Nice arbor as per usual. I am no expert but have 4 tips for using the cutters. 1 wear good eye protection. They can jam with chips and will explode without warning (painful when you shatter an $80 cutter), 2 don't peck, continuous feed recommended. 3 they come in 2 grinds, one for single plies (these are the standard) and one for stack cutting (drilling through multiple plies). You can only drill through one layer of steel with the regular cutters. Power feeding through a stack with the wrong cutter will probably shatter it. 4 the rim of the slug is f'ing sharp. Be carful getting them out if they stick in the cutter (or just picking them up)
Those who have used annular cutters wonder how we ever got along without them. I have a Jancy magnet drill that I bought in the 90s and a set of their cutters. Great for drilling holes in truck frames.
@@MattysWorkshop They work well to put a hole where there already is a hole or to move a hole. Try it in the test hole you made. You can move it slightly or half the width of the hole. They cut from the inside out. The Jancy drill was set up to supply cutting fluid inside the cutter. A good cutting paste applied to the inside of the cutter works well too. Jancy made a Slugger paste but almost any cutting paste or wax will work.
Gday Mark, the taper turned out spot on and the sin bar makes it really easy to get everything set right, definitely going to invest in some more annular cutters, they do a neat job mate, thanks for watching, cheers
Matty you're an absolute legend - i adore your channel (g'day from brisbane) - kurtis (CEE) drew reference in a video that he was going to get you up for a meet & greet - i can't wait to see it - he is also a brilliant tradesman - make sure that they take you to the Yatala pie factory, give karen a hug n a kiss, i reckon buy homeless at least 20 tennis balls - you know he's going to eat them all 🥰 can't wait to see it. Matty keep being yourself - we love you 🙃
Gday, I’m looking forward to getting up there one day, should be good, I don’t change for the camera, what you see is what you get with my channel, appreciate you watching mate, cheers
Gday, yer you did see coolant now on the lathe, homemade setup, I used a pump out of a parts washer that has a built in filter and a 20ltr bucket with a lid, simple and it works, thanks for watching, cheers
Yeah annular cutters are great for large holes. Makes quick work. You dont have to step drill like you do with regular drill bits. Nice job on the arbor build.
Gday Gary, first time I’ve used these cutters and I’m amazed how well they work, definitely going to get more when the funds allow it, thanks for watching mate, cheers
Those annular cutters are fantastic, wish they'd incorporate a chip breaker though . Taper was spot on , very nice . Also great looking part and addition to your tooling .
Gday, this was the first time I’d used these style of cutters and it would be good to have a chip breaker, the compound sine bar makes cutting the taper a breeze, thanks for watching mate, cheers
We have a mag drill at work with smaller annular cutters, but I like the idea of using bigger ones like you did as it saves time and materials. I also like the dedicated holder idea for them. Nice use of the compound sine bar, Jim sent me one too but I haven't had a chance to use it yet. You make beautiful work, gotta say.
Outstanding Matty ! Nice build, using the spindle MT adapter for the finish boring was genius... Your going to love those annular cutters, there awesome. Cheers....Dean
Gday, i think ER collets are a good all round tool holder compared to other options for the hobbyists, much more range and cost wise to, thanks for watching, cheers
Gday Jim, the sine bar made all the difference yet again, brilliant tool that makes a world of difference in setup time and accuracy, it just works, definitely a game changer in any workshop mate, thanks for watching, cheers
Another fine piece of work Matty. Annular cutters are great - much nicer to use than hole saws. And as a bonus you get a dump with no hole that can be used for other projects. Cheers.
best thing since sliced bread those annular cutter arbors, I got one for my drill press and it makes life so simple for any hole over about 12mm (you can get 12mm annular cutters, but I'm happy enough to use normal drill bits for that size). Annular cutters work well and are a fraction of the price of a drill bit to make the same size hole. You can get arbors that take a coolant feed internally as well, now I have my mill, I might try one, no good for the drill press though, would make a heck of a mess!
Gday, this was the first time I’d ever used an annular cutter and I’m impressed, they seem to cut faster then a normal drill and leave a really neat finish, thanks for watching mate, cheers
In the process of setting up horizontal milling for my little lathe, finding tooling and such. I learnt a lot from that video. THANKS a hell of a lot Matty.😊
Brilliant job Matty. It looks and works great. And saving that amount of height is a definite advantage for you big time. It's great that there are people out there that are impressed with your work and want to help you out by donating nice brand new tooling to your channel, and that's down to two things mate, one your work is exceptionally good, and two your a real nice bloke. Cheers from the snowy UK. Sam
Gday Sam, i was expecting to save around 50mm but ended up with 65mm extra bonus there, I never expect viewers to spend there hard earned coin on me, it’s was an amazing gift and truly grateful, I offered to pay him but he all is good, thanks for watching and kind words mate, cheers
Good stuff Matty! That waste slug will be potentially useful for something. Good science wins. I do love my lathe sine bar as well. Jim at Tangent Engineering did a great job with the design.
That came out a thing of beauty just like you said it would. I made one for my mill/drill with a straight shaft so I could use it in a collet or drill chuck. I had to have a 1/4" thru hole in mine. All my annular cutters have a 1/4" guide in the center that helps to position them on a center punch mark. Thanks for the video.
Gday Jim, i decided not to put the guild pin in the arbor to gain more z height, my thought is I can make a short pin to pick up the centre of the hole and remove it before cutting, I hope I explained that right, thanks for watching, cheers
Matty, a little tip, you can freshen up the cutting edge on the annular cutter with a stone or diamond hone....... sometimes cutting hot rolled steel a hard spot will be found an may give you trouble..... just hone the cutting face, and not the edges.....there are sharpening services that can re-sharpen also.... they sell a jig for doing this, but I do not know how much they are.....probalby not cheap.....I hope this helps, Paul
Gday, I was looking at the cutting edges and wondering how I’d go sharpening them, I’ll have to have a look at how the sharpening jigs are made and see what I can do there, thanks for the info, cheers
I always assumed that Hangsterfer's was an Australian company. When you mentioned it is made in USA I looked them up. They're a couple of hours from my house. I'm definitely going to try their stuff out now that I know.
