Micro 100 was founded and based in my hometown Meridian Idaho USA. It’s great that products from a small town being used on the other side of the world. My dad repaired the machine that soldered that carbide to that shank.
@@swanvalleymachineshopI have a couple of their carbide end mills and a small carbide boring bar that have held up rather well. I love your content keep it coming.
😂.כייף לראות אותך עובד,זה מזכיר לי את שנת 1984 כשלמדתי בתיכון מכניקה,מתגעגע לימים האלה,הלוואי ויכולתי לעבוד אצליך...בהצלחה חבר ושהקב''ה יברך אותך בכול מכול כול אמן.🤲👍👌💞🇮🇱🙋♂️
your effort into the camera angles is awesome, makes ya really feel as if your right on the subject and not some distant tripod view.. keep at it brother, love watching your content.. Much love from an American machinist.
Great Video, Used geometic heads alot back in the 1970's and 80's. You are lucky to have all the cutting dies for those heads. I love the camera shots, and the closeups were for real. But the Slow-Mo shots. WOW. I need to work on that technique. Your videos are always special, But this one Really Stood Out. Thanks for shareing.
@@number2664 Hey , no worries thanks . There are a few bits missing for the capstan slide apron . I will look in my parts book when i get time . My email is theswanvalleymachineshop@gmail.com
That tailstock adapter is a good idea. I need to make one. I run my die heads in boring bar holders on the tool post like Keith Fenner demonstrated a while ago. Stopping against the carriage looks easier than my current process of running to a zero on the DRO.
Hey mate you are on par with Matty's Workshop for making me piss my pants with your one liners. Great aussie slang, love it . Cheers from Mt Hawthorn, Perth .
G'day Max, just up on Sunday morning, fresh coffee and a video from you, happy days! Thanks for sharing buddy and best wishes to you and yours Edit: Having watched this, I have to say what a job well done mate, lovely stuff
I have a small die head I will have to put on the list of things to do and collect the smaller common threads Also Ended up with some larger thread chasers Thanks top video as aways.
Great video Max. Acquired one of those years ago in a box of bits that I bought. Never understood how they worked until you just explained it. I’ll go out and have another look now but as you say, without the dies it’s a bit like having a car without wheels…………
To secure a contract from Coventry fasteners is a machinist dream job. Avoided nut & bolt section as apprentice & chose fitting. Did use a turret & robotic instincts can cause problems if finger are not careful. True thread eater all my experience was done at the Haros Boiler Company. They were a great start in a new state. Definate showing that a run of threaded parts is no problem for Max's shop.
Great video Max! I'd never known what these were called till now. They're similar to the dies I'd use on a pipe threading machine at a factory. Lol I can still smell the toluene we'd use to clean off the cutting oil.
Amazing how similar AUS. Is to where I live in South Africa. We also haven't had a winter yet, still swimming at 06h30! No rain in month either, not expecting any until Oct/ Nov.
Great job Max! I love those Coventry style geometric die heads. My late brother was a precision thread grinder, apprenticed at the firm of LAL ( Lehman, Archer and Lane) literally a mile and a half down the road from me, I think they made thread chasing dies but I'm not exactly sure. Sadly the firm went under in the early 90's like so many British engineering companies did around that time. I love your work and Aussie humour and as someone else commented it's on a par with Matty's from Matty's workshop from beautiful Eden. Keep the vids coming Max, they're really good to watch and are extremely informative. Cheers from England, Sam
I wonder what the guts of that head looks like. I'll have to see if I can find some patent drawings and decide if it's something that can reasonably be shop made. Great job on the video, as usual!
I had this one apart but did not film it . I should video the strip down & clean of one of the other ones . It could be made , but would be more than a tad tricky ! Everything is hardened & ground so it will last . Cheers . 👍
Hi Max I'm a hobbyist from the UK and your channel is very informative. I enjoy watching and learning from you. Thank you for all your effort. You mentioned in this video that you honed the ball mill before you used it but unfortunately you didn't show how? If possible could you show how you hone your tools. If I have missed a video that you have done so already could you point me in that direction. Many thanks and please keep up the great videos. Dazzer. 👍
We have had 2 days consecutive with no rain here on the mid north coast of NSW, I have several of those die heads and a box of dies, one day I will get around to working out how to use them. You have explained it better than a lot of other videos I have watched, I feel I could now attempt using them, a lot are just thrown in a box, I do have some boxed sets
Now that is the way you can bang out some threads! Always knew that something like that existed, but it’s the first time I’ve seen one in operation. Single pointing films great, but if you have to do five or fifteen of the same size and pitch…….😮. I’m guessing that retail is stiff for setting up initially, but what a tool! Thanks Max
Hey Max, another great video. I need to do the same for my 3/4" Die Head. I need to get the Capstan up and running as well in amongst everything else. Cheers.
Max, you're too modest. I ALWAYS get something out of your videos! Trouble is, I'm an old fart who wishes he'd done this stuff years ago. Regards from Townsville, Col.
That was very interesting. I've never used die heads, the guys on capstans were very jealous that they knew something 'we' didn't. I do have a set of 1/8" Whitworth chasers I bought for some reason but so long ago I forget what I needed them for (a 'Saturday morning special') I was more into British bikes back then, even though I had a Honda to get back and fore to work. Only Vincent's and Brough Superiors were collectible classics (probably others I can't remember) BSA, Triumph and Norton's were mainly just old leaky bikes rusting in back yards. Wish I had a few nowadays though seeing the crazy prices they go for.
@@swanvalleymachineshop Hi Max, I was working at a Honda, Yamaha, Triumph dealers when the Jubilee Bonneville was launched. We had one come back where they 'forgot' to put circlips in piston one side and gudgeon pin wore a slot between cylinders. Very difficult to get apart. Almost all of them came back for faulty chrome. Meridan wasn't doing a very good job. A friend was racing a Bonneville with Weslake 8 valve top end though, said being passed by Kawasaki Zed's' at over 130 was depressing after all the work he put into it. Did go around corners better than the Kawi's though. Until about 1998, I worked on various 'old' Triumphs every few years, when running right they are really good fun, the low speed torque was great, particularly in traffic (much better than Yamaha's XS650 in my opinion)
G'day Max. The 3 MT adapter worked out really well, but ... looking at the Coventry Die cutting the thread, then opening up to stop cutting at the exact marked point is very Impressive. Well Done, & a Very Professional Tool.
If you want some rain Max, you can have some of ours. Its done nothing but piss down here in Yorkshire, UK, for about the last 18 months. Though the last week we have seen 21C and some sun, almost forgotten what the sun was. Another lovely little job done again. Really must try and find some decent 2nd hand tapping and die heads.
I can send you some rain. We have had a lot over the last 2 weeks. Probably 5 to 6 inches. Everything is green and growing strong being we are in late spring here.
for the benefit of those that haven't or cannot visit Max's Machine Shop - the fast forward segments are actually His real speed ! 💥, Max only slows down while speaking and thinking
Hi Max, we are screaming out for the wet season to start here in Philippines, currently in drought conditions. The die head produces an excellent finish and cuts to an accurate length, easy