Gday Max, the new pinion gear worked out absolutely spot on, the further jobs look very interesting, that tractor is pretty sophisticated by the sounds of it mate🤔🤣, cheers
The shaft turned out really well. I did a similar hardening technique when trying to make a small gauge for an aerospace company. They were warping like crazy until I held it in my drill press and rotated it slowly while heating it. I even got so fancy as to have the cup of quenching oil on the table and dunked it in by feeding the quill down while still rotating. I was amazed at how much it reduced the distortion. By the way, I liked the subtle swipe. (You don't need $10,000 worth of Starrett granite but I do think you need to level it to within .00025"/mile). Ken
Thanks Max, I learn more from every video. I have 2 questions: 1) How did you suspend the shaft from the Mag Drill? Did you tap the center hole? 2) Found your answer to #2. Why no drive dog when grinding the shaft. I've done a couple of small heat treat jobs in my hobby shop; a one off metric transfer punch, and a threaded stem for a lantern toolpost. I also used my toaster oven to temper them. Ken
A 6mm tapped hole in the end of the shaft & a cup hook in the drill . I have a few rods with different threads that have a ring in the ends for the cup hook . 👍
Always an absolute delight watching your working methods Max, working with that old machinery, getting Stefan like precision, just amazing. The next project looks interesting too, tractor eh?😊 cheers from the UK, Dave
Nice clean heat treatment, even presence of mind to reposition the camera, great idea of vertical rotating part, i did see your R8 arbour videos, old fire extinguisher makes a great quench tank. Great job again Max.
Great vid dude congrats on the good finished gear with all those steps done right. Flame spray build up will be cool to see I've never heard of that before.
Excellent video, incredible results. I'm very interested to check out the tool post grinder videos you mentioned. I liked the trick of angling the tool post so that it would advance at only a fraction of the normal infeed.
Really looking forward to getting the Churchill grinder running , but that will be some time yet . Cheers 👍 Lol , ah it's Glen . Did not catch on at first !
Great work again Max. now time to finish the JFMT lathe and make first chips on it to see how it performs. The spray welding project looks interesting as well. Cheers
The least amount of Pig into the part…….uh can you translate into North American for a Yank learning Aussie? It’s a process to understand y’all sometimes 😂. Appreciate your generosity in sharing your knowledge of the “ old school “ way of building machine tool parts. Thanks Mate!
It’s important to get the piece into the tempering oven immediately after removing it from the hardening process. Sometimes people wait a couple of minutes, and that’s too much.
Nice work Max, reminded me of my first acquaintance with a lathe and grinder. An older mechanic used to put the grinder at an angle and dress the wheel to be parallel, Anyhow, it turned out nice and thanks for awakening some ancient memories.
hey mate, feel free to hit me up next time you have any heat treating to do. I've got a Paragon heat treating oven. more than welcome to pop one street over and use it if I'm around. I got it to heat treat some W302 as no shop would take there gear to the temp i needed.
Hi Max, you can remove warpage in a shaft with an oxy acetylene torch and no hammering or forcing. heating quickly very small spots to red and quench and mist with water. this is done between v-blocks and using a dial indicator. there are videos out there to show the process. Rich
Looking forward to seeing the apron on the JFMT back in action. Is that the last of the refurbishments for the JFMT lathe, or are there others? Those unobtainium 'tractor' parts look interesting 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Beautiful results Max, I've really enjoyed and learned from your TP grinding episodes 👍I need to venture down that path fairly soon. Practice parts first... Thanks for bringing us along... Cheers....ATB...
As near as I can tell, the mathematicians got really stuck years ago and came up with imaginary numbers to help them out with some problem solving. Now I can see no objection to using imaginary letters and words to solve crossword puzzles, or you, as a excellent machinist and artist to having an imaginary Starrrett inspection bench underneath that cloth. Easy-peasy. Just be careful to not drop anything heavy on it. Cheers and another great video, thanks Max.
