Adam, I never fast forward your videos, especially when you are doing some odd ball indicating. Seeing is learning. If you ever feel the urge, you would make a fine teacher in a tech school. I learned this stuff in the late 70’s early 80’s in high school from a bunch of WWII navy guys that prolly forgot more than I ever learned from them. You keep on indicating work and showing the process in real time. I’ll bet dollars to donuts that there are teachers that use your videos to teach the old ways to students because they don’t understand the process themselves.
Adam, I think the indicating is a great part of the channel. CEE doesn't really show it and that works for them, but I really enjoy seeing how you get things aligned properly on your channel. You always seem to go the extra mile and get it as close as you possibly can too, which is very satisfying. Love the channel man, keep up the great work.
A decade ago I found the Abom79 channel. Three things stood out: no music -- just the sound of cutting; real-time shots of cutting -- full face, full side; real-time shots of indicating. It was the real-time indicating that moved me to make a monthly paid subscription, which I have never regretted. Adam you _earn_ my money each month, by posting a video such as this showing real-time indicating.
Yes I totally agree he apologises but i think it is probably one of the most interesting and critical parts of the video, which I was anticipating.. many thanks Adam
The tediousness of indicating must be shown to give those who are not aware of the extra time it takes beyond making chips……it’s part of the time & effort that needs to be factored in for cost & time estimates. It’s also awesome to see an experienced machinist process which we can all learn from. Keep doing your thing Adam, & thanks again for sharing the knowledge no matter how seemingly boring it may be, it’s just part of the process.🇺🇸👍
Man, the amount of time and effort that goes into doing these... Tying you up for a whole week... I cannot imagine how much this is costing the customer. As always, you are a pleasure to watch because you are a complete and utter master of your craft.
I really appreciate the indicating footage, it's so good to see because I know how time consuming it can be and how important it really is. I know it can be monotonous, but necessary and personally I think it's so important to see what it takes. lol especially when you accidentally go the wrong way and have to start all over...a machinists Murphy's Law "when you are at the very last half-thousandths, you will move it the wrong way"
I think its very important to understand the time it takes to setup an operation, so please do keep showing us your indicating process. Thank you for the content.
Adam , You are a real world machinist ! Taking on the jobs that the guys that can only program the machine are afraid of . That from you're first video has really been an inspiration to me . I love the pics of you're dad and grandfather 😃Thanks for the videos and keep up the good work !
Every time I see something big spinning in a lathe I get a little tingling in my toes. It good to feeling of not everyone can do this moment. Thanks for sharing.
What a great learning project for odd shapes. That's what we love about your channel, you're a great teacher!! And what an awesome thing to be able to help out one of us viewers!! This is what makes you great!!
I love your indication education portion. Indication is so important in the machining process. Thank you for showing the techniques involved with indicating so you have precise and true measurement parts.
Am I the only one who thinks the setup in the lathe looks like Scrat, the squirrel from ice age??? :D Dang it, can't unsee it :D That being said.. Fantastic video as always Adam. Major thumbs up. Always a pleasure watching your stuff man:) I seriously don't know how I'm gonna fill the space if you were to stop making content. Been watching for the most of 10 years now I guess... Started watching Just about the time when you made the Rotary Weld table :) Keep up the good stuff buddy :) Much love.
@@hennievangalen3789no? The further away a weight is from the pivot point or point of rotation in this case, the greater the torque is that’s applied to the pivot point or point of rotation. Therefore, more movement generated balancing the chuck better Torque = force (weight in this case) x distance Grab some dumbbells and hold them at your chest, then hold them at full arms length and see the difference
"Indication section can get a bit long".. hey, that's what the channel is about. To take two random pieces of scrap and always make sure they are square and straight and level to less than 1/1000" (approx 3/100 mm).