Nice work on the arbor! Those cutters are pretty slick, big time saver and great finish also. That sine plate for the lathe is a great addition, what a great idea!! Thanks for sharing.
Gday, I really have to buy a set of cutters now, I’m amazed at the finish they leave in the side wall of the hole, thanks for watching and all your support mate, cheers
20:00 we call those slugs 'Round Tuits' like when the wife wants something fixed, . We will get "Around to It Soon"....... I use a magnetic drill that uses annular cutters, [jancy Slugger] it runs at 440 rpm, it will cut a 1 inch hole /25.4 mm in 1 inch A36 hot rolled steel in less that 1 minute......these cutters are an amazing tool.......Paul...
I’m seriously considering buying a mag drill for a couple of ideas I have, there not cheap so I have to make sure the plans I have are going to work first, cheers
@@MattysWorkshop there are a lot of uses for a Mag Drill...I carry a plate of 1/4 " steel and attach the drill to it. by the magnet.....then I can clamp small parts to the plate and drill on location.....you do not need a hole in plate for the bit to to go through, as the slug will spin but the thin rim will keep the bit form biting into the plate.....you can of course use a drill press vise to clamp, but that limits the height of material you can drill, I find it is easier to just clamp......check this video out where I am drilling aluminum 1.5 inch sq tube.....run video at 2x speed if you want....you must remove the slug when going through one wall of tube if it does not fall off, but sometimes, it will drop off and land where the bit is going and cause the drill or part to twist, so check each time you go through the top.....of course, if drilling solid material, you do not need to check....a lot of mag drills will come with a coolant system, you can use water, beer, or even water base coolant....the guide pin in the center of annular cutter pushes back, the coolant will flow.....of course, the pin also will keep cutter coolant kick out the slug as it is spring loaded...shoot me an email if you have questions....I hope this makes sense, Paul....ruclips.net/video/lZ2Cdpr_5Z8/видео.html....
Fantastic video. I have a lathe same as yours, but I am not a machinist , I wish I was , I learned that little that I know, pinching some time during working on any lathe I could put my hands on during my exquisite life of Boilermarking/Welder . I have used Annular Cutters extensively from I can ever remember, mainly with a portable magnet drill press, to witch in the pass they were bulky and havey, in our days they came in various sizes and a light weights one does miracle. The Annular cutter they came in many quality to suet applications, and prices of course, some with diamond tips, and they cut a one to one hole, very precise.... (for a boilermaker work of course)... In my earlier years I suggested to some workplace and they couldn't' tank me enough, also some newest apprentices use to use the wrong procedure, by cooling at the finish of the cut, so, on the next hole they would shatter as soon they start drilling... no need to explain way the reason to you...., but yes hopping the magnetic drill on large frames , it makes much easier to predrill big frames RHS before assembling and also more precise, and not to forget that they work horizontally and overhead.... providing the 240 "V" is always on ( a good reason to secure them with a rope or chine during usage)....Hahahahaha .
Gday, I’m really happy with the AL960b, so far it’s done everything I needed to do, I’m not a machinist either, I’m purely self taught and learnt buy watching others, RUclips and asking questions, I’ve been looking at Mag drills for a while now and for what I do I don’t need the top of the range, really an import drill would be alright, thanks for watching mate, cheers
Wow way to go Matty , I just bought a set of the annular cutters. After seeing what the bill was for them I felt like I should take out a loan for them. Lol
Have done the same as you Matty but with a 16mm straight shank so I can use it in the mill via a jacobs Chuck and in the lathe, brought a set of five up to 30mm but want to get some larger ones now. Good job pal, Terry from Scotland 🇺🇦👴🏻👍
Gday Terry, I seen on the news tonight you guys had a massive cold front and a big dump of snow there in Scotland, I’ll definitely be buying more annular cutters, there really do a neat job, thanks for watching mate, cheers
Annular cutters are great, I have a bunch of them. I made my own arbor also as it would have been a week to get one. Turned out nice Matt, Keep smilin.
Gday Darren, I’ll definitely be buying some over the next while, the arbor is a simple build and I was surprised I saved 65mm of Z height, I thought I would have saved around 50mm, thanks for watching mate, cheers
Gday Kev, I was amazed how the cutter preformed, I think your mill would run this cutter, im going to give it a go in my mill/drill in the next day or so, thanks for watching mate, cheers
Great job, I need to do the same but I'm going to cheat and use a blank MT3 from China. I really like those annular cutters but boy are they expensive, I agree there are some very kind people out there.
Gday, I haven’t had a big search on the internet yet but places like Amazon don’t seem to be to badly priced compared to buying large drills, all depends on quality to guess, thanks for watching, cheers
Right on nice job 👍👍👍 you're gonna love them they are pricey compared to regular bits but they're just flat out awesome I've only got a couple to try I haven't made an arbor yet I just hold them in a 3/4 collet they're fast leave an awesome finish and cut on size and you get tons of cuts without having to resharpen I hoping to add more soon 👍👍👍
Gday, I was amazed how well these cutters work, certainly quicker then a regular drill and there on size, I’ll definitely be buying more when the funds allow, thanks for watching mate, cheers
@@MattysWorkshop yea the best is when you have to drill multiple of the same parts I set up a stop or jig and that's it no changing bits for spotting or starter hole that's when I was sold when something that would have taken an hour for several parts went down to less than half that time they pay for themselves in labor quickly 👍👍👍
Still a place in the shop for drills, but they do cut a nice 'ole. Yes, the bastard who sent you that, is committing you to spend your hard earnt on more cutters. We all need mates that do that. chuckle. 🙂
I was in the same pickle last week. My 4 in 3 jaw Bison spindle style chuck has a MT 3 taper. My LeBlond 17 tailstock is MT4. Was going to machine an adaptor, but found that MSC had them for 30 buck shipped to my door. I love watching and learning from you guys out there that are true machinist, but I am still an amateur, so precise tapers still make me nervous 😜. Thx for sharing Matty, I love that sine plate, will have to buy one someday when funds allow :-) Bear
Gday Bear, I’m only an amateur machinist that’s all self taught, the compound sine bar makes cutting tapers really easy and accurate, thanks for watching and commenting mate, cheers
@@MattysWorkshop Of course! The fun is making things. Ordering from China the inspiration of doing the project is often lost when the stuff arrives... My ones are sitting, nice to have some day inte future......
