That's just people that never did any real CNC Machining. All the manual machining I did in the trade school, and at the beginning of my career is just an icing on the cake.
@@dimitrismitalakis2803 This brand makes heavy duty machines, só I think either it already comes with or is designed to accept another chuck on the back, since it'll be used to handle very long parts.
Good Job keeping it concentric, a skill not many machinists have. To visualize the part and its stress relieving movements. To adjust cuts in just the right places and plan ahead for this takes experience that is priceless. Machinists are underappreciated and under paid.
I just got around to watching this, Chris. I took some notes, although I will never be in a position to do this work. I find your skill and expertise so fascinating that I often watch your videos more than once. Thanks very much.
My Dad was a MACHINIST from 1946 to 1995, he loved being a MACHINIST! I guarantee he would give you the best compliment, saying that man IS A MASTER MACHINIST!😎👍
1946~1995, that's when machinists were real machinists. I started trade school in 1990, all manual machines ,so at least I got some taste of a good old times
Pełna profeska, obejrzałem do końca. W pracy się na pewno nie nudzisz przy takich robotach :P Ten uchwyt z tyłu robi robotę jak i sam operator oczywiście :P Pozdrawiam
In 1984 I worked for a month as an aluminum caster at „FSO Warszawa”. We had leather shoes, but no one had heard of such covers for the top of the foot. To this day I have a delicate reminder on my left foot after a drop of aluminum (about 30ml) dripped from my shank ladle.
Ja pamiętam w 1990 jak chodziłem do szkoły zawodowej to na warsztatach musieliśmy nosić berety na głowie, ale okularów nikt nie wymagał. 😅 Tak samo my musimy nosić te buty (metatarsal boots) ponieważ ubezpieczenie tak wymaga. Czy to uratuje twoją stopę jak coś spadnie, raczej takie sztuki jak ja obrabiam, chyba nie bardzo .
Glad there is a chip conveyor. Always enjoy your works of art. It looked like you clamp the tail stock at three lications. Can we get some more video of that sometime?
Nice work as usual.Now for the questions. When you mount that 3 jaw chuck do you grip something in the jaws to check the runout like a set true chuck? What RPM will that shaft run at in use? Cheers for the replies in advance.
First, I'll just check the OD of the chuck, and then once I have the part in, I'll make final adjustments. This piece doesn't spin at all. It just pushes and pulls.
For the fanuc 21i, I had a guy for a day to show me some basic, and then just the fanuc books to figure other things out. Fanuc Oi is completely different, so a lot of reading and youtube videos. But I got so good at it that about 80% of my programming is done in conversational programming (manual guide)
Wow! 55:1 length:dia ratio - that's skinny! Thanks for showing the left side of the headstock - I was wondering what the setup was over there after the previous video!
I was this 🤏 from giving up on this job, but I pushed it back into the spindle and just kind of played with the steady rest. It turned out alright, but I'll take big, heavy parts over this noodle any time. 😅
I have not used two steady rests cause I only have one for this machine. One steady rest usually gets the job done for this size of a lathe. You do have to get creative sometimes, though.
So long so thin and the concentricity maintain chattering very well done the job nice experience and patience i also do turning about 700 mm i know how challenging it is 👍
Jeszcze jak byłem w szkole zawodowej to nauczyciel pokazał nam ten sposób. Mówił że pomaga przy obróbce ciekich walków. Do dziś używam tej metody nawet na tokarce cnc. Wiadomo że jak coś już jest naprawdę cienkie, to nawet to nie pomoże.
At least the customer didn't have the idea to start with a piece closer to finished diameter and weld that little shoulder onto it 😅 But seriously, would a second steady rest help, or just get in the way?
This thing doesn't spin at all, there's just a lot of force in pushing and pulling. Probably that's why one piece design. Follow rest would have be a best option.
I actually got that app the other day when my windows XP computer with Gagemaker Thread Disk on it crashed and my dad is too cheap to get the new version.
Back when I was still in trade school, one of the older teachers showed us that trick and said that it helps with chatter, and man, was he right. It somehow distributes the forces, bla,bla,bla😅 he had a good explanation for it, but I just don't remember. All I know that it helps, and I'm still doing it even on the cnc lathe.
Ну, у меня нет упора для этого токарного станка, и я нарезаю слишком много резьб разных типов и диаметров, поэтому я использую только метод 3-х проводов.
And people think CNC machining is just parts loading! Nice job. Love the chuck on the back of the headstock.
That is the ultimate lathe spider.
That's just people that never did any real CNC Machining. All the manual machining I did in the trade school, and at the beginning of my career is just an icing on the cake.
How you put chuck on the back of headstock
@@dimitrismitalakis2803 This brand makes heavy duty machines, só I think either it already comes with or is designed to accept another chuck on the back, since it'll be used to handle very long parts.
Good Job keeping it concentric, a skill not many machinists have. To visualize the part and its stress relieving movements. To adjust cuts in just the right places and plan ahead for this takes experience that is priceless. Machinists are underappreciated and under paid.
Well said!
I don't know what others think, but for me watching a skilled craftsman (no matter what the craft) is so satisfying to watch. well done sir.
hopefully your boss read this
Ay Bosss!
give this man a raise thanks!