G'day Adam. Thanks for taking us through this type of very awkward meticulous job. It is food for thought in the event we come to any job , that might even come close to what you have taken on. Very complex in setup etc. Job is working really well especially with the baring train fitting so well. Thanks Ted
Guite the process Adam. Lot a fun watching this project come together and progress. Enjoy watching these build up to finish processes take place piece by piece. Thanks for sharing.
Hi Adam, my name is Wagner and I watch your videos and Thank you for what you doing, There aren't many people like you these days who do their job and at the same time pass on excellent information to others. I’m in the process to move to Florida next year to Dade City to live near my daughter and grandchildren, I hope One day I can stop by your shop to meet you in person and see your shop too. Thank you
Now that you have coolant on the APM … it looks like a plexiglass back splash might come in handy to keep splash off of the wall and circuit breaker box
I would suggest increasing the diameter of the pipe coming out of your coolant pump for as far as you can, if not all the way to the tool. That pump can likely provide you with more volume of coolant if you reduce the restriction of the small discharge line. The line can be larger than the outlet of the pump and you will get better volume at a lower pressure.
I'll tell ys guy, I'm ssoo happy to see some real payin' work come in. A business owner needs income or pretty soon no business. I've been down that road. Damn good video.
I just love it when you do the manual maching and watching you center a piece is all part of it. Don't get me wrong I know that you are working to do more CNC work and I applaud you for that endevor and you are learning it very well. I just enjoy your manual work so much more and have learned a lot from watching your manual work. Thanks for what you do and your teaching.
😮 It's a process that you will do every time when it comes to oddly shaped parts you'll put into a lathe. Since you have to do multiple pieces of the same shape I liked that you made counterbalances to help the machine plus helping keep the borehole from being egg shaped. I definitely enjoyed your show and I know you and Abby have things to do and places to go when you two hit the road but I wisk wish you could have taught would be machinist the knowledge you have like in a trade school or co-op. You're passing it on now. Keep it up.
What a pain this job is. I know of no shops is our area that would consider this work. It's painful to think of doing 15 of these. Something tells me these would be easier on a VTL, but again there not many of these machines in use these days. Hope you are getting well paid for this job. You are a very patient person.
I enjoy seeing you run a lathe . I like knowing what the end use of any parts being made are for but I understand if they don’t want to say . Still made a good video. Thanks Adam
This was classy machining! You have done a wonderful job of setting your shop up to handle an important niche in the machine-shop market. For a general audience like this, perhaps you should have mentioned that had you needed some finer adjustment on your counterweight system, moving the weights in the t-slots in or out a bit would change the center of mass of the entire spinning system.
If you have a CAD model of the workpiece (approx) then you can easily figure out the approximate center of mass and then based on where radially you want to locate the counterweight you should be very close and then adjust manually afterwards. I've used this type of method and it has worked very well. Just something to think about for your future projects. As usual your videos are amazing and very informative!👍
Abom its surprising to me that after all these years you still have not made a brass shim clip on cap for your jaws that would make it easier to indicate if the same piece of shim is on the same jaw for this job
Pretty awesome to see this massive lathe doing what it was intended! I would liked to have seen a cup of water set on the headstock or something before and after the counterweights were added... It looked pretty rigid even without the weights!!
I was wondering for so long in the previous videos "Is it really worth all this setup of the drill? Couldnt he just drill it to an inch or so and take a 'little' extra time boring?". Then I saw the number of parts on the pallet at 22:51 and I understood just how much time all that coolant setup, pinning, and drill setup was saving
That's a remarkably good bandsaw. If I don't have at least six inches of clamping surface then pieces of metal start flying around my shop. LoL don't get me started on my belt sander. It once flung an axe head 15 feet across my shop. It was the closest shave I've ever had.
We would do that job at our shop in Ohio but we would do it on a horizontal boring mill. If I was doing it I would rather have all the material in the back already removed so it would actually be boring a through hole. Not near as much indicating required on a boring mill. Just lay it on its side on the table and place that long side up against the table keys. Then clamp over a solid area so it doesnt distort when you drill the hole. set machine spindle to the center hole and drill and bore and done.