Hi Matty, I also love those cutters and so far they have lasted longer than I expected them to, but I expect the quality to vary dependent on the manufacturer. I made two parallel shank holders for mine, one 20mm for my version of the TTS on the mill and a 16mm one which the largest I can hold in a drill chuck on the lathe. If you want to save a bit more Z on the mill you could get a 3 morse 3/4"collet and fit it directly, over here in UK you can get them for about 10 quid but I guess they all come from your near neighbour so could easily be bought locally.for the equivalent price. ATB C
Very neat job, love it. I've tried those cutters in an ER40 collet chuck on the Bridgeport, but now I'm wondering about a better solution. That poor coolant nozzle was having a hard life at 18:54 !
Did my reaction come through to the net? When you changed your tool to the TNGG Insert I let out a loud OOOOOOOOOO! Damn, that's pretty! Wakodahatchee Chris
Funny you mention that, I thought I heard something🤣, the finish from the TNGG insert is mind blowing, even on soft material it will leave a mirror like finish, it’s an easy way to make you jobs look professional mate, thanks for watching, cheers
@@MattysWorkshop Since you didn't post a link I watched the video again to see if I missed it. I checked out the availability of TNGG inserts but there's a wide range in $$. Please post the link to yours. Thanks!
@@cdrive5757 I buy my inserts through LiveTools www.googleadservices.com/pagead/aclk?sa=L&ai=DChcSEwj1mIyK3t_9AhWsYA8CHfywAVEYABAAGgJ0Yg&ae=2&ohost=www.google.com.au&cid=CAESauD2o6w45Fl5Da9gmBWvhvWSGraNDwXSGBqP3-ULO6GuGfQa26JHj0o9GTE_1Vc9fNNmP0a6s82PCFpWm1VcYS-Rf3c3BQZM9H0Td62rXFux7ix6luUd6JS-NF8mei-Ts-4ncirgaa_iBxg&sig=AOD64_3RJOlsxv0U0Ual6ML0TXUAnT2S1A&q&adurl&ved=2ahUKEwjX_IOK3t_9AhXvmVYBHVDhC7UQ0Qx6BAgIEAE Best to give them a call mate
Nice work Matty. I don't think i've seen one of those cutters before. I have a box full of Holesaw cutter from 16mm to about 100mm. Starret type, but not a tough thing like that. I'll bet they cost a pretty penny or 2 to buy. Regards. Steve.
Gday Steve, these have been around for years but I’ve never had any before, certainly going to out a collection together though, overall there not to badly priced depending on quality, thanks for watching mate, cheers
Nice work as always Matty. That cutter is fantastic. I have bi-metal hole saws and you know how bad the concentricity is on those. You use a 50mm hole saw and you end up with a 51.5mm hole :(
Nice job Matty I really like that compound sine bar do you know where I can get one in the USA and if you don't mind me asking what inserts do you find that works well for steel and aluminum thank you for the video
Gday, the sine bar I used is made in the USA by Tangent Engineering, (Tangent Jim on RUclips), if you go back a few videos of mine you’ll see the contact details for Jim, I mainly use Palbit WNMG inserts for material removal and Union Materials TNGG for finishing in steel, aluminium I use the TNGG inserts and I also have inserts made for aluminium but not sure of the brand name on them, hope this helps, cheers
Matty, you know at 13:50 when it is a very tight fit, it will make a sound like prrrrffffffftttt upon inserting the cutter... .like my wife's Bum when it falls asleep as she says...
Matty, just watching Pask. ""Making this unique and favourite tool even more awesome."" At his 13.30 mark, check him out using an Annular Cutter in the lathe.
Hi Matt nice video. Have you tried to use the hole saw for face milling? Cheaper than getting a milling face cutter. Would it be also easier to re-sharpen in a tool grinder?
Came out really nice and cuts well, good addition to the toolkit. How much does that slideway oil cost ? I just use an all purpose synthetic oil at the moment, wouldn't mind switching.
Gday, I buy the way oil off LiveTools, your best to get in contact with them, I brought these at the end of last year, it’s not the cheapest but it works well, I used to use Penrite from memory and it always just ran off the ways, this stuff doesn’t, it just works, let me know if you need there contact information, thanks for watching, cheers
@@MattysWorkshop thanks, they responded very promptly. ~ $70 for a 5L can if anyone else is looking. It seems reasonable for something I'd buy once every few years.
Yeah, its amazing, the generosity I mean... I now and again consider starting filming my shop, which is being slowly put together, as i am in the process of restoring quite a few machines for myself, yada yada... I know that i would never ask for any money or gifts of any kind, as i too cant imagine disrespecting someones labors by asking them for what they are paid for their work... I would make content to educate and show what i was shown freely in regards to an area i fell in love with 15 years ago and now i actually have a home shop, a hobby shop, but it aint 100kg machines, ill tell you that... Yet at the same time, as an avid viewer of some channels, i know that if i actually had the resources to fund someone or give them a lovely high precision instrument, i sure would... Tho, now with some of my machines in action, i could make them high precision shit and gift it to them, allowing me to not spend the money and still present someone i want to support with a masterwork tool, and as im making one, i can make two, so i get to add a tool to my own collection.. And being a youtube player makes you a bit less of a parasocial generous weirdo, when you gift say a swiss/jap grade carbide tipped dead center, or a live center with a carbide tip just as an overkill, as there its not needed apart for its durability...
Gday, when I started this channel I have never wanted to ask anyone to support the channel, I monetized the channel which does put adds in the videos only because YT was going to put adds in anyway, I don’t expect anyone to spend there hard earned money buying items for my workshop, I have had quite a few companies contact me offering items for review and I have excepted the ones that I believe will be a benefit to what I do and that will possibly help others with the some occupation/hobby, the guys who sent the annular cutter and arbor had me address from a previous email exchange and before I could say anything he had already ordered and had sent to my address, I’m extremely grateful of his generosity and it’s his way of saying thank you for the entertainment he gets from my content, cheers
@@MattysWorkshop As said, i fully understand you in that regard, and wholly approve of any move you made, i too would monetize the channel, and implore all of my subscribers to use an adblocker to not have to see any commercials/ads unless watching those was their deliberate choice to fractionally fund me, as while i could use extra coin, i would not be fine with anything that cometh not from ones own selfless desire to gift out of thanks for whatever was provided by me...
