Restoration Of Old 4 Sided Milling Machine | The Test Run
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- Опубликовано: 11 июл 2024
- - Finally We Can Test The Old And Restored 4-Sided Wood Milling Machine.
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Welcome To Survival-Russia. One of the very best Outdoors and Survival related communities on RUclips, and yes, It's a pretty good Channel too.
My name is Lars. I'm From Denmark but I live in Rural Russia now. I live at a Homestead in wild nature surrounded by a huge forest.
On The Survival-Russia channel we do all things related to the Outdoors Lifestyle. I share my thoughts and experiences on Survival Techniques for the woodlands of the Northern Hemisphere. the Reality of Survival. I share Techniques and ways of the Siberian Tribesmen and the Russian Longhunters of the older days. Things not shown outside of Russia very much.
On this Channel we also do Off-Road driving, Vehicle builds, Metal Detecting, all things Outdoors basically. Enjoy!
#Tools #DIY
We call them tongue and groove boards, very useful for flooring and walls where a tight fit is needed.
Det hedder fer og not.
Feder and not 😉
Norsk planker
Very impressed that you got that machine up and running. I really like these house build/daily life kind of videos.
I love to see old tools being restored and used again. I'm not sure if it's like this in Russia but in the U.S. a lot of these "old" tools are of superior quality as compared to their modern counterpart and sometimes they don't even make an older tool anymore making finds like yours priceless.
Soviet tools are ugly, but sort of eternal. I'm still using my grandpa's hammer which is older than me for a few years.
@@olekscap4620 I'm not quite sure why the Soviets, in my opinion, built such ugly things. I'm not as familiar with the tools but I've seen architecture and I'm not a fan.
@@The5As7 Le Corbusier - that's the answer. As for blockhouses - that was the cheapest solution to the housing problem. Millions of people lived in the dug-outs after the WW2 because all European part of the USSR was burned to the ground. My relatives too - my mom was about 7 years old when the family finally moved into the house.
@@olekscap4620 I totally understand that and we currently have our own form of the in the States, they are called The Projects and they exist in liberal cities and are as sad as they are dangerous. Also Necessity is the mother of all invention that's why pioneers on the prairie made sod houses which sounds like your "dug outs".
I heard it described once as the old Soviet concept of reliability was that something was easy to repair quickly. So you get lots of assemblies that seem clunky and overwrought, but they're bunches of easy to produce parts so if one cracks/breaks it's almost trivial to repair the part. A "western" tool might weigh 10 pounds and run seemingly forever thanks to expensive bearings and tight tolerances, but it's all held together in a custom alloy casting so if it does break, you're hosed... equivalent old Soviet would weigh 25 pounds and breaks down every several dozen hours but it's 5 minutes to shove another off the shelf ball bearing behind a plate, or if the plate cracks you can just grind and weld it and make sure it's reasonably flat (in other words, 'Gudenov').
It's always a treat to see old machines come back to life. Something sad about old broken down gear just rotting away.
That machine sounds good. The cut just sizzles, no strain or bind. Your friend is an excellent millwright and has set those cutters up proper. Beautiful boards.
Narrow guage tracks I see outside? Maybe a bit more of them but don't bore everyone else.
Your house is going to be beautiful and something you can be proud of for sure. Definitely a family heirloom.
Stay safe
Cheers
Terry
Tounge and groove planks You lucky men. Thank you Lars . That machine is worth a small fortune.
Tongue an Groove same as used on wood flooring..
👍
English translation " Tonge and Groove". Well done fellows.
Play safe from Elliot Lake, Ontario, Canada.
My 70-year-old oak floors are 3/8ths thick. What you are crafting will last untold hundreds.
Tongue and Groove is what you are planing
NICELY DONE TONGUE AND GROOVE FLOORING!
Hello from Western Canada. It is so nice to get your updates. Cheers!
Considering you guys used a screw for the feeler gauge to measure the blades that machine is awesome. Thanks for sharing Lars
Really enjoying your building videos, using old craftsmanship is making this build just that much more enjoyable. Nice work Lar's.
Tongue & groove, nice job
доброго вечера Ларс! У меня отец работал в столярном цехе в 80 годах вспоминаю детство этот запах дерева когда маленький с старшим братом приносили ему обед) Но освещение нужно улучшить в цеху!!!
