Hydraulic Press Channel Workshop Tour! All the Machines!
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- Опубликовано: 1 окт 2024
- Here it is update and better made workshop tour of our workshop. This is our family business workshop where we do lot of customer work and most of the RUclips stuff happens now days in my filming workshop. But we still film all the 150 ton press videos here and machine all the parts for other projects.
Here is link to Finnish version • Hydraulic Press Channe...
Here is link to playlist with all the workshop videos mentioned on this video • Workshop videos
Here is link to our new Finnish channel with the Finnish version of this video ruclips.net/video/1nWtG5rUzDg/видео.html
I try to get couple videos per month there on Finnish language and maybe even English subtitles if somebody has time to do those :D
Do you use sandvik coromant tooling for the mill and lathes?
Quite much. We have also some other brands on use but lot of Sandvik also
Subtitles would be great! I can learn Vouhensilta dialect of Finnish then.
@@Beyondthepress Nice, doing quite a bit of CNC-ing in my spare time on a converted manual mill and have gotten a Dekel 15k rpm head with watercooling and power supply for it and thinking of getting Sandvik tools when it's installed but unsure if it's worth the investment.
Great! I'm gonna use it for practice!
Today is my first Finnish lesson and I'm exited!
"If it's not like too broken, don't fix it!"
lmao, new take on the old saying.
Words to live by.
My new favorite final statement!
I need that on a sticker for my Car...
gonna take that advice.
How about a video showing a normal day at the shop? Just what you do for a normal day to day paycheck. Like please and something.
Yeah I want to see that too. A workshop without anyone working is like a museum.
Normal day to day paycheck is RUclips. They make more money off RUclips
@@Ckcdillpickle They've had some of those machines longer than RUclips has been around. He's obviously a professional machinist. YT might pay better now but I'm sure he still keeps busy with client jobs.
@@MattBlank0 I wouldn't doubt hes a machinist. he just makes more money off youtube than he ever will from being a machinist
I would also like to see a work day
"If it's not too broken, don't fix it" -Finnish proverb.
And if it broke but still runs dont fix it
@@chrimony "It's already fucked, so you ain't gonna fuck it any further" - AvE
@@chrimony I think it goes, "gotta keep fixing it 'til it's broke" - worth at least seven point five Canuckistan Pesos.
Ah Ave the smartest skookum opener out there
When trying to fix a minor malfunction, you can invariably cause a major malfunction. 😱
I'm a bit envious. Growing up on a farm, we never had enough machining work to justify having proper metal working machines. Anytime we needed a piece turned, I'd chuck it up in the power drill, hold a file against it, and hope it didn't fly off and hit me in the face.
Big brain time farm
"This is the small milling machine/lathe." Dude, they are the size of my bed. You could fit normal sized machines inside your "small" machines with room to spare.
Also, neat video showing where you work. If you ever want to do videos showing some of your machining work I'd definitely be interested. It's cool to watch the professionals at work.
Never seen a lathe before?
Never seen a proper "bed" before? X'D
Our small lathe swings 72" over the carriage, 31' between centers. Our small planer mill has a 30' table.
I used to be an apprentice in a milling machine that was the size of a small room. Maybe about 5x5 meters wide inside.
Super cool little thing. Problem is that the height of the inside was only about 1.5 meters.
So after many fun days of learning how to use it, they told me to go in and clean it... Problem is that one of the process steps used a big saw to cut several deep groves into the material, so it had aluminium wool all over.
So a days was spent hunched over, coolant dripping on my head and my feet soaked. Stood there cleaning metal shavings and aluminium wool out of the machine with my hands, a small hook to get into tight spaces and a hose of coolant to wash everything down to the screws that extract the scrap.
Always expect these kind of tasks when you're new or an apprentice from a school etc.
this is the most "workshop" workshop ive ever seen
Exactly, this a real workshop. Not a factory.
It looks like you have enough machinery to build a tank from scratch.
Those Russian machines look like they have already made tank parts.
I'd guess the foundry / forging / heavy plate fab sections are missing, but now I'm going to be searching for tank building videos XD
Who tells you they haven't already?
The T-SHIRT 5 000 000 is *vastly* superior to the T-SHIRT 5000. I strongly recommend it.
Truth.
"This is our small milling machine" - and shows a machine with a size of a parking lot for semi-trucks... That's my humor.
it is really not that big
6:53 If material is too long just make another new hole in the workshop wall again 😅
Also spinning Anni.
Aarpora - pretty much a horizontal milling/boring machine.
Yes, also known as an arbor mill
@@cambridgemart2075 Thanks man! I wasn't sure whether the Finnish name is a loanword/puhekieli name. I was in two minds about arbor mill since most mills are pretty much that anyway. If it were aarporakone ("arbor machine" maybe) then I'd have that confidence, "pora" being drill/bore. One of those edge cases where the word seems to work either way equally. How weird.