Another great video Matty. Excellent taper turning. There are some very kind and generous people out there. My RUclips channel is very new and I've been overwhelmed to receive a couple of viewer gifts. Take care Matty. Cheers Nobby @ nobbysworkshop
@@MattysWorkshop Thanks so much for subscribing Matty. It was an amazing gift and so unexpected. Have installed the Z-axis, and now working on the Y- axis. Take care Matty. Cheers Nobby
Always a pleasure to watch your videos. Thank you.
Thanks very much, appreciate you watching and commenting, cheers
Winning 70mm on the Z-axes is a lot. Well worth making a new arbor. Nice one, Matty.
Gday, I was expecting to get around 50mm, certainly makes a difference mate, thanks for watching, cheers
Great job of tool making. Thanks for the video keep on keeping on.
Thanks very much Harold, appreciate your support mate, cheers
G'day Matty, nice seeing you again mate, cracking job and a very generous gift eh, fantastic stuff, she'd be shaking a bit if I'd made that 😀
Gday Ralfy, if you made this it would spin spot on, im amazed at the generosity I get mate, truly humbling to be honest, thanks for watching, cheers
Matty , this is fantastic, I love my annular cutters......best wishes for USA and the other Sunshine State, Paul
Gday Paul, I think I’ll be buy a set of annular cutters before I buy more large drills mate, they just work, thanks for watching, cheers
@@MattysWorkshop they even make Carbide tip ones for the nasty stuff.....but the high speed steel works just fine....
Nice arbor as per usual. I am no expert but have 4 tips for using the cutters.
1 wear good eye protection. They can jam with chips and will explode without warning (painful when you shatter an $80 cutter),
2 don't peck, continuous feed recommended.
3 they come in 2 grinds, one for single plies (these are the standard) and one for stack cutting (drilling through multiple plies). You can only drill through one layer of steel with the regular cutters. Power feeding through a stack with the wrong cutter will probably shatter it.
4 the rim of the slug is f'ing sharp. Be carful getting them out if they stick in the cutter (or just picking them up)
Gday, I really appreciate the information, I’ll keep this in mind, cheers
Matty, I had not seen your use of the sine bar, that is very slick as we say......Bravo.....Paul
Gday, check out Tangent Jim on RUclips, he’s the man responsible for building them and they work a treat, cheers
@@MattysWorkshop thank You Matty....Paul
Those who have used annular cutters wonder how we ever got along without them. I have a Jancy magnet drill that I bought in the 90s and a set of their cutters. Great for drilling holes in truck frames.
Gday, I’ve only done 2 holes so far and I’m already thinking the same, they do a great job, thanks for watching, cheers
@@MattysWorkshop They work well to put a hole where there already is a hole or to move a hole. Try it in the test hole you made. You can move it slightly or half the width of the hole. They cut from the inside out. The Jancy drill was set up to supply cutting fluid inside the cutter. A good cutting paste applied to the inside of the cutter works well too. Jancy made a Slugger paste but almost any cutting paste or wax will work.
Top taper turning mate. Them cutters are the way to go, lot less mucking around than drilling. Thanks for another great video and have a good one 👍🇦🇺
Gday Mark, the taper turned out spot on and the sin bar makes it really easy to get everything set right, definitely going to invest in some more annular cutters, they do a neat job mate, thanks for watching, cheers
Matty you're an absolute legend - i adore your channel (g'day from brisbane) - kurtis (CEE) drew reference in a video that he was going to get you up for a meet & greet - i can't wait to see it - he is also a brilliant tradesman - make sure that they take you to the Yatala pie factory, give karen a hug n a kiss, i reckon buy homeless at least 20 tennis balls - you know he's going to eat them all 🥰 can't wait to see it. Matty keep being yourself - we love you 🙃
Gday, I’m looking forward to getting up there one day, should be good, I don’t change for the camera, what you see is what you get with my channel, appreciate you watching mate, cheers
G'day Matty another very nice project that works very well. You have found your calling. Make lots of shiny bits & pieces & keep having fun
Gday Ted, not sure if I’ve found my calling but I’ve found I enjoy machining, thanks for watching mate, cheers
Did I see COOLANT on the lathe,,, yeah,, great job on arbor. And yes annular cutters are fantastic
Gday, yer you did see coolant now on the lathe, homemade setup, I used a pump out of a parts washer that has a built in filter and a 20ltr bucket with a lid, simple and it works, thanks for watching, cheers
Yeah annular cutters are great for large holes. Makes quick work. You dont have to step drill like you do with regular drill bits. Nice job on the arbor build.
Gday Tom, I’m amazed how good it went through the plate, thanks for watching mate, cheers
Another beautiful tool Matty, well done. Hard to beat those cutters. Gary
Gday Gary, first time I’ve used these cutters and I’m amazed how well they work, definitely going to get more when the funds allow it, thanks for watching mate, cheers
I have used similar cutters on mag drills. They are amazing. Nice job on the arbor. Thanks for sharing.
Gday Patrick, I’m still amazed at how good it cut through the plate, Thanks for watching, cheers
keep up the good work sir, l always enjoy watching your videos.
Thanks very much for the kind words and support mate, cheers
Those annular cutters are fantastic, wish they'd incorporate a chip breaker though . Taper was spot on , very nice . Also great looking part and addition to your tooling .
Gday, this was the first time I’d used these style of cutters and it would be good to have a chip breaker, the compound sine bar makes cutting the taper a breeze, thanks for watching mate, cheers
We have a mag drill at work with smaller annular cutters, but I like the idea of using bigger ones like you did as it saves time and materials. I also like the dedicated holder idea for them. Nice use of the compound sine bar, Jim sent me one too but I haven't had a chance to use it yet. You make beautiful work, gotta say.
Gday Everrett, the sine bar is a game changer, every taper I’ve done has been spot on every time, thanks for watching mate, cheers
Outstanding Matty ! Nice build, using the spindle MT adapter for the finish boring was genius... Your going to love those annular cutters, there awesome.