Fascinating and instructive - as always. When you said " just clean up the centres", is this just a polish with a bit of emery cloth, or is it more involved?. I'm curious as the grinding world seems to be in the realms of 'tenths'.
This time , it was a quick clean with emery . Sometimes a centre drill or grinding stone is used . Most grinding machines are graduated in tenths & smaller or the metric equivalent . 1 thou on a grinder is a country mile . 👍
Max, you started off shewing the component driven by a dog to the catchplate, but the actual grinding was done without any visible means of rotation other than axial pressure on the live centre. Don't you need to be careful about stalling the rotation and getting an uneven grind, and/or overloading the live centre?
I did not have enough clearance with the drive dog . Stalling is no problem as the tool post grinder can only remove small amounts . The down side is that with extra tailstock pressure , tail stock adjustments may be required . As was the case . 👍
G'day Max. Excellent video with the Hardened gear. Did you use engine oil to quench the Hot Gear, or water. The machining turned out really well. Should run well when you do a refit
Is that a knucklehead up in the rafters in your intro? That's a hella nice surface finish for what looks like quite a coarse wheel? What rpm is it spinning? Don't know why exactly but I'm really pleased it came out so well. (even though your 12,000 miles away and outcome doesn't affect me, must be getting soft in my old age 😁) Is the 'tractor' kinda 'tracked vehicle' restoration with a large 'sticky out thing' on turntable? 😉
Thanks . Lol , the thing on the rafters is a 1957 farm implement ! Can not remember the wheel rpm , something around 4000 rpm . The wheels are rated for 5000 & i know it's well under that . Lol , the tractor has 2 wheels & a sticky out thing ! 👍
Very nice I love your videos. I do t get to comment much because I watch you on tv on roku but I have watched every video. What steel did you use for that? I’m not sure if you mentioned that. I wanna play with some heat treating. I haven’t done it yet. I’d love to see more of that insanely monstrous mill you have! Thanks for the videos
I have one . But from memory , it goes off the boil too quick and requires frequent dressing & results in slight wheel hop type marks on the finish . There are only 3 types available that are not a special order . The one i used in the video , the 9A60 & a silicon carbide one from Abrasiflex . Other suppliers do not keep bugger all in stock here so i have learned to get by with the limited options . Need to get the Churchill cylindrical grinder up & running ! 👍
Hi again. With the 9A wheel or most white wheels for this application dress the wheel face so that only 1/4 to 1/3 of the width touches the work. With too many grains touching there is a lot of puch back. BC
That sounds like a rather unique tractor someone is restoring there! Can I assume if you had a surface grinder you would have used that with the part spinning between centres on the surface grinder table? Just curious how the results or time taken for the job would fire (a question from a person without access currently to any metal lathe.milling machines). Thanks again Max Mark
I was too restricted for room , so pressure between centres was the best way . It does not take much to drive when grinding with a tool post grinder . 👍
Hi Max, nice job, when are you going to profile grind the gear teeth? Joking of course! Watched the Pakistanis molest a large DSG lathe the other day, felt sorry for the old girl. Interestingly they had 2 Webster & Bennet vertical borers same as the ones we had at the refinery.
Lol , i watch them as well ! I bet they have a list of back & foot injuries a mile long ! I often wonder , how many You Tube machinist's could survive in those environments with no mod con's ! 👍
I refuse to watch their videos. I figure if they have to sit barefoot on a dirt floor cross legged to work on machine parts, because they are too stupid to build a bench to work at and a stool to sit on them there’s little likelihood I’m going to learn anything worth knowing from watching the videos. 🙄🤷♂️😜😂
I know you have done this hardening thing a few times. Does this process end up with just a case harden or through hardened? Does the oven temper it or just stress relieve ? Do the gear teeth need grinding or not? Cheers Mate.