Это особый запах))) Конечно, мы улучшим освещение.
Hey Lars, if you can make a run off table for the finished planks, that will be a great solution. Rollers only work if you have a "bed" of them...if you have, rollers are great. Individual, portable rollers, not so much.
The lights must all go dim in the whole village when you turn that monster on.
I love your shop, my nebor had a wood working shop just like your, I was there everyday sheet school.
Nice job getting it up and running.
I hope you restore the entire workshop and get to keep using it ..
Thank you , Lars .
🐺
Hello from Detroit Michigan USA brother great video thank you for sharing your knowledge and expertise and thank you for taking us on your adventure
Lars! Way to go. Tongue and groove flooring is great looking. I hope you sand it after the floor is laid, otherwise the ninjas will be getting splinters in their feet! HA HA
best series ever ! talk about doing something awesome. you are doing it and what better than a roof over your families head ! thanks for all you do and show Lars. yall keep up the good work !
Tongue and groove boards Lars. All credit for efforts.
The yellow machine beside the 4 sided planer is a jointer. It should be used to make sure the edges are perfectly straight before the board is fed through the 4 sided planer. If the edges of the boards aren't straight there will be a gap when the boards are joined.
It would be great to put a skylight in the building so you could get some natural "free" light in there. Great work with the machinery and your efforts so far! Most impressive!
In two months, show us the grocery store supply.
It makes noise and chips and nobody lost any digits so I'd say success!
I agree Will :)
masking tape tricks are worth learning.
Perfect! The "Home Sweet Home" project is moving along in grand style.
This new house will be outstanding and a great source of personal accomplishment!
Best Wishes Lars! 🤠
Well done Lars. By the time you and your buddy do the final tweets on the lathe you will be able to turn out a very fine result.
Years since i did real wood work i miss the smell of the wood. These days i just do welding and arc air gouging.
well done,middle aged men can do anything..thank you
Maybe add some flex pipe, stove pipe or similar to redirect all the wood chips.
Great work on getting that machine back up and running again 👍 nice snug fit too.
Wow that cuts really fast. There are hand tools for tongue and groove , and router bits, but they are a lot slower.
Setting up milling machines is a big part of the production process alright!
Tongue and groove or "ship lap" that's what we call it here in the US.
That is a awesome machine. Nice job getting it up and running.
That's called tong and groove in English 👍👍
I like to see old unused machinery brought back to useful life
Now that is a cool milling machine. You wouldn't believe how much tongue and groove boards are selling for here right now. Sticker shock! That will be one solid floor after you get it installed. Kudo's to you two.
Wow very impressive Lars. Glad to see the milling machine has come back to life. Once the feed rolls and tables are in place you will have some nice looking material for that house of yours.....cheers Fred
a very exciting project
SUCCESS STORY!
Those tight joints will help keep the family warmer! Great job as always Lars.
Teeth are looking much better as well 😀
Hi lars, good tool to have, well worth the time and effort fixing it up, will last for years, 👍✊
Great job Lars, that seemed to work a treat!
Thanks for posting.
Good engineering skills to get that machine back to working order making tongue and groove boards, nice one Lars and friend.
Great job Lars , looks good , thanks for sharing , God bless !
I love old woodworking machinery, n you got a helluva one
Neat to see old equipment being used again.
Most excellent! At some point Lars, you fellows need to put in a couple Russian fireplaces in there to heat the place!
Good job, look forward to seeing the machine 100%.
Awesome. Nice to see that these tools get back to life.
The pink Ninja’s kids will be able to use that machine one day.
That's a pretty awesome machine. Great work restoring it!
Nice work! It was fun to watch, but please wear protective glasses!
Great to see that mill working!
Tung and groove is what that cut is called here in the northwest of the US.. But could have a different name in other parts of the US.. Damn nice toy there Lars.. I would give anything to have a little shop like that.. Carry on my friend!
Toung and grove will very nice .
Lars, that is a good width of tongue and groove (T&G) board for that thickness of timber. The wider a tongue and groove floorboard is, the greater the potential for shrinkage which creates visible gaps. Those gaps fill up with dirt. Every time I work in a house with T&G boards cut from 150x25 timber, I see such shrinkage. I prefer to fit floorboards cut from 100x25 or 75x25 timber for regular domestic use. The heavy boards that you are machining are more typical of an old style warehouse and would appear to be ideal for a rural house where heavy footwear is essential for much of the year.