Cheers....Dean
Gday Dean, the MT5 - MT3 adapter is handy, did you get one with your new lathe?, it’s very similar to my lathe, thanks for watching mate, cheers
@@MattysWorkshop Yep I got one 👍
Great build, Matty! Arbor turned out beautiful. Good on the bloke that sent the cutter.
Gday, I’m very grateful of the generosity of the viewers of my channel, Appreciate you watching mate, cheers
When you can easily "whip up" a morse3 taper with no errors you know you have skills! 👍
Gday, not sure about the skill part mate, more luck and the right tools I’d say, thanks for watching, cheers
That is not a Morse Taper to 3/4 inch Weldon Shank....that is a Marvelous Piece of Art my friend......
Turned out alright in the end, gotta love it when a plan comes together, cheers
@@MattysWorkshop Cheers my friend, see you later on CEE
I have also found using the ER collets to hold the rota broach cutters works a treat as well. Cheers for the videos Matty love your work!
Gday, i think ER collets are a good all round tool holder compared to other options for the hobbyists, much more range and cost wise to, thanks for watching, cheers
Good one Matty! At least with Annular cutters you get consistent round holes that hold their size.
Gday, I’m amazed at how good they cut, thanks for watching mate, Cheers
G'day Matty. Love that new autofeed you installed on the compound feed 🤣. Hey, that arbor came out awesome mate. Good work buddy. Cheers, Aaron.
Gday Aaron, nothing wrong with a bit of Makita power feed, i’m to lazy to do it by hand, thanks for watching mate, cheers
Matty -- Excellent Video . FYI -- The Slug fell out. That's because the I.D. is eccentric.
Gday Jim, the sine bar made all the difference yet again, brilliant tool that makes a world of difference in setup time and accuracy, it just works, definitely a game changer in any workshop mate, thanks for watching, cheers
Nice to have something with more available Z height. Makes those tools that much more usable. Fantastic machining, Matty.
Gday, I was surprised I gained 65mm, I was expecting 50mm to be about it, thanks for watching, cheers
Hello Matty,
Nicely made and well worth the effort to get the extra height...
Take care.
Paul,,
Gday Paul, I didn’t expect to gain 65mm, I thought I’d only get 50mm, thanks for watching mate, cheers
Good additions to your arsenal - one gifted and one made. Nice work, Matty. Worth the wait 😉
Gday Russell, certainly a good addition to the workshop, thanks for watching, cheers
Another fine piece of work Matty. Annular cutters are great - much nicer to use than hole saws. And as a bonus you get a dump with no hole that can be used for other projects.
Cheers.
Gday Alan, I’ll definitely be buying more annular cutters over the next little while, they cut super clean, thanks for watching, cheers
best thing since sliced bread those annular cutter arbors, I got one for my drill press and it makes life so simple for any hole over about 12mm (you can get 12mm annular cutters, but I'm happy enough to use normal drill bits for that size). Annular cutters work well and are a fraction of the price of a drill bit to make the same size hole. You can get arbors that take a coolant feed internally as well, now I have my mill, I might try one, no good for the drill press though, would make a heck of a mess!
Gday, this was the first time I’d ever used an annular cutter and I’m impressed, they seem to cut faster then a normal drill and leave a really neat finish, thanks for watching mate, cheers
In the process of setting up horizontal milling for my little lathe, finding tooling and such. I learnt a lot from that video. THANKS a hell of a lot Matty.😊
Gday, I really like hearing the videos are helping others in the workshops, appreciate you letting me know mate, cheers
Peter, these cutters are nearly "Milling Cutters" in their own right. I have used one as such, carefully and a nice finish.
@@jasonneedham6734 what?
@@PeterMurphy_ OK Forget it!
Those tips you're using certainly give an awesome finish, nice work 👍
Gday, the TNGG inserts are brilliant, they are made by Union Materials and I buy them through LiveTools here in Australia, thanks for watching, cheers
Very Cool, annular cutters are a godsend Matty..
Gday, I’m amazed how good they work, thanks for watching mate, cheers
Another wonderful project done without any drama. Good to see that sine bar out again. It's so simple and useful.
Gday Joe, the sine bar makes all the difference between a good job and an alright job, definitely a tool worth having, cheers
Brilliant job Matty. It looks and works great. And saving that amount of height is a definite advantage for you big time. It's great that there are people out there that are impressed with your work and want to help you out by donating nice brand new tooling to your channel, and that's down to two things mate, one your work is exceptionally good, and two your a real nice bloke. Cheers from the snowy UK. Sam
Gday Sam, i was expecting to save around 50mm but ended up with 65mm extra bonus there, I never expect viewers to spend there hard earned coin on me, it’s was an amazing gift and truly grateful, I offered to pay him but he all is good, thanks for watching and kind words mate, cheers
Good stuff Matty! That waste slug will be potentially useful for something. Good science wins.
I do love my lathe sine bar as well. Jim at Tangent Engineering did a great job with the design.
Gday, this is the second taper I’ve done since I’ve had the sine bar and it’s certainly a game changer in accuracy, thanks for watching mate, cheers
very good job matty
Thanks very much mate, appreciate your support, cheers
Very nice “handy” build, great job/discussion….I will need to build a MT3 stub driver for my new mill to power the horizontal head
Gday Chuck, I really like the new mill you picked up, beautiful condition, can’t wait to see it up and running, thanks for watching, cheers
That came out a thing of beauty just like you said it would. I made one for my mill/drill with a straight shaft so I could use it in a collet or drill chuck. I had to have a 1/4" thru hole in mine. All my annular cutters have a 1/4" guide in the center that helps to position them on a center punch mark. Thanks for the video.