The lathe gears sound way, way better with the counterweights bolted on. I've been waiting for this video since you put this on IG a wile back. Cheers!
Adam, something that I saw Kurtis do on the Cutting Edge Engineering channel do was to make caps out of brass sheets that went over the ends of the chuck jaws. They were slightly springy so that they wouldn't off without the jaws being tight to a workpiece. This saves Kurtis from having to keep track of each shim, fishing them out of the chip tray and whatnot. And if the jaws of the 3-jaw and 4-jaw are the same dimension, you'd only need to make a set of 4 and pull as many as needed.
Curtis also has a drilled hole in the end of his three jaw chuck jaws, he uses small 6 mm screws to hold L strips with the screw going through the short leg. He drilled the hole with a carbide drill bit and was careful to over size the hole for the tap so as not to break it while carefully hand tapping each jaw. He did use a new tap he said, in case that made a difference. And, yes, the jaws are hardened through not just surface hardened or maybe it was the other way around, yeah, that what it was, only the surface was hard to about 4mm? The rest of the jaw was just tool steel before being hardened. Induction hardened I imagine, or flame hardened and quenched with water.
Adam, I never fast forward your videos, especially when you are doing some odd ball indicating. Seeing is learning. If you ever feel the urge, you would make a fine teacher in a tech school. I learned this stuff in the late 70’s early 80’s in high school from a bunch of WWII navy guys that prolly forgot more than I ever learned from them. You keep on indicating work and showing the process in real time. I’ll bet dollars to donuts that there are teachers that use your videos to teach the old ways to students because they don’t understand the process themselves.
A 1 hour long video of Adam doing his finest, YES PLEASE, give me more of this!!
Adam, I think the indicating is a great part of the channel. CEE doesn't really show it and that works for them, but I really enjoy seeing how you get things aligned properly on your channel. You always seem to go the extra mile and get it as close as you possibly can too, which is very satisfying. Love the channel man, keep up the great work.
A decade ago I found the Abom79 channel. Three things stood out: no music -- just the sound of cutting; real-time shots of cutting -- full face, full side; real-time shots of indicating. It was the real-time indicating that moved me to make a monthly paid subscription, which I have never regretted. Adam you _earn_ my money each month, by posting a video such as this showing real-time indicating.
watching abom indicate is like watching a great chef dice onions... it may be routine but it's still fun to see an expert do it
Yes I totally agree he apologises but i think it is probably one of the most interesting and critical parts of the video, which I was anticipating.. many thanks Adam
The tediousness of indicating must be shown to give those who are not aware of the extra time it takes beyond making chips……it’s part of the time & effort that needs to be factored in for cost & time estimates. It’s also awesome to see an experienced machinist process which we can all learn from. Keep doing your thing Adam, & thanks again for sharing the knowledge no matter how seemingly boring it may be, it’s just part of the process.🇺🇸👍
Man, the amount of time and effort that goes into doing these... Tying you up for a whole week... I cannot imagine how much this is costing the customer.
As always, you are a pleasure to watch because you are a complete and utter master of your craft.
I really appreciate the indicating footage, it's so good to see because I know how time consuming it can be and how important it really is. I know it can be monotonous, but necessary and personally I think it's so important to see what it takes. lol especially when you accidentally go the wrong way and have to start all over...a machinists Murphy's Law "when you are at the very last half-thousandths, you will move it the wrong way"
It is tedious for sure. Especially when you are doing work that is better suited for a horizontal boring machine on a lathe.
Adam, I love how you honor your Dad and Grand Dad at the end of your videos with the pic of the three of you.
I think its very important to understand the time it takes to setup an operation, so please do keep showing us your indicating process. Thank you for the content.
I really went to school here on this indicating and really see how useful that brass shim stock can be.
"PURE POETRY" Adam - What an Inspirational Project Share - Absolute Perfection! ❤👍
Adam , You are a real world machinist ! Taking on the jobs that the guys that can only program the machine are afraid of . That from you're first video has really been an inspiration to me . I love the pics of you're dad and grandfather 😃Thanks for the videos and keep up the good work !