Pretty well through hardened . The low temperature temper helps prevent embittlement cracking but the part can not fall below 100 C from quenching to tempering . No need to grind the teeth , they were good . I can not do that process anyway . Cheers 👍
Hi Max, Was just wondering if the teeth were still running true as the shaft deformed. I have a nasty picture of you trying to re-mill those teeth at 50+ rockwell. lol
@@swanvalleymachineshop My grandfather was a blacksmith on plows buggies wooden wagons etc and he never either but I have seen knife makers argue about it ... Your heavy steels shouldn't suffer crystalization shocks or warping.
Gday Max, the new pinion gear worked out absolutely spot on, the further jobs look very interesting, that tractor is pretty sophisticated by the sounds of it mate🤔🤣, cheers
Quenching has always fascinated me. But the use of the faceplate in background was super cool. It's dangerous but fun with Max.
Thanks Matty . Lol , the tractor is very basic . I will try & get a picture ! 👍
The face plate was to act as a driving plate , but was too cramped for room . It also protects the cam lock spindle nose . 👍
I can’t believe your shop is getting full! This is the best machinist channel on RUclips.
It's full alright , just ally ways ! Thanks 👍
For sure.
The shaft turned out really well. I did a similar hardening technique when trying to make a small gauge for an aerospace company. They were warping like crazy until I held it in my drill press and rotated it slowly while heating it. I even got so fancy as to have the cup of quenching oil on the table and dunked it in by feeding the quill down while still rotating. I was amazed at how much it reduced the distortion. By the way, I liked the subtle swipe. (You don't need $10,000 worth of Starrett granite but I do think you need to level it to within .00025"/mile). Ken
Lol , a 10'' plate would make a great Bar in summer . Nice & cool to stop the beers getting warm ! 👍
Thanks Max, I learn more from every video. I have 2 questions:
1) How did you suspend the shaft from the Mag Drill? Did you tap the center hole?
2) Found your answer to #2. Why no drive dog when grinding the shaft.
I've done a couple of small heat treat jobs in my hobby shop; a one off metric transfer punch, and a threaded stem for a lantern toolpost. I also used my toaster oven to temper them.
Ken
A 6mm tapped hole in the end of the shaft & a cup hook in the drill . I have a few rods with different threads that have a ring in the ends for the cup hook . 👍
very good job max..thanks for your time my friend
Cheers . You are looking very busy in your shop these days . 👍
Looking good! Another project checked off the list. 👍
And the list just gets longer ! Cheers Tom 👍
Always an absolute delight watching your working methods Max, working with that old machinery, getting Stefan like precision, just amazing. The next project looks interesting too, tractor eh?😊 cheers from the UK, Dave
Thanks . I will try & get a picture of it ! 👍
Enjoyed…nice build
Thanks Chuck 👍
Wow another great video, thanks Max,
From kiwi land.
Cheers 👍
Love the work, Max. Cheers.
Thanks Rob . Cheers 👍
Love that toolpost grinder work...beauty!
The TPG is a gem ! 👍
You make it look easy Max. Well done once again. 👍🏻
Those are some interesting looking tractor parts my friend 😊
Thanks 👍
Nice clean heat treatment, even presence of mind to reposition the camera, great idea of vertical rotating part, i did see your R8 arbour videos, old fire extinguisher makes a great quench tank.
Great job again Max.
Thanks . The old fire ext is a gem ! 👍
Max, with regards to the “Tractor parts” I didn’t know you were a subcontractor for The Australian Armour & Artillery Museum. 😉👍🏴
On a smaller scale for a collector ! 👍
Thanks Max. Have a good one 👍🇦🇺
No worries 👍
Thanks for the vid Max. Camera work nice, clear and good focus control. Keep it up pls!
No worries 👍
Awesome stuff as always!! Like the proper (CAT ) bolt securing the grinder too !
Best regards
Paul
Thanks 👍
Great vid dude congrats on the good finished gear with all those steps done right. Flame spray build up will be cool to see I've never heard of that before.