Or a horizontal boring mill as they are known up here in Canukistan😁
@@DanielSmith-uy3yg "Traitement spécial"
Most boring of the machines they have there...Badumm
Here I thought you just had a small shop where you just did some minor work.
I'm really impressed with all this.
The difference between the binary and analogue worlds:
- If it's not broken, don't fix it
- If it's not too broken, don't fix it.
Fuzzy logic.
Well, it's broken, but it still works fine.
There are 10 types of people.
Those who understand binary,
And those who don't.
😝
Does it move? Yes. Should it? No. Then use duct tape.
Does it move? No. Should it? Yes. Then use WD-40.
All other cases are not a problem, so I guess you're right. It's binary.
Lauri, there are two sides of the shop.
1) The Inside
2) The Outside
👍😊
Yeh! That's not a lathe, this is a lathe... Take that Adam Booth!
Thanks for the tour, that was a lot of big heavy machinery,
So like you know, you two gotta do the "slo-mo-walking-through-the-factory-with-sparks-flying-in-the-background-towards-the-camera" now.
Its a machine shop. If sparks are flying then they do not know what the hell they are doing. Or the power panel is blowing.
'Stick welder', we call it stick welding, because we're very imaginative with our language.
"Shielded metal arc welding" is the official name. We call it electrode welding.
Arc welding. And TIG was once called heliarc.
Just like how other countries call it "Autumn" but here in merika, we call it "Fall" because leaf fall down :D
Of course "Autumn" is still the best way.
@@simontay4851 Yeah but people look at you like a fairy when you say Autumn.
In Sweden we had an old cartoon called ”Ville” by Jan Lööf. I was reading it as a child. Your workshop really reminds me of his drawings. Both are fantastic by the way.
Love the T-shirt 5,000,000; best tool of the whole shop. 😎
I’d totally wear the T-shirt 5000000, but nobody would understand it😫
It would be an opportunity to introduce many others to these channels. 👍
It would be nice to see some of your machining - I love the shop tour, but the shop "in action" would be really nice!
US English for the big Sacem mill is HBM - horizontal boring mill.
This is distinct from a horizontal milling machine in that the HBM has a quill (Z axis) that travels in and out. Also, on a HBM the spindle travels up and down, whereas on a horizontal mill the table travels up and down.
Unless we’re talking about a HMC - horizontal machining center, the CNC version of a horizontal milling machine, where the spindle does move up and down. No quill though.
Would it be the same as a bar machine? I get them all confused.
"We destroued a window with playdough"
Flythrough*
Smashinator Shrapnel. 😱
Are kiding me, that smaller milling machine is from my country made by tos kuřim in czechoslovakia.
Wow truly unbelivable. AMAZING WOWOWOWOWOW OMG
We have a tos cssr slotting machine that like 3 times my age
One of the scarier machines we have at our workshop no doubts about that one
Its called a stick welder in English because when it sticks, you’ve got to yank and wiggle the bastard to get it un-stuck xD
when you have the stick and hand weld it in america we just call it stick welding lol were primitive buddy.
Manual Metal Arc Welding, but only on sundays
07:00 "If you have like seven meters long....thing..it's it's..it's pretty long and it's really hard to get in"
Aaand that's what she said.
2:34 did he just pronounce "hydraulic" the way I heard?
this whole channel is a lie
4:00 Horizontal Boring Mill
In Germany we call this big milling mashines "Bohrwerk"
Yep, but you call visible timber frame "fachwerk" and thus just confuse the whole werkstatt :)
And i think that's wunderschön
I think the english for that one is a boring mill
@15:45 I learned the Finnish word for wardrobe charge. But it must be a rather ancient sign. Why do you have that in the shop?
Maybe for similar reasons why we had the No Way Out poster glued to the door of the projection booth in the cinema I started my career in.
Hey Lauri and Anni! Just got the greatest idea for more views. This time of year many people do apple juice. Could you make apple juise press 5 million with 150 t force?! How much juice could be extracted from lets say 10 kg of apples?
Excellent equipment Timo and Lauri, impressive you have retrofitted CNC control, I assume the leadscrews were changed to ball screws?.
Russian machinery is very good, sometimes the quality of materials was poor upto the 1980's due to availability, same for other eastern European, excellent engineering, but materials were difficult to obtain.
Thanks for sharing.
