop, happy shop. Season Greetings from icy Finland.
Hey mate thanks for watching all the way over there
You put alot of thought into your videos even though there work related! Even the fact you went to the scraper to show your audience what your talking about shows just how much affordable you pair put into everything! Want more bloopers to!
Karen’s videographer skills increase with each passing week. Have you upgraded the camera equipment at all. Great color contrast makes everything pop. And her skills at various angles, slow mo, speed up etcetera make for a lively presentation. Well done again you guys.
Thank you for noticing! I upgraded my phone about 6 months ago, went from Samsung S8 to an S10 which does have better quality video and I am also uploading the files with higher bitrate/frames per second I think that has helped with the quality as well 😄
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering
It absolutely shows. There is a depth of color and a contrast that gives the video warmth. Best Regards
Hey Karen I use an s10 with a DJI gimble .If you don't have one they really do help getting good shots into difficult. Location's
Ps love your work
To be able to visualize the part, and where it goes on the 631G really made this video educational. You’re a master teacher. Thank you.
Kurtis and Karen, this is gorgeous. So fun to see a more milling-intensive machining project!
So many explanations- from the initial look at the machine to the centering device to getting the hole positioned properly during boring- this was a real 7 course meal, especially for a non-machinist (or machinist wannabe) like me. Thank You!
Gotta love when only one side of your bit is cutting and you haven't the time to fix it. 21:47 Good job muscling through it.😉👍
I must say Kurtis, the way you explain why you are doing what you are doing, is brilliant ! For those people who have never seen these processes, or for people like me, who are many, many years away from a machine shop, it’s extremely helpful.
I would also imagine that , even for those currently in the business, it is very educational.
It probably also causes a fair bit of. “ hey boss! You know what I saw last night? ………..we need one of those!”
I just love the effort both you two put in these videos. You literally showed us on a FREAKIN site where these part comes from it is 🤯 and the skilled machining that we see, oh and dont even mention that really neat editing of the videos. Love you and wish you only the best, waiting for more awesome vids have a good one from Slovakia.
Thanks for the awesome comment we appreciate it and always great to know the videos are enjoyed. Cheers
The knowledge you possess of the machines in your shop and the care you take of them is an example that any machinist would be wise to mimic. Makes me want to apply for an apprentice position and I live in the US and am 70 years old, I would be honored to learn from you. Definitely and advantage to a one-man shop because you know the machine will be right every time.
Gday Kurtis and Karen, this turned a really interesting job and one I throughly enjoyed watching as normal, I’ve never been around a scraper before and didn’t quite understand how the bowl worked, I had a rough idea, the mill does a bloody awesome job, have a great weekend mate, Cheers
Hey Matty yeah they're pretty awesome bits of machinery, great way to move dirt quickly. We're going to start winding down soon hopefully get a few workshop projects done while we are closed for holidays. Enjoy the weekend too mate 😎👍
CNC Aerospace programmer. In it for 24 years. You know your stuff but I have to admit.
I'm totally here for the dog !
I used to run the identical Toshiba cnc mill, nice to see the old girl.
And the birds which weren't in this one.
Great channel, glad you were able to show in the field where those parts were going to go. I had never considered how a lot of the larger construction and mining equipment was maintained and repaired. The shop dog is awesome too. Thanks for your videos it gives me another reason to love Fridays.
You should consider a raise for the "giggler", she's doing an excellent job. And, I love the out takes, they just show you're human like the rest of us. I really enjoy your videos!
she does all the accounting so she will happily give herself a raise 😂
I have to say Curtis it is fascinating to watch tou using all the different machines and from a lump of ugly steel to a precision engineered bracket is amazing. Keep it up mate from a loyal watcher in the UK.
I’ve purchased and installed parts like these many times over the years from various manufacturers. Honestly, I never stopped and thought about how much personal touch goes into them until now. Thanks for the new perspective and kudos on the attention to detail and quality of your work.
Another great vid, love the way you take the time to show where and how the part works.
Glad that it's enjoyed 😁👍
You Aussies show us Yanks here in the States...A quality of ingenuity and work that we have lost over the last Forty or Fifty years!!! Keep it up it up Mate!!! Kudos to you!!!
Nice to see the cleaning up! Remember folks, respect your tools!
Right on 😎👊
We so rarely get to see so much milling machine action. Even things like hole boring you can do on a mill, you often do on your very boss lathes. I love milling machine work. Wish you had more of it.
Great to see where these things go. Really professional work as always.
I guess "Homeless" is even more favored than my own "shop dog". He's clearly "boss of the shop floor" with all those toys in his toy bin! He's also clearly a happy dog. Thanks!