Gday Jim, i decided not to put the guild pin in the arbor to gain more z height, my thought is I can make a short pin to pick up the centre of the hole and remove it before cutting, I hope I explained that right, thanks for watching, cheers
Matty, a little tip, you can freshen up the cutting edge on the annular cutter with a stone or diamond hone.......
sometimes cutting hot rolled steel a hard spot will be found an may give you trouble.....
just hone the cutting face, and not the edges.....there are sharpening services that can re-sharpen also....
they sell a jig for doing this, but I do not know how much they are.....probalby not cheap.....I hope this helps,
Paul
Gday, I was looking at the cutting edges and wondering how I’d go sharpening them, I’ll have to have a look at how the sharpening jigs are made and see what I can do there, thanks for the info, cheers
I always assumed that Hangsterfer's was an Australian company. When you mentioned it is made in USA I looked them up. They're a couple of hours from my house. I'm definitely going to try their stuff out now that I know.
I thought the same thing, time to go shopping...
Gday, I think you’ll like the Hangsterfers products, definitely worth checking out mate, thanks for watching, cheers
Nice work on the arbor! Those cutters are pretty slick, big time saver and great finish also. That sine plate for the lathe is a great addition, what a great idea!! Thanks for sharing.
Gday Craig, the compound sine bar makes cutting the taper extremely easy, a simple tool that makes a world of difference, thanks for watching, cheers
Great arbor build Matty. Nice tool addition being able to use annular cutters.
Thanks for sharing.
Gday Joe, I’ve never used these cutters before but I’ll definitely be buying some now, thanks for watching, cheers
What a great job you did. Well done Matty
Thanks very much, appreciate you watching mate, cheers
Great finish for a useful tool
Thanks very much, cheers
Excellent build Matty, I bought a set of cutters from Amazon like 90 bucks for six they do a great job, great video, keep'um coming..
Gday, I really have to buy a set of cutters now, I’m amazed at the finish they leave in the side wall of the hole, thanks for watching and all your support mate, cheers
Thanks, nowbI'm going to be spending more money on tools that I hadn't know I needed. ;)
20:00 we call those slugs 'Round Tuits' like when the wife wants something fixed, . We will get "Around to It Soon".......
I use a magnetic drill that uses annular cutters, [jancy Slugger] it runs at 440 rpm, it will cut a 1 inch hole /25.4 mm
in 1 inch A36 hot rolled steel in less that 1 minute......these cutters are an amazing tool.......Paul...
I’m seriously considering buying a mag drill for a couple of ideas I have, there not cheap so I have to make sure the plans I have are going to work first, cheers
@@MattysWorkshop there are a lot of uses for a Mag Drill...I carry a plate of 1/4 " steel and attach the drill to it. by the magnet.....then I can clamp small parts to the plate and drill on location.....you do not need a hole in plate for the bit to to go through, as the slug will spin but the thin rim will keep the bit form biting into the plate.....you can of course use a drill press vise to clamp, but that limits the height of material you can drill, I find it is easier to just clamp......check this video out where I am drilling aluminum 1.5 inch sq tube.....run video at 2x speed if you want....you must remove the slug when going through one wall of tube if it does not fall off, but sometimes, it will drop off and land where the bit is going and cause the drill or part to twist, so check each time you go through the top.....of course, if drilling solid material, you do not need to check....a lot of mag drills will come with a coolant system, you can use water, beer, or even water base coolant....the guide pin in the center of annular cutter pushes back, the coolant will flow.....of course, the pin also will keep cutter coolant kick out the slug as it is spring loaded...shoot me an email if you have questions....I hope this makes sense, Paul....ruclips.net/video/lZ2Cdpr_5Z8/видео.html....
Kerja bagus.. 😍
Thanks very much, appreciate you watching mate, cheers
The old Morse taper is always a challenge for me, I have had a few fails.
The shorter fitting is the go, top result.
Gday, cutting a Morse taper now is extremely easy with the compound sine bar, it makes a world of difference mate, thanks for watching, cheers
Fantastic video. I have a lathe same as yours, but I am not a machinist , I wish I was , I learned that little that I know, pinching some time during working on any lathe I could put my hands on during my exquisite life of Boilermarking/Welder . I have used Annular Cutters extensively from I can ever remember, mainly with a portable magnet drill press, to witch in the pass they were bulky and havey, in our days they came in various sizes and a light weights one does miracle. The Annular cutter they came in many quality to suet applications, and prices of course, some with diamond tips, and they cut a one to one hole, very precise.... (for a boilermaker work of course)... In my earlier years I suggested to some workplace and they couldn't' tank me enough, also some newest apprentices use to use the wrong procedure, by cooling at the finish of the cut, so, on the next hole they would shatter as soon they start drilling... no need to explain way the reason to you...., but yes hopping the magnetic drill on large frames , it makes much easier to predrill big frames RHS before assembling and also more precise, and not to forget that they work horizontally and overhead.... providing the 240 "V" is always on ( a good reason to secure them with a rope or chine during usage)....Hahahahaha .
Gday, I’m really happy with the AL960b, so far it’s done everything I needed to do, I’m not a machinist either, I’m purely self taught and learnt buy watching others, RUclips and asking questions, I’ve been looking at Mag drills for a while now and for what I do I don’t need the top of the range, really an import drill would be alright, thanks for watching mate, cheers
Wow way to go Matty , I just bought a set of the annular cutters. After seeing what the bill was for them I felt like I should take out a loan for them. Lol
Gday, I believe they can get pricey but almost everything is now days mate, thanks for watching, Cheers
Have done the same as you Matty but with a 16mm straight shank so I can use it in the mill via a jacobs Chuck and in the lathe, brought a set of five up to 30mm but want to get some larger ones now. Good job pal, Terry from Scotland 🇺🇦👴🏻👍
Gday Terry, I seen on the news tonight you guys had a massive cold front and a big dump of snow there in Scotland, I’ll definitely be buying more annular cutters, there really do a neat job, thanks for watching mate, cheers
Nice job on the arbor....Thanks for sharing
Thanks Paul, appreciate you watching, cheers
Annular cutters are great, I have a bunch of them. I made my own arbor also as it would have been a week to get one. Turned out nice Matt, Keep smilin.
Gday Darren, I’ll definitely be buying some over the next while, the arbor is a simple build and I was surprised I saved 65mm of Z height, I thought I would have saved around 50mm, thanks for watching mate, cheers
Great Job Matty
That Cutter does an amazing job. My mini mill would'nt be able to cope with it though, thats a shame
take care
Kev uk
Gday Kev, I was amazed how the cutter preformed, I think your mill would run this cutter, im going to give it a go in my mill/drill in the next day or so, thanks for watching mate, cheers
Great job, I need to do the same but I'm going to cheat and use a blank MT3 from China. I really like those annular cutters but boy are they expensive, I agree there are some very kind people out there.