I love it. This video took me right back to the mid 1990s when I worked as a journeyman machinist. I worked in a shop that has an old Mazak lathe pretty much like that one. I also worked for a company that had a horizontal boring machine similar to the one you showed. Only the one I ran had a turntable on it that was big enough for a modern American pickup truck. I think the turntable was around 6 meters (20ft) in diameter. At that company I primarily programmed and ran a 4 axis horizontal mill with a 24 slot tool changer. I got out of the manufacturing business in 2001 and went into Telecommunications. Sometimes I miss that kind of work. Thanks for bringing back some good memories with this video.
i don´t know the english word for the "big milling machine" either, but in German this is called a "Bohrwerk"
Plot twist....do you need a giant lathe, to make a giant lathe?
6:50 Hi, Anni!! 👋
Good video! Nice workplace!
I am reading a book right now about sheet metal forming with a press: dies their construction and use. It is downloadable for free: archive.org/details/diestheirconstru00woodrich/page/n6
There are more good (old) books about metal working on that site. The waybackmachine is also a cool feature on the main page. You can check out websites how they were in the past.
Greetings,
Jeff
Thanks for the updated shop tour Lauri. 👍
Another "Clueless Machinist" video coming any time soon? Moi Anni.👋
Metal worker's porn. Impressive. Love it all. Thanx for the tour.
You should put some loose clothes on a foam manikin and have it get stuck in the big lathe, show what can happen if you dont respect the machines.
Loose clothing.
Jewelry.
Long hair.
(No worry on that one for Lauri.)😊👍
Time for some AvE stickers
I likely was one of the few that have watched both videos...
"If it's not *too* broken, don't fix it".
Excellent video.
6:50 Anni doesn't care at all and is sick of this shit!! Plus, you had to edit in her saying "Thanks for watching" from a different video. Haha!
You need to make "Electric lathe channel". Can you roast a pig on 500rpm :)
i'm machinist, hello from Québec
My favorite province
The majority of RUclipsrs don't rely on revenue from the platform and it's nice when you get to show your audience behind the scenes moments because it helps them to understand that there is real work being done and how the real money is made. Very few RUclipsrs get to rely on just revenue from the platform. Even less so nowadays.
Nice that you have Heidenhain Controls on the mills 👍
Hi Guys , I'm a mechanical engineer from UK...the machine you call a 'milling machine' we would call a 'horizontal borer' here; but both names are correct of course. Love your videos and quests, keep up great work !!
6:52 LOL on Anni spinning chair in the background
I would love to see some large scale turning and milling!!! Next time you have a job bring out the camera! Thanks for the video!
I see press channel video, I hit like.
The long stick for welding is called stick welding or arc welding in English.
"If it's not too broken, don't fix it." lol
I like how the big lathe in the machine shop class I was in is about the same size or smaller than his "small lathe." I guess if you have a lathe that can hold an 8 x 2 m piece of steel that really does look like a small lathe in comparison.
There is no way it can spin 8*2m steel part. Those are just max. dimensions.
Nice I’ve been a Machinist for 18 years. Love seeing another’s shop!
Hey guys, is the giant shredder / mixer project cancelled ?
nice to be rich
Lauri, I have often wondered what kind of material is the hydraulic press table made of? All the pressure that is applied to it and it never bends or warps. Also, why is it in 2 pieces?
Thanks for the tour. It’s the kind of place I would like to work at. 👍
i know it's not me you asked, but the table is made of steel. it does flex under pressure in elastic deformation, that's why stuff pops/jumps up sometimes when it gets crushed - the energy stored in the table is released. if you need to press something out like a bearing in the middle of a wheel you can pull the two pieces apart to make a gap allowing the bearing to drop out
clive ramsbotty thank you so much, Clive. I have wondered about it for some time but your explanation makes total sense to me. I will view future hydraulic press videos with much more understanding. 👍
@@DaveBowman345 no worries dave, i'm glad that the small amount of knowledge i had was useful to someone!
Two sides of the shop...🤔
One side for roughing out parts...👍
The other side for Finnish goods.😏😜😁😎
Welcome to the milling machine channel! today we will see how a can of beans will hold up against 40mm drill bit!
The big French milling machine is called a horizontal boring mill. I wonder how long it took to convert it to the Heidenhain control? I know you have engineering guys there who specialise in such conversions.
BTW with that new control you could interface a D'Andrea U'Tronic head to it.
Nice I like VERY MUCH
This is heaven
Wow, now that's some industrial-grade machining equipment! Just handing the parts must be a skilled task, let alone working them!
I love the welders hanging down, people are very creative building their little trolleys, but having it off the floor is great - and so much easier to get to the settings, change wire etc.
4:11 boring mill
How many square metres or square feet is your shop in total?
Yes good
Awesome video, the wedding machine I use at work, uses 1.6mm wire and the smaller one is 0.9mm, love tig welding, arc welding with the rods is fun 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🦘🦘🦘🦘
The cover for the balancing machine should be a rollover cover so you can run large diameter wheels which won't fit under the cover.