This is easily one of my favorite channels, not only for the machining work but for the video quality also. Thank you for all the time and effort you guys put into every video.
It is good to see Homeless healthy and happy.
I also have a "homeless" found abandoned in the crime riddled part of town and took him home last year.
He and I are getting along very well but he does seem to have one problem. He is having trouble training his "bearded monkey", me.
Now we are both homeless living in our car, an old motorhome, but we are happy and enjoying retirement together.
😅😅😅😅
As always I enjoy these videos.
Sou do Brasil, parabéns por seu trabalho.
Desde criança, tenho admiração por mecânica.
Hoje com 74 anos, deficiente físico, ainda fascinado por mecânica, seu canal tornou-se meu passatempo favorito.
Parabéns.
I'm from Brazil, congratulations on your work.
Since I was a child, I have an admiration for mechanics.
Now 74 years old, handicapped, still fascinated by mechanics, his channel has become my favorite pastime.
Congratulations.
Hey mate thanks for the support from Brazil! Cheers 😎👍
The onsite intro sent my PTSD into overdrive, spent more hours under those things than I care to remember, gives a perspective to those lucky enough to never having the displeasure. Merry Christmas guys keep up the good work.
I always look forward to this time of day knowing another video will be posted.
Thank you to both of you and have a Great Christmas and Better New Year!!!
Hey Mike thanks for taking time to watch the videos. You have a great Chrissy too mate 😎👊
As a former motorcycle mechanic that declined the invitation to train as a heavy goods vehicle mechanic because I enjoyed working on compact components and engines, I am in awe at the projects that you undertake and the size of the parts you work with and the huge machines they fit on to!
Literally everything is super scale, and that includes the calibre of the Engineers that make it happen.
Much respect to you for the phenomenal work you do.
Let's not forget the sweetest workshop dog, too!
I've been a motorcycle mechanic better than fifty years and have an equal appreciation for this kind of work. Makes mine look easy, almost delicate.
The first time I've seen the milling machine used like that. Really smart and really cool. Thanks, man.
The poor pig's fate was sealed when it entered the building. haha.
You guys are great together. Thanks for what you do and hope you have a peaceful Christmas and summer holiday. Cheers.
I really enjoy watching your videos. I'm an old welder and part-time machinist, and you really seem to know your stuff. I also like your pup.
Kurtis, you are amazing. But Karen, you are SPECTACULAR! I have gone back and watched all the vids from the beginning of your channel. You have simply turned into an astounding vidiographer. You just keep getting better and better. Your shots, editing, and content are simply excellent. God, you have a gift. Now a quarter million subscribers. Kurtis, i'm sure she gets in your way but i think it is so worth it. Karen has made you an internet sensation. Please keep up the great work. I know new content must be difficult. I have watched and rewatched so many of your vids and enjoy them every time. They are the best i've seen - just great. I had to chuckle at Homeless opening the mail on his own now. Not too spoiled. :-) Love the outtakes. Brave of you, Kurtis. Great work, you guys. I'd definitely keep the 'giggler'. In fact, i think she deserves a big raise. 500K on the way. You deserve it.
Hi Robert I have just had chance to read your comment, wow thank you very much! 😁 Karen
The slow motion makes me smile! Keep up the great work Karen!
Glad you enjoyed that 😁
One cool thing about your way of working is you don't waste your time being precise where precision isn't required, you are allways fast, efficient and straight forward with your aproach. No bullshit, no filler, just substance. Where someone across the ocean would go mad over a few tenths on a completely unnecesary detail. This is the reason I stopped following him and I started following you guys. You get more done in a video than he does in a quarter year.
hey mate thanks for sharing your feedback, we wanted our channel to be about real life in a real workshop and don't have the time to make 16 episodes of 1 job 🤣👍
Greetings from Colorado. Im glad you took the time to show that cleaning up the work area is just part of the job. Another excellent video!
Glad you enjoyed it
This was a fascinating project, but in addition, the cinematography was extra special! Really nice work in all departments! Thanks!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Love your work, and your wife is a BRILLIANT editor!! About the time I think... hmm, I've seen this before, I might FF through this... she does her slo-mo, or change of orientation, or before/after... and I'm hooked again!!! what a great Gal you got there buddy!
This is even nicer to watch than Clickspring... ;-) Big thanks for sharing your knowledge and showing your skills! I'll pass it through to my students Mechanical Engineering. They'll love it! If our workshop with the tiny machinery doesn't impress them enough, then it's nice to have some heavy duty backup over here. You just got a new subscriber ;-)
hey mate thanks for subscribing and watching
That swarf collector is the greatest tool I saw on here for keeping my garage cleaner easier! So good
“Extremely sharp and terrifying tinsel!” - classic.