I hope so, too
3d print bros will never appreciate how hard this is to pull off.
😂 I wonder if they could 3D print that 🤔
I just got around to watching this, Chris. I took some notes, although I will never be in a position to do this work. I find your skill and expertise so fascinating that I often watch your videos more than once. Thanks very much.
My Dad was a MACHINIST from 1946 to 1995, he loved being a MACHINIST! I guarantee he would give you the best compliment, saying that man IS A MASTER MACHINIST!😎👍
1946~1995, that's when machinists were real machinists. I started trade school in 1990, all manual machines ,so at least I got some taste of a good old times
Pełna profeska, obejrzałem do końca. W pracy się na pewno nie nudzisz przy takich robotach :P Ten uchwyt z tyłu robi robotę jak i sam operator oczywiście :P Pozdrawiam
Lovely piece of turning 👌 patience is the key and all of your skills and magic tricks 😊great video thanks for sharing 👍
Thank you! Cheers!
Nice job! High level of turning skills.
In 1984 I worked for a month as an aluminum caster at „FSO Warszawa”.
We had leather shoes, but no one had heard of such covers for the top of the foot.
To this day I have a delicate reminder on my left foot after a drop of aluminum (about 30ml) dripped from my shank ladle.
Ja pamiętam w 1990 jak chodziłem do szkoły zawodowej to na warsztatach musieliśmy nosić berety na głowie, ale okularów nikt nie wymagał. 😅 Tak samo my musimy nosić te buty (metatarsal boots) ponieważ ubezpieczenie tak wymaga. Czy to uratuje twoją stopę jak coś spadnie, raczej takie sztuki jak ja obrabiam, chyba nie bardzo .
First time i see your complete lathe machine,how you made shafts, but this is so much challenging ❤🎉 greetings
You never know what the stress relieving has done to long shafts till you start to turn them
Love your vids Chris
Yeah, you can have a plan in your head how you're gonna do this job, but then you start machining and your plan goes up in the flames.
that hankook lathe is on another level. top machine i guess. never seen something quite like this.
Yeah, can't complain.
Every single process is truly amazing.👍👍👍👍👍
Masterpiece , must be terrifying to take so much material of and release tensions, but you handle the runout to impressive precision.
Nice looking thread app, thanks for sharing. Charles
You bet
Outstanding results
Brilliant !
Glad there is a chip conveyor. Always enjoy your works of art. It looked like you clamp the tail stock at three lications. Can we get some more video of that sometime?
Typical... smashes some buttons. Comes back 30 minutes later to a finished part! Top shelf work as always.
Hahaha, yeah, typical button pusher, but it's a stressful job if you ask me.
@@ChrisMajI find cnc turning WAY more stressful than manual. I do both.
I watch your channel and always think that I should run my lathe in reverse with upside down tools when roughing more often!
This lathe and toolpost isn't really made for roughing with the tool upside-down, but finishing it helps with the chatter
Gday Chris, I bet that chatter tested the patience, brilliant job mate, cheers
I'll take big, heavy parts over this noodle any time.
@@ChrisMaj noodle is exactly what it is! Patients and attention to details pays off! Thanks for making and showing us the video
wonderful job...cheers
Thank you! Cheers!
Nice work as usual.Now for the questions.
When you mount that 3 jaw chuck do you grip something in the jaws to check the runout like a set true chuck?
What RPM will that shaft run at in use?
Cheers for the replies in advance.
First, I'll just check the OD of the chuck, and then once I have the part in, I'll make final adjustments. This piece doesn't spin at all. It just pushes and pulls.
0.2mm over 4 metres! 👏
Shoulve showed the polishing part too haha. Nice job always enjoy your videos
Sand paper and more sand paper.
Congrats!
This brings me back to the 1990's when I was working for the Minster Machine Company, Beaufort, S.C. plant.
1990, that was my first year of trade school, all manual machines, milling and turning. I kinda miss these days.
Do you pre center drill your parts on another machine? Like a manual lathe? I tend to do that before loading mine up just seems easier sometimes
Thanks for the videos, how did you learn manual guide i, did you go to school or just played with it?
For the fanuc 21i, I had a guy for a day to show me some basic, and then just the fanuc books to figure other things out. Fanuc Oi is completely different, so a lot of reading and youtube videos. But I got so good at it that about 80% of my programming is done in conversational programming (manual guide)
Wow! 55:1 length:dia ratio - that's skinny! Thanks for showing the left side of the headstock - I was wondering what the setup was over there after the previous video!
I have already put in request for the follow rest about 15 years ago, but it's still not here, so I'm doing what I can 😅
Hey Man !
Why aren't you made a new center hole after you flip the shaft ?
I think it is amazing how well that came out. I know it must have wanted to sing like a canary.
I was this 🤏 from giving up on this job, but I pushed it back into the spindle and just kind of played with the steady rest. It turned out alright, but I'll take big, heavy parts over this noodle any time. 😅
Fantastische Arbeit. Wie lange hast Du dafür gebraucht. Du hast es voll drauf.