Any video of that huge milling machine in action?
At @10:30
You talking about your Turning machine.
I did my apprenticeship on a VDF from the mid 60ties in 2001.
It's also completly in my muscle memory.
If i need to do a bearing seat i know where and how much i have to rotate the x axis while tuning to get a even and parallel diameter.
Also we had big machinery.
Since i started work every other machine is looking tiny.
We have a Drilling machine wich would doo 100mm diameter holes in one go with out pre drilling.
I like your workshop very much ...!!!
I would feel at home there.
The big mill is a boring mill. If you want to get real technical it is a horizontal boring mill, but most people assume horizontal when you say boring mill. Sweet shop, id love to have one just like it!
The shop would be a USA OSHA inspector’s wet dream as the inspector could write HUNDREDS of totally useless safety regulation violation fine tickets
All you need now is casting and forging and you'll be able to build your own tank.
Oh don't give him any ideas please, otherwise the radius of his mushroom clouds gets much bigger!
The Big NC horizontal-mill is bigger than "Abom79" size ^^ #Abom79
Awesome video.
You could build some fun stuff there, heck build a car.
. 😊😊😊
Why do i feel he made my summer car
These big industrial machines are very impressive,but I bet you do not have a 5.5 mm wrench!.
Please do more workshop videos. Some real project would be great, something like that plastic hydraulic cylinder,
That is the biggest lathe I've seen owned by a private individual or small company. I've only ever seen large lathes like that in giant industrial manufacturing floors. Pretty awesome thing to have access to!
I somehow see my Finnish made Sako a7 being made in a shop like this but I know it’s rather different comparing a factory to a shop. I love seeing shops like this. It reminds me of many of the northern machine shops here in Canada. I had the chance to work for a defence contractor that had a horizontal milling machine that had a bed the size of half a soccer field. And a lathe that was roughly the size of a school bus! No one ever got hurt on those machines thankfully:)
I used to work in a machine shop here in Sweden. Used manual lathe, mill and arborr. Fun to work with manual machinery.
Aahhhh.... I could almost smell the oil, cutting fluid, coolant and honest hard work.
Interesting also for me to see you use diesel forklifts. That must be the biggest difference between USA and Europe. We're so used to use propane for big indoor lifts. Smells a little nicer.
Thank you! Great video. Could watch THIS stuff for hours. (Hey, live stream from the shop. Just weld a camera or two to the roof and go. "Shop stream 5 million")
Definitely, this is one of my Top-5,000,000 favorite videos 😉
(Moi Anni. Be careful spinning on that chair in the shop)
Candyland for Abom79, AvE and This Old Tony...
Funny how he has more equipment than all of them combined but he just makes vijaos about crushing and blowing stuff up.
Maybe this seems boring to him as it's his everyday job...
Kiitos! Which side of the shop has the most Timo holes in the wall... small side or large side ?
small it's next to the drill sharppener :D
@@Beyondthepress but the biggest hole was in the roof to lower the large milling machine. 👍
Would you like to have a machinist helper for a little while from the UK? I would love to work in this environment again. I have my own Bridgeport mill and a similar sized lathe at home. My first ever job was using large machines when I left college. Including Herbert large mil. Dean Smith and Grace large lathes, We had one Okuma lathe, A Huge Stirk Planer/shaper and vertical and horizontal boring centres. One new Horizontal borer from TOS came from CZ.
What kind of products do you make in the shop besides awesome videos?
Garderobsavgift 1 :-... where did that door come from? "Coat checking 1 (whatever the currency at the time)" for the English speakers.
Those Sandvik silent tools are really worth the money for large milling machine.
Respect. My dad was a tool and die maker.
I have a lot of tools from the 40’s that I don’t know what they do.
Jim, the old war year tools were TOP quality. Here in Australia they are now quite rare. As a Fitter and Machinist I am always on the lookout for them but unlike in America they never seem to come up for sale. There are plenty of channels on here that have a lot explained...eg abom79.....keith rucker...tubal caine etc. Cheers from Down Under.
Jim, if there is no one in your family into machining You possibly should find someone who is and can at least sort through them.
One of the dreadful things, to my mind, is that precious tools get tossed and lost just because someone with the problem of deciding what to do with them has no idea of their value or use.
Some of those tools your father made himself, that is the nature of tool makers.
Think about what will happen....
I recognised your radial drill because Keith Rucker has one too.
loving your shop.....best wishes from USA....Paul
A much bigger operation than I imagined. National or private company? How many people work there? Is this left over from world war 2? Not many words to look at except on the big doors, but Finnish words seem long, with double vowels like AA. I can almost smell the cutting oil.
They are not the same videos. One is in english and the other is in finnish!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Very nice video. This is the kind of unique and interesting content that you can only find on youtube. Thanks!