Adam you'll always be "Indicator Champion" of RUclips machinists . I think we can spare a few minutes to watch the master.
Nice work, Adam. I'm sure the American Pacemaker was happy with the counter weights you added. Thanks for sharing.
What a great show. Old school machining rocks. Superb filming. Thanks
Your holding to the old style machine tools such as the Pacemaker comes out once again as a winner. Well worth the hour of video time.
To add to what other might have said, showing the amount of time something critical takes gives realistic insight into what it takes to do this job
Every time I see something big spinning in a lathe I get a little tingling in my toes. It good to feeling of not everyone can do this moment. Thanks for sharing.
Looks great Adam. You just proved what I tell people all the time, set up is the lion share of the machining process most of the time.
What a great learning project for odd shapes. That's what we love about your channel, you're a great teacher!! And what an awesome thing to be able to help out one of us viewers!! This is what makes you great!!
I love your indication education portion. Indication is so important in the machining process. Thank you for showing the techniques involved with indicating so you have precise and true measurement parts.
Looking good kid! You're a master craftsman and you deserve every single subscription you have. Thank you so much for sharing with us.
Adam's machinist eye is crazy accurate! He sets up the ductile iron round in the saw and center cuts them to within 0.002"
Am I the only one who thinks the setup in the lathe looks like Scrat, the squirrel from ice age??? :D Dang it, can't unsee it :D
That being said.. Fantastic video as always Adam. Major thumbs up. Always a pleasure watching your stuff man:)
I seriously don't know how I'm gonna fill the space if you were to stop making content.
Been watching for the most of 10 years now I guess...
Started watching Just about the time when you made the Rotary Weld table :)
Keep up the good stuff buddy :) Much love.
"only 13 more to do" That's a huge job and a lot of work. I hope you're being well compensated.
You could adjust the balance by simply sliding the weights closer of farther from the center to get that fine adjustment. Great channel.
Wrong assumption..
@@hennievangalen3789no? The further away a weight is from the pivot point or point of rotation in this case, the greater the torque is that’s applied to the pivot point or point of rotation. Therefore, more movement generated balancing the chuck better
Torque = force (weight in this case) x distance
Grab some dumbbells and hold them at your chest, then hold them at full arms length and see the difference
From father to son, you get the job done. Great skills.
"Indication section can get a bit long".. hey, that's what the channel is about. To take two random pieces of scrap and always make sure they are square and straight and level to less than 1/1000" (approx 3/100 mm).
Indicating is prep work for machining just like you do for painting the better the prep the better the paint job
G'day Adam. Thanks for taking us through this type of very awkward meticulous job. It is food for thought in the event we come to any job , that might even come close to what you have taken on.
Very complex in setup etc. Job is working really well especially with the baring train fitting so well.
Thanks
Ted
Guite the process Adam. Lot a fun watching this project come together and progress. Enjoy watching these build up to finish processes take place piece by piece.
Thanks for sharing.
I was kind of surprised to see how well that spade bit pushed the chips out of the bore. Impressive!
Hi Adam, my name is Wagner and I watch your videos and Thank you for what you doing, There aren't many people like you these days who do their job and at the same time pass on excellent information to others.
I’m in the process to move to Florida next year to Dade City to live near my daughter and grandchildren, I hope One day I can stop by your shop to meet you in person and see your shop too.
Thank you
What a wonderful bandsaw cut!❤❤❤❤❤
I love every minute of your videos. Feel free to share the details. I consider these to be instructional videos.
I've grown accustomed to watching your videos, so you take care of yourself, and stay healthy and safe! Happy Thanksgiving!
Merci pour cette vidéo d'un travail d'excellente qualité et toujours bien expliqué. Vous êtes un très bon professionnel.
Another great job Adam. I love these videos and keep em coming!