Gday, I haven’t had a big search on the internet yet but places like Amazon don’t seem to be to badly priced compared to buying large drills, all depends on quality to guess, thanks for watching, cheers
Fantastic work
Thanks very much, cheers
Right on nice job 👍👍👍 you're gonna love them they are pricey compared to regular bits but they're just flat out awesome I've only got a couple to try I haven't made an arbor yet I just hold them in a 3/4 collet they're fast leave an awesome finish and cut on size and you get tons of cuts without having to resharpen I hoping to add more soon 👍👍👍
Gday, I was amazed how well these cutters work, certainly quicker then a regular drill and there on size, I’ll definitely be buying more when the funds allow, thanks for watching mate, cheers
@@MattysWorkshop yea the best is when you have to drill multiple of the same parts I set up a stop or jig and that's it no changing bits for spotting or starter hole that's when I was sold when something that would have taken an hour for several parts went down to less than half that time they pay for themselves in labor quickly 👍👍👍
Did the same thing for mine. Yours is a bit nicer though!! Cheers from Sydney. God Bless
Gday, gaining the extra 65mm Z height was great, I was expecting around 50mm, thanks for watching, cheers
Another good one fella cheers
Thanks mate, appreciate you watching, cheers
I chuck them in my r8 to use them in my mill. You have to remember you can't cut a blind hole with them unless your willing to bore the center out.
Pretty neat finish. Kudos.
Thanks very much, cheers
Nice job !!
Thanks very much, appreciate you watching, cheers
Nice tool build, enjoyed watching. Thanks!
Thanks very much John, appreciate your support mate, cheers
Still a place in the shop for drills, but they do cut a nice 'ole. Yes, the bastard who sent you that, is committing you to spend your hard earnt on more cutters. We all need mates that do that. chuckle. 🙂
Gday Mark, it’s going to be money well spent mate, I never knew that they worked so well, thanks for watching mate, cheers 😉
I was in the same pickle last week. My 4 in 3 jaw Bison spindle style chuck has a MT 3 taper. My LeBlond 17 tailstock is MT4. Was going to machine an adaptor, but found that MSC had them for 30 buck shipped to my door. I love watching and learning from you guys out there that are true machinist, but I am still an amateur, so precise tapers still make me nervous 😜. Thx for sharing Matty, I love that sine plate, will have to buy one someday when funds allow :-) Bear
Gday Bear, I’m only an amateur machinist that’s all self taught, the compound sine bar makes cutting tapers really easy and accurate, thanks for watching and commenting mate, cheers
Interesting project, well done.
You can buy ready MT3 taper with some 1" body that You machine to fit the needs. I think eBay sold such ones.
Gday, I see you can buy mt3 arbor blanks but I prefer to make my own for the challenge, cheers
@@MattysWorkshop Of course! The fun is making things. Ordering from China the inspiration of doing the project is often lost when the stuff arrives...
My ones are sitting, nice to have some day inte future......
Hi Matty, I also love those cutters and so far they have lasted longer than I expected them to, but I expect the quality to vary dependent on the manufacturer.
I made two parallel shank holders for mine, one 20mm for my version of the TTS on the mill and a 16mm one which the largest I can hold in a drill chuck on the lathe.
If you want to save a bit more Z on the mill you could get a 3 morse 3/4"collet and fit it directly, over here in UK you can get them for about 10 quid but I guess they all come from your near neighbour so could easily be bought locally.for the equivalent price.
ATB
C
Gday, saving Z height is the challenge on the Cincinnati, I’ll have a look for a MT3 collet now, thanks for watching, cheers
Very neat job, love it. I've tried those cutters in an ER40 collet chuck on the Bridgeport, but now I'm wondering about a better solution. That poor coolant nozzle was having a hard life at 18:54 !
Gday, I was really surprised how good these cutters work, the nozzle certainly got hammered but it’s survived, thanks for watching, cheers
Did my reaction come through to the net? When you changed your tool to the TNGG Insert I let out a loud OOOOOOOOOO! Damn, that's pretty!
Wakodahatchee Chris
Funny you mention that, I thought I heard something🤣, the finish from the TNGG insert is mind blowing, even on soft material it will leave a mirror like finish, it’s an easy way to make you jobs look professional mate, thanks for watching, cheers
@@MattysWorkshop Since you didn't post a link I watched the video again to see if I missed it. I checked out the availability of TNGG inserts but there's a wide range in $$. Please post the link to yours. Thanks!
@@cdrive5757 I buy my inserts through LiveTools www.googleadservices.com/pagead/aclk?sa=L&ai=DChcSEwj1mIyK3t_9AhWsYA8CHfywAVEYABAAGgJ0Yg&ae=2&ohost=www.google.com.au&cid=CAESauD2o6w45Fl5Da9gmBWvhvWSGraNDwXSGBqP3-ULO6GuGfQa26JHj0o9GTE_1Vc9fNNmP0a6s82PCFpWm1VcYS-Rf3c3BQZM9H0Td62rXFux7ix6luUd6JS-NF8mei-Ts-4ncirgaa_iBxg&sig=AOD64_3RJOlsxv0U0Ual6ML0TXUAnT2S1A&q&adurl&ved=2ahUKEwjX_IOK3t_9AhXvmVYBHVDhC7UQ0Qx6BAgIEAE
Best to give them a call mate
Thx for the vid.
Thanks mate, appreciate your support, cheers
Matty that’s awesome nice work
Thanks very much mate, cheers
Nice work Matty. I don't think i've seen one of those cutters before. I have a box full of Holesaw cutter from 16mm to about 100mm. Starret type, but not a tough thing like that. I'll bet they cost a pretty penny or 2 to buy.
Regards.
Steve.