Really enjoyed the on-site intro as well. It’s fun to get the scale of some of these machines.
Shame you couldn’t tolerate a little bevel on the closing end corners and do the boring and beveling on a lathe. I have to say I was amazed how well that wonky 45 degree setup worked. :)
Any particular reason you couldn’t just run an 8mm end-mill to make the slots? Slower I’d imagine, but with the changeover to horizontal and back, for four parts, one wonders.
hey mate thanks for watching good question. The stick out (flute length) of the end mill to cut slots is not as efficient
The introduction was nice. We know that you don't have a chance to bring the whole machine to the shop. But the chance to see what you have made will be used for was great.
Enjoyed the vid ! Love watching the milling machine projects , it’s a big barsted of a mill ..👍 top stuff
Thanks for watching
Curtis, your a Class Act Mate! Love watching someone that has So Much Pride in their Work! Nice Job!
me encantan los trabajos de este hombre ..lo hace que sean faciles ..genial .
Your milling machine is SWEET. I wish I had a toy like that to play with 50 years ago.
Me encantaría saber manejar todas esas máquinas que tienes, perfecto trabajo, gracias por enseñarnos.
Never seen a horizontal mill attachment for a bridge port style machine. that is pretty cool.
Thanks for the detailed explanation of where the parts are and their function, very informative and appreciated. Been meaning to ask for a long time - what cutting fluid do you use for your drills? Homey sure loves all the toys, I definitely would NOT want him latching onto my leg (or any other body part)!
hey Fred i'm using rapid tap with the drilling. Homey's pig did not last very long!
I'm guessing that I squeeky bit got removed before it drove k&k batty.
Thank you for showing the machine "in the wild" was very insightful and helped a ton to understand what exactly you are manufacturing
Awesome glad you enjoyed it thanks for watching
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering Thank you for these educating and enjoyable videos!
Great to see the part on the machine before we start the machining process.Brilliant.
Great video work. You could even hear the ping at 27:33 as the machining stresses suddenly released.
Question please: How come the large diameter drill didn't try and walk as it exposed half its' diameter when drilling air in the clamp hole, especially as it was sharper on the one flute?
Because the drill bit is scared of what Kurtis would do to it if it wandered off course!
That was one heck of a slit to do with a milling cutter! It did a nice job of it, though. Loved seeing all of the machining, and also really appreciated the on-site views of the machine. Cudos to the machine owner for letting you show it to us. Loved the video as always. The sound is almost studio quality, too. All-in-all, a great treat for a Friday. Wishing you all a pleasant weekend.
This is why you need to get your CNC up and running. At least 3/4 of the work you needed to do on these can be automated, allowing you to do other things. And if these are a common item for you, it just amplifies the reason you need it. Don't worry that you can't tilt the head on the CNC; a bull nose cutter head using round inserts will cut the weld prep bevels, as well as rough out the bores for the pins as well. These can be done completely in the CNC with the correct tooling, and with almost the same fixturing you just used.
Yeah just great! CNC does everything...........but who programs the CNC? Personally I'd rather spend time actually machining that sitting in a stuffy office fart arsing around with a bloody computer!
It can be done, but all the setup for handful of those parts a year. CNC repeatability is more of an serial production thing.
He could make them in advance once set up, but who wants to carry stock nowdays?
Beethoven had his critics too . . . . . .
@@goodiezgrigis Actually Kurtis mentioned that he had the basic blanks in stock in his container, so he must make a few per year.
@@goodiezgrigis I work for a small shop where we program stuff like this all the time, ON THE FLOOR, at the control. And as for machining stock ahead, why??? As long as he has the setup details and the program, he can just order the material as needed and machine the parts when called for.
Two things I enjoyed about this video, the happy butt four legged supervisor, makes me miss my staffy, and the fact you explain everything but without going into the unnecessary things.
5 minutes online and 30 comments.....the work and entertainment speaks for itself though
We reckon we have the best community on the tube 😎👊
Your dog is like mine, He loves to get gifts in a bag. Thank You for the videos on your work, You have given me a lot of tips too on how to do something.
Hot damn! I’m early again!
Good to see your comment mate 😎👊
I was a day early.thought yesterday was Friday. Got pissed as a mute sitting waiting for the vid last night.🤣🤣🤣🤣
Curtis, having studied the female component of the species for nigh onto 80 years, be advised that Karen is what is known as "a Keeper". You are one lucky man. Keep your Man Card up to date, do lot's of anniversaries, birthdays, and no reason days to take her out and wine and dine her. Heck, sometimes a Happy Meal as a surprise can turn into a romantic dinner date.