Now that you have coolant on the APM … it looks like a plexiglass back splash might come in handy to keep splash off of the wall and circuit breaker box
Adam, you’re a Prince among machinists. 👍👍👊👊👊
I would suggest increasing the diameter of the pipe coming out of your coolant pump for as far as you can, if not all the way to the tool. That pump can likely provide you with more volume of coolant if you reduce the restriction of the small discharge line. The line can be larger than the outlet of the pump and you will get better volume at a lower pressure.
Beautiful work. What a job on just one 14 more to go. Adam you are the man!
I love you Abom.......Ur an awesome person.
Dam hearing that old iron working with a good load on it sounds so good
I'll tell ys guy, I'm ssoo happy to see some real payin' work come in. A business owner needs income or pretty soon no business. I've been down that road. Damn good video.
Love the sound of a lathe when it's under a constant load
Great work. I like your problem solving skills.❤
Nice Job, Adam! All that prep time over these last few vids has really paid off. It's nice when a plan works as intended.
seeing that chuck wrench handle flex must've be like what, 2.3-2.5 abom-torque 😉
Love the way you think Adam
Nice to see you use your skills
I just love it when you do the manual maching and watching you center a piece is all part of it. Don't get me wrong I know that you are working to do more CNC work and I applaud you for that endevor and you are learning it very well. I just enjoy your manual work so much more and have learned a lot from watching your manual work. Thanks for what you do and your teaching.
Great job like watching Thanks Happy Thanksgiving
The American Pacemaker specs are impressive. Very nice result on the procedure
😮 It's a process that you will do every time when it comes to oddly shaped parts you'll put into a lathe.
Since you have to do multiple pieces of the same shape I liked that you made counterbalances to help the machine plus helping keep the borehole from being egg shaped.
I definitely enjoyed your show and I know you and Abby have things to do and places to go when you two hit the road but I wisk wish you could have taught would be machinist the knowledge you have like in a trade school or co-op.
You're passing it on now. Keep it up.
Wow, Adam that was amazing, great job. You are a legend. Thankyou.
Great teaching as always Adam, keep up the great work 🍺
What a pain this job is. I know of no shops is our area that would consider this work. It's painful to think of doing 15 of these. Something tells me these would be easier on a VTL, but again there not many of these machines in use these days. Hope you are getting well paid for this job. You are a very patient person.
I enjoy seeing you run a lathe . I like knowing what the end use of any parts being made are for but I understand if they don’t want to say . Still made a good video. Thanks Adam
nice way to spend some time during a blizzard Adam thanks for the tech tips and entertainment from the great white north
The lathe generally sounds much happier now you've balanced if properly.
That's what I was thinking
35:00 Yes Adam, I enjoy the precision work that you do.
Ok, who else sees Scrat the little squirrel guy from the " Ice Age" cartoons?
Can’t beat Abom when the weathers nasty and cold outside
I know that the counterweights had to be faced, but I am still amazed at the cut quality of the band saw blade.
Abom moving some metal and having some fun doing it!
Thanks Chief. I love to watch you Metal Masters at work. Thanks for sharing, good fortune in 2025!
This was classy machining! You have done a wonderful job of setting your shop up to handle an important niche in the machine-shop market.
For a general audience like this, perhaps you should have mentioned that had you needed some finer adjustment on your counterweight system, moving the weights in the t-slots in or out a bit would change the center of mass of the entire spinning system.
Wicked Work Adam!
Really enjoyed this!
Excellent job on a very challenging job!!!!
If you have a CAD model of the workpiece (approx) then you can easily figure out the approximate center of mass and then based on where radially you want to locate the counterweight you should be very close and then adjust manually afterwards. I've used this type of method and it has worked very well. Just something to think about for your future projects. As usual your videos are amazing and very informative!👍
For parts like this, it could be done by hand too, but for more complex parts, CAD would indeed make it easier.
Love that lathe ❤
Awesome, enjoyable and worth the time to watch Adam work.