Gday Steve, these have been around for years but I’ve never had any before, certainly going to out a collection together though, overall there not to badly priced depending on quality, thanks for watching mate, cheers
Nice work as always Matty. That cutter is fantastic. I have bi-metal hole saws and you know how bad the concentricity is on those. You use a 50mm hole saw and you end up with a 51.5mm hole :(
Gday, I know what you mean about hole saws, they work but no where near accurate, thanks for watching mate, cheers
They aren't cheap. But they cut a beautiful hole. I made an adapter with a 1/2 shank to fit a drill chuck. You can buy one for an R8.
Gday, they really do cut a beautiful hole, appreciate you watching mate, cheers
another nice one,matty 70 mm is a lot
Gday, I was expecting to gain around 50mm but 65mm is better, cheers
Matty your a good man
Gday Jay, appreciate you watching mate, cheers
Nice job Matty I really like that compound sine bar do you know where I can get one in the USA and if you don't mind me asking what inserts do you find that works well for steel and aluminum thank you for the video
Gday, the sine bar I used is made in the USA by Tangent Engineering, (Tangent Jim on RUclips), if you go back a few videos of mine you’ll see the contact details for Jim, I mainly use Palbit WNMG inserts for material removal and Union Materials TNGG for finishing in steel, aluminium I use the TNGG inserts and I also have inserts made for aluminium but not sure of the brand name on them, hope this helps, cheers
👍👍👍
Thanks for watching mate, your new shop looks the goods now most of the machines are in, cheers
Matty if you haven't got the tools you can't make videos for use to watch.
Kit from up North
That’s very true mate, thanks for watching, cheers
Matty, you know at 13:50 when it is a very tight fit,
it will make a sound like prrrrffffffftttt upon inserting the cutter...
.like my wife's Bum when it falls asleep as she says...
Nothing like a tight fit mate
@@MattysWorkshop that is tight as a crab's ass, water tight.....
Matty, just watching Pask. ""Making this unique and favourite tool even more awesome."" At his 13.30 mark, check him out using an Annular Cutter in the lathe.
Gday Jason, I’ll slip over and check it out, thanks for letting me know, cheers
Yep just had a look and that’s a brilliant use of the cutter
Hi Matt nice video. Have you tried to use the hole saw for face milling? Cheaper than getting a milling face cutter. Would it be also easier to re-sharpen in a tool grinder?
Gday Steve, I haven’t tried that and I don’t think I’ve seen it done before, I’ll have to see if it can be done, thanks for watching, cheers
Matty, 🕷️ how’s the elbow healing? 👍🏴
Gday, it’s getting there, only the very centre won’t completely heal, apart from that it’s good, thanks for asking mate, cheers
Came out really nice and cuts well, good addition to the toolkit. How much does that slideway oil cost ? I just use an all purpose synthetic oil at the moment, wouldn't mind switching.
Gday, I buy the way oil off LiveTools, your best to get in contact with them, I brought these at the end of last year, it’s not the cheapest but it works well, I used to use Penrite from memory and it always just ran off the ways, this stuff doesn’t, it just works, let me know if you need there contact information, thanks for watching, cheers
@@MattysWorkshop thanks, they responded very promptly. ~ $70 for a 5L can if anyone else is looking. It seems reasonable for something I'd buy once every few years.
i would like to see your headstock - collet design material gripper
Which part would you like to see??
how it attaches to the machine and how it grips and is used
Nice work.
How precise was it on the finished hole diameter?
Gday Patrick, the hole finished up right on size, I was amazed how close it was, thanks for watching, cheers
Hay
👍💪✌
Thanks for watching, cheers
Noice!
Is there a story or video coming up with the faceplate @17:20 ?
Gday, at this stage there will be if I can work out how I’m going to do it mate, Thanks for watching, Cheers
Yeah, its amazing, the generosity I mean... I now and again consider starting filming my shop, which is being slowly put together, as i am in the process of restoring quite a few machines for myself, yada yada... I know that i would never ask for any money or gifts of any kind, as i too cant imagine disrespecting someones labors by asking them for what they are paid for their work... I would make content to educate and show what i was shown freely in regards to an area i fell in love with 15 years ago and now i actually have a home shop, a hobby shop, but it aint 100kg machines, ill tell you that... Yet at the same time, as an avid viewer of some channels, i know that if i actually had the resources to fund someone or give them a lovely high precision instrument, i sure would... Tho, now with some of my machines in action, i could make them high precision shit and gift it to them, allowing me to not spend the money and still present someone i want to support with a masterwork tool, and as im making one, i can make two, so i get to add a tool to my own collection.. And being a youtube player makes you a bit less of a parasocial generous weirdo, when you gift say a swiss/jap grade carbide tipped dead center, or a live center with a carbide tip just as an overkill, as there its not needed apart for its durability...
Gday, when I started this channel I have never wanted to ask anyone to support the channel, I monetized the channel which does put adds in the videos only because YT was going to put adds in anyway, I don’t expect anyone to spend there hard earned money buying items for my workshop, I have had quite a few companies contact me offering items for review and I have excepted the ones that I believe will be a benefit to what I do and that will possibly help others with the some occupation/hobby, the guys who sent the annular cutter and arbor had me address from a previous email exchange and before I could say anything he had already ordered and had sent to my address, I’m extremely grateful of his generosity and it’s his way of saying thank you for the entertainment he gets from my content, cheers
@@MattysWorkshop As said, i fully understand you in that regard, and wholly approve of any move you made, i too would monetize the channel, and implore all of my subscribers to use an adblocker to not have to see any commercials/ads unless watching those was their deliberate choice to fractionally fund me, as while i could use extra coin, i would not be fine with anything that cometh not from ones own selfless desire to gift out of thanks for whatever was provided by me...
Another great video Matty. Excellent taper turning. There are some very kind and generous people out there. My RUclips channel is very new and I've been overwhelmed to receive a couple of viewer gifts. Take care Matty. Cheers Nobby @ nobbysworkshop
Gday Nobby, I’ve subscribed to your channel, the dro was an amazing gift, there’s generous people still out there mate, thanks for watching, cheers
@@MattysWorkshop Thanks so much for subscribing Matty. It was an amazing gift and so unexpected. Have installed the Z-axis, and now working on the Y- axis. Take care Matty. Cheers Nobby
@@MattysWorkshop Meant to say I subscribed to your channel some time ago, and really enjoy your videos. Cheers Nobby