Thanks 👍
Thx for a Great vid Max.
No worries . 👍
Superb workmanship Max
Cheers Chris
Thanks 👍
Excellent video, incredible results. I'm very interested to check out the tool post grinder videos you mentioned. I liked the trick of angling the tool post so that it would advance at only a fraction of the normal infeed.
No worries . The R8 Tooling videos are place to go ! Cheers 👍
great video series mate, you make grinding look easy, bet you cant wait to have the cylindrical grinder up and running !
Really looking forward to getting the Churchill grinder running , but that will be some time yet . Cheers 👍 Lol , ah it's Glen . Did not catch on at first !
Great work again Max. now time to finish the JFMT lathe and make first chips on it to see how it performs. The spray welding project looks interesting as well. Cheers
Thanks 👍
Nice job. ...and look at that shop !!
Thanks 👍
Hi Max, Top slide angle 5.8 degs, every thou on top slide dia is a tenths in feed cut.
Steve
Thanks . 👍
Thank you for sharing, Max.
No worries , Cheers 👍
Nicely done my friend
Thanks 👍
The least amount of Pig into the part…….uh can you translate into North American for a Yank learning Aussie? It’s a process to understand y’all sometimes 😂. Appreciate your generosity in sharing your knowledge of the “ old school “ way of building machine tool parts. Thanks Mate!
No worries , Cheers 👍👍👍
Great Job Max. I enjoyed learning about every step required to achieve these impeccable results. Cheers 👍👍😎👍👍
Thanks 👍
Thx Max always good to see what your working on. Hope we get to see the tractor turret assembly in action
Cheers 👍
It’s important to get the piece into the tempering oven immediately after removing it from the hardening process. Sometimes people wait a couple of minutes, and that’s too much.
Yes . It's not supposed to drop below 100 deg C . 👍
Nice work Max, reminded me of my first acquaintance with a lathe and grinder. An older mechanic used to put the grinder at an angle and dress the wheel to be parallel, Anyhow, it turned out nice and thanks for awakening some ancient memories.
Thanks . I have done that on occasions for clearance also . 👍
another good video max !
thanks for sharing.
cheers ben.
No worries 👍
Beatifull job !!
Thanks 👍
hey mate, feel free to hit me up next time you have any heat treating to do. I've got a Paragon heat treating oven. more than welcome to pop one street over and use it if I'm around. I got it to heat treat some W302 as no shop would take there gear to the temp i needed.
Hey , no worries . Will try & catch up when you are down next . 👍
Good work!
Thanks 👍
Really nice !
Thanks 👍
Well done Max
Cheers 👍
Great video max, came out great..
Thanks 👍
Excellent result Max It’s great to see a master at work 👍👍
Thanks 👍
Once again very nice and accurate work......Thanks for sharing
No . just the wire wheel clean up was all that was needed . It's a slow turning gear on a rack . 👍
Hi Max, you can remove warpage in a shaft with an oxy acetylene torch and no hammering or forcing. heating quickly very small spots to red and quench and mist with water. this is done between v-blocks and using a dial indicator. there are videos out there to show the process.
Rich
I would never do it with heat treated parts , you could start a crack . 👍
@@swanvalleymachineshopadditionally you damage the heat treatment.
Doing that to a hardened carbon steel part is a recipe for disaster.
Looking forward to seeing the apron on the JFMT back in action. Is that the last of the refurbishments for the JFMT lathe, or are there others? Those unobtainium 'tractor' parts look interesting 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Thanks . Not sure where i will stop on the JFMT yet . The Herron lathe will fill in when required . 👍
Very outstanding job all around. Couldn't ask for any better. . Good Job.
Thanks 👍
Beautiful results Max, I've really enjoyed and learned from your TP grinding episodes 👍I need to venture down that path fairly soon. Practice parts first... Thanks for bringing us along...