Taking the cut is easy, it’s always setup that takes time, and it’s worth it!
No way I'm this early. Never happens. Hey Adam, hope you're good
Holy Cow! That was so intense! And you've only (only!!) got 13 more to go!
Abom its surprising to me that after all these years you still have not made a brass shim clip on cap for your jaws
that would make it easier to indicate if the same piece of shim is on the same jaw for this job
This drill is like your content: Awesome!
And now Adam is in the market for a nice horizontal boring mill Josh Topper has.
As the crow flies Josh is closer to Colorado than Adam is. I'll bet Josh would love to have this job.
Pretty awesome to see this massive lathe doing what it was intended! I would liked to have seen a cup of water set on the headstock or something before and after the counterweights were added... It looked pretty rigid even without the weights!!
More American Pacemaker content please 🙏
Dude, you had me screaming at my phone...just slide them away from the axis!
😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣
He was only just clear of the ways with the chuck jaws-so maybe close to his practical position?
Superb work sir ... Tasty !
Very lengthy and successful job,Adam.Thank you.
Nice work and discussion….❤
I was wondering for so long in the previous videos "Is it really worth all this setup of the drill? Couldnt he just drill it to an inch or so and take a 'little' extra time boring?". Then I saw the number of parts on the pallet at 22:51 and I understood just how much time all that coolant setup, pinning, and drill setup was saving
Seeing that fit must be satisfying. Excellent job.
I like it!!!
That's a remarkably good bandsaw. If I don't have at least six inches of clamping surface then pieces of metal start flying around my shop. LoL don't get me started on my belt sander. It once flung an axe head 15 feet across my shop. It was the closest shave I've ever had.
Them old cast lathes are very strong and accurate .. I served my apprenticeship on a Holbrook Lethe .. uk machine best I’ve worked
We would do that job at our shop in Ohio but we would do it on a horizontal boring mill. If I was doing it I would rather have all the material in the back already removed so it would actually be boring a through hole. Not near as much indicating required on a boring mill. Just lay it on its side on the table and place that long side up against the table keys. Then clamp over a solid area so it doesnt distort when you drill the hole. set machine spindle to the center hole and drill and bore and done.
Many ways to do a job, one isn’t better than another, just different.
This job was a classic boring mill job if there ever was one - but apparently no one with a boring mill wanted to do it.
I'd think a boring mill would be better. If you had one. Alot less work not having to indicate each part
HBM's are kind of falling out of favor these days, but when you need one, you need one.
@Rorschach1024 we have 7 of them
The lathe gears sound way, way better with the counterweights bolted on. I've been waiting for this video since you put this on IG a wile back. Cheers!
This is gonna be a lot of work.
Not as fast as Keith but lot faster than me. I was at the clash at the Bash😊
That American pacemaker is a beautiful machine. I'm going to learn more about its history of it company.
Adam, something that I saw Kurtis do on the Cutting Edge Engineering channel do was to make caps out of brass sheets that went over the ends of the chuck jaws. They were slightly springy so that they wouldn't off without the jaws being tight to a workpiece. This saves Kurtis from having to keep track of each shim, fishing them out of the chip tray and whatnot. And if the jaws of the 3-jaw and 4-jaw are the same dimension, you'd only need to make a set of 4 and pull as many as needed.
Curtis also has a drilled hole in the end of his three jaw chuck jaws, he uses small 6 mm screws to hold L strips with the screw going through the short leg. He drilled the hole with a carbide drill bit and was careful to over size the hole for the tap so as not to break it while carefully hand tapping each jaw. He did use a new tap he said, in case that made a difference. And, yes, the jaws are hardened through not just surface hardened or maybe it was the other way around, yeah, that what it was, only the surface was hard to about 4mm? The rest of the jaw was just tool steel before being hardened. Induction hardened I imagine, or flame hardened and quenched with water.
Thank you for sharing
I personally find the long form videos more enjoyable
UR setup works good - Thanks for showing