Fast zwei Tage.
You are pretty handy with those wires. I’d have to fish them out of the pan if I didn’t put tape on them.
I do so many different types and sizes of threads that I got pretty good at it.
Nice work! How long was the runtime of the hole part?
Almost two days
Como fez pra fazer furo de centro nas extremidades
I see some guys put some nice think grease on those threading wires to keep then in place but then You also have to clean it off again.
I use grease sometimes for smaller diameters.
Have you got a traveling steady on that machine?
No, I don't have a follow rest for this lathe.
Have you ever used two steadyrests on the same machine at once?
If not, is that something that's ever done at all on any machine?
I have not used two steady rests cause I only have one for this machine. One steady rest usually gets the job done for this size of a lathe. You do have to get creative sometimes, though.
Fajna ta aplikacja. Da się zmienić język i wyniki z cal na mm?
Języka nie zmienisz, ale cale na mm tak. play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.pluckedstudios.machcalcpro
Nuce job! Why is your tool upsidedown?
Helps with chatter.
NOICE!!
Much better than the 1045.
Yeah, just a little.
It was my job in 1978..making extrusion screws…
keterampilan yang sangat bagus, dan juga mesin yg sangat mendukung 💪
Dude😮😮😮 what app is that for the threads?
it appears to be an app called cnc machinist calculator, apparently there is also a pro version but doesn't look like he's using that
play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.pluckedstudios.machcalcpro
@ChrisMaj I just purchased it. Is pretty legit I must say has an amazing amount of good stuff on there.
So long so thin and the concentricity maintain chattering very well done the job nice experience and patience i also do turning about 700 mm i know how challenging it is 👍
Glad you enjoyed it
@ChrisMaj Lewe obroty w 11 minucie dają jakieś dodatkowe efekty prócz innego układania się wiórów na suporcie?
Jeszcze jak byłem w szkole zawodowej to nauczyciel pokazał nam ten sposób. Mówił że pomaga przy obróbce ciekich walków. Do dziś używam tej metody nawet na tokarce cnc. Wiadomo że jak coś już jest naprawdę cienkie, to nawet to nie pomoże.
@@ChrisMajMoże chodzi o zmniejszanie ugięcia przez siłę przyciągania.
Ale i tak podtrzymka chyba najlepiej wychodzi w takiej sytuacji.
Witam. Co to za aplikacja z bazą danych gwintów ??
play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.pluckedstudios.machcalcpro
How many years of experience? Is this cnc or manual
What is the app called ? „Thread data“ ? Can‘t find it in app store… the pin Info is pretty cool
play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.pluckedstudios.machcalcpro
At least the customer didn't have the idea to start with a piece closer to finished diameter and weld that little shoulder onto it 😅 But seriously, would a second steady rest help, or just get in the way?
This thing doesn't spin at all, there's just a lot of force in pushing and pulling. Probably that's why one piece design. Follow rest would have be a best option.
I actually got that app the other day when my windows XP computer with Gagemaker Thread Disk on it crashed and my dad is too cheap to get the new version.
I got this app about 8 years ago, and I use it all the time.
Why do you flip the tool downwards? Except for the fact that the chips are going down this way, is there another reason for this?
Back when I was still in trade school, one of the older teachers showed us that trick and said that it helps with chatter, and man, was he right. It somehow distributes the forces, bla,bla,bla😅 he had a good explanation for it, but I just don't remember. All I know that it helps, and I'm still doing it even on the cnc lathe.
@@ChrisMaj Thank you for your reply
At the 5 min mark I'd be thinking about a follow rest to preserve my sanity.
I've mentioned that to my boss a few times, but I don't think I'll be getting one anytime soon 😅
@@ChrisMaj he's an uncaring sod.
чудеса на виражах!
Well played Chris! Did you ask for a raise?
He said, "You get a raise, but you can't do youtube no more" 😉😅
Expendido 👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿😎👍🏿
Did he add a $50.00 bill in the wage slip Chris?
Yeah, I wish. He's probably gonna get some shitty job just to mess with me 😅
So what is a pull rod?
Have you ever seen those big steel coils of sheet metal? That's a small part of the mandrel uncoiler assembly.
👍👍
Milímetros por favor !
Я один слышал про подвижный люнет и резьбовой микрометр? )
Ну, у меня нет упора для этого токарного станка, и я нарезаю слишком много резьб разных типов и диаметров, поэтому я использую только метод 3-х проводов.
Where's your follower rest? 😂
I have put in a request for it 15 years ago, still not here 😅
@@ChrisMaj 🤣🤣🤣
Wire manufactory 😁
I'll take big parts over this any time.
✋🏼🇦🇺👍🏼
I have never seen a thread measured in such a fashion before! I presumed that you would have a go no-go gauge.
It's a 3-wire method. For all the different types and sizes of threads, it worked really good for me so far
spaghetti.......
It is what it is. Did the best I could.
@@ChrisMaj fine job. tough part.
it's not a good process, you got an ellipsis for sure
or throwing
I'm guessing you mean an ellipses, and no, I did not.
Bruv...ur really know how to handle ur shaft!
How many years of experience? Is this cnc or manual