Cheers....ATB...
Thanks Dean . Once you get used to them , they are very handy . 👍
As near as I can tell, the mathematicians got really stuck years ago and came up with imaginary numbers to help them out with some problem solving. Now I can see no objection to using imaginary letters and words to solve crossword puzzles, or you, as a excellent machinist and artist to having an imaginary Starrrett inspection bench underneath that cloth. Easy-peasy. Just be careful to not drop anything heavy on it. Cheers and another great video, thanks Max.
Cheers 👍
Very informative. Thanks & Good onya
Cheers 👍
Fascinating and instructive - as always. When you said " just clean up the centres", is this just a polish with a bit of emery cloth, or is it more involved?. I'm curious as the grinding world seems to be in the realms of 'tenths'.
This time , it was a quick clean with emery . Sometimes a centre drill or grinding stone is used . Most grinding machines are graduated in tenths & smaller or the metric equivalent . 1 thou on a grinder is a country mile . 👍
Nice job Max. I thought you have a cylindrical grinder, when is that seeing the light of day.
I do . A Churchill 10 x 24 . There are a couple of my other machines that have priority over the grinding machines at the moment . 👍
Max, you started off shewing the component driven by a dog to the catchplate, but the actual grinding was done without any visible means of rotation other than axial pressure on the live centre. Don't you need to be careful about stalling the rotation and getting an uneven grind, and/or overloading the live centre?
I did not have enough clearance with the drive dog . Stalling is no problem as the tool post grinder can only remove small amounts . The down side is that with extra tailstock pressure , tail stock adjustments may be required . As was the case . 👍
G'day Max. Excellent video with the Hardened gear. Did you use engine oil to quench the Hot Gear, or water.
The machining turned out really well. Should run well when you do a refit
Old hydraulic oil , with a bit of engine oil in the mix ! 👍 Hey , sorry to hear about your latest events . Heard on the grape vine , it's a hard one .
Love this video as of all
Thanks 👍
Is that a knucklehead up in the rafters in your intro?
That's a hella nice surface finish for what looks like quite a coarse wheel?
What rpm is it spinning?
Don't know why exactly but I'm really pleased it came out so well. (even though your 12,000 miles away and outcome doesn't affect me, must be getting soft in my old age 😁)
Is the 'tractor' kinda 'tracked vehicle' restoration with a large 'sticky out thing' on turntable? 😉
Thanks . Lol , the thing on the rafters is a 1957 farm implement ! Can not remember the wheel rpm , something around 4000 rpm . The wheels are rated for 5000 & i know it's well under that . Lol , the tractor has 2 wheels & a sticky out thing ! 👍
Very nice I love your videos. I do t get to comment much because I watch you on tv on roku but I have watched every video. What steel did you use for that? I’m not sure if you mentioned that. I wanna play with some heat treating. I haven’t done it yet. I’d love to see more of that insanely monstrous mill you have! Thanks for the videos
I am pretty sure that steel was EN25 . 👍
Hi Max. On the harder work try a 9A 60 wheel. White alox will perform better. BC
I have one . But from memory , it goes off the boil too quick and requires frequent dressing & results in slight wheel hop type marks on the finish . There are only 3 types available that are not a special order . The one i used in the video , the 9A60 & a silicon carbide one from Abrasiflex . Other suppliers do not keep bugger all in stock here so i have learned to get by with the limited options . Need to get the Churchill cylindrical grinder up & running ! 👍
Hi again. I changed to Norton 38A 60 and got good results. The flarded cup wheels are heaps ahead.@@swanvalleymachineshop
Hi again. With the 9A wheel or most white wheels for this application dress the wheel face so that only 1/4 to 1/3 of the width touches the work. With too many grains touching there is a lot of puch back. BC
Nice vid Max. Where can you get one of the pointers that was snapped onto your micrometer barrel? Thanks
Not sure , i have never seen them sold separate . You might have to buy a knackered mic with one ! 👍
That sounds like a rather unique tractor someone is restoring there!