More good planning on your part. Keep up the good work. Nice to see the spindle moulder going.
You are an amazing guy, Lars!
I just spotted something extremely important... that topside plane, it's going to require, and I mean REQUIRE a runoff table. If the work tips down coming off the bed, you run the risk of digging the cutters in and sucking the board back into the machine with great force.
I said so myself at the endo f the video :)
@@SurvivalRussia Sorry, I was probably spinning thoughts by then. Give me too much to think about and I think about it too much :)
Hi Lars, well done to you both on getting that machine working again, and your right a long out feed table is a must have , to keep the boards level as they come out, if the cutters are HSS I think you'll find you have to sharpen regulary, especially whith old dirty timber, but I hope floorboard production realy speeds up now, stay safe guys, best wishe's to all, Stuart Uk.
I admire your vision and self-sufficiency...
Great video Lars, my old man just got a new Dewalt consumer type thickness planer, he replaced the old one which was 23 years old (same model) i'm ordering the parts to fix the old one. Unfortunately I have to use the old General jointer, than thickness planer, can't do it all at once which would be awesome. Working with nice gear makes a heck of a difference, here in north america we had a company called Beaver, and one called Rockwell. When I was a kid working in the lathe shop in highschool, my boss had some decent old gear from the forties and fifties, all made by Beaver, Rockwell, or Rockwell-Beaver, and a 14" radial armsaw from the 50's made by dewalt, they made good tools back then. Learned so much in that shop, I used to "eye" on that massive Beaver tablesaw, rough sawn lumber fresh out his kiln, three four inches, to get ready to square it. He made anything wood that could be turned on a lathe, we made 14 foot tall mohogany columns once, restored old columns from the local university. I learned more from that dude which is useful in my life than that whole year and a half of highschool. My old mans shop, small albeit, got all the tools, a bandsaw made by General that's taller than me, General jointer I gotta do some maintanence on soon for him, just need a good oldschool cast iron based four foot wide table saw.
Congratulations Lars! You guys did good.
Love that old machinery 👍🏴
Bravo, super machine!
Nice job Lar !
"Yeah, there is nothing more to say than to see how it goes." Something will blow up, or all hard work will pay off. Either way, it will be interesting! I love those times.
Stay safe out there, and happy hunting!
You are going to have a wonderful wood shop when you are done. Good friends get good results!!
Another great video 👍🏻👍🏻
Thank you. More videos like this please !
That is definitely going to make a nice, thick, durable floor when all is said and done.
Make sure you sweep up your saw dust. We wouldn't wan to start a fire....again.:)
Not that you need it but on a molder of course a input and output deck will help with a aligned tongue and groove but what is key is feeding the boards butt to butt will help eliminate variations
We have the decks. they are very needed :)
There seems to be a whole woodworking shop of machinery in this building.
Either the machine is missing the out guide rollers or it was built to push trough by the next board to keep things moving along.
It is industry grade, old time machine, robust and meant to eat wood all day long.
We have the rollers and run off tables too :)
@@SurvivalRussia then you are golden, you can build whole villages with that shop.
Nicely done!
Cool video, you are a hard working man. Thanks for uploading
Bravo,well done.You are an official lumberman.
Wow that's a very valuable tool. Nice live it!
I think you mean tounge and groove. That's what we use for flooding joinery.
Tongue and groove!
The milling looks better than 'government work' in my opinion.
Nice to refurbish & keep the machines running. Question why don’t you put lights in the ceiling?
Tounge and groove, what that is called in english.
a lot of floorboards, and for that matter, wall planks, are made that way.
Called Tongue and groove boards for flooring
I thought that was a planer at first...I guess it pays to watch before I comment...LOL
For a machine that was made on the spot and it's age - it is doing very well...
Nice planer. I'd love to get my hands on one like it
Awesome. Great job.
Excellent.
great looking tongue and grove boards they remind me of the ones that are in my house
Dang it man! That beast sounds turbine powered!
Good job!
.. Cheers to you ..
Better lighting…lost fingers are forever!