Can I assume if you had a surface grinder you would have used that with the part spinning between centres on the surface grinder table? Just curious how the results or time taken for the job would fire (a question from a person without access currently to any metal lathe.milling machines).
Thanks again Max
Mark
If my cylindrical grinder was running , i would have used it . Way quicker . 👍
Interesting video. Thanks. I didn’t see any drive dogs on the shaft while turning. Is the pressure from the tail stock enough from when grinding ?
I was too restricted for room , so pressure between centres was the best way . It does not take much to drive when grinding with a tool post grinder . 👍
Hi Max, nice job, when are you going to profile grind the gear teeth?
Joking of course!
Watched the Pakistanis molest a large DSG lathe the other day, felt sorry for the old girl.
Interestingly they had 2 Webster & Bennet vertical borers same as the ones we had at the refinery.
Lol , i watch them as well ! I bet they have a list of back & foot injuries a mile long ! I often wonder , how many You Tube machinist's could survive in those environments with no mod con's ! 👍
I refuse to watch their videos.
I figure if they have to sit barefoot on a dirt floor cross legged to work on machine parts, because they are too stupid to build a bench to work at and a stool to sit on them there’s little likelihood I’m going to learn anything worth knowing from watching the videos. 🙄🤷♂️😜😂
I suppose if you want to attractor you need smoothly running rollers. The old ones look far too knarly.
Lol , That's why they make Bundaberg Rum ! 👍
Grant what way oil do you use for your lathes. Do you run that same oil for your cross slide. Another great production like always.
68 hydraulic oil . Same oil for the ways , but with a stick slip additive . 👍
Thank you @@swanvalleymachineshop
I think it's time for me to find a toolpost grinder...
A man of your imagination Rusty , i am sure you will be able to build one . 👍
With all the trickling coolant, i wonder how many times machinists use the urinal in a day, hahaha.
Lol , i have a lemon tree near the door ! 👍
Great video, the grinding wheel GW2160 A46MV ?
I used to use that wheel , but went up to the 100mm GW2201 60MV . I found it gave better results . 👍
👍
Cheers 👍👍👍
I know you have done this hardening thing a few times. Does this process end up with just a case harden or through hardened? Does the oven temper it or just stress relieve ? Do the gear teeth need grinding or not? Cheers Mate.
Pretty well through hardened . The low temperature temper helps prevent embittlement cracking but the part can not fall below 100 C from quenching to tempering . No need to grind the teeth , they were good . I can not do that process anyway . Cheers 👍
Do you have to do anything to the teeth?
Nice job!
No , just the wire wheel clean up will be good . 👍
Hi Max, Was just wondering if the teeth were still running true as the shaft deformed. I have a nasty picture of you trying to re-mill those teeth at 50+ rockwell. lol
It would be so minimal . Not enough to have any effect on the operation . 👍
Yep I knew that. Cant remember what state the racks were in, Are they usable or are we in for more fun and games?.
@@1ginner1 Lol , undecided yet ! 👍
It looks as if you are in big trouble, it is nearing December 25 and you do not have your wife’s Christmas gift ready for wrapping and delivery.
Your not wrong there ! I will get her a couple of bottles of Bubbles , so she doesn't notice ! 👍
Max, do you preheat your quenching fluid before you start the heat of the part?
I have on occasions but not usually . With such an uncontrolled method of heat treating , i have found little difference in pre heating the oil . 👍
@@swanvalleymachineshop My grandfather was a blacksmith on plows buggies wooden wagons etc and he never either but I have seen knife makers argue about it ... Your heavy steels shouldn't suffer crystalization shocks or warping.
@@clydedecker765 It's a point that can be discussed either way & also as the oil temp rises with quenching multiple parts .
Great grinding work! Really enjoyed the process. Thanks!
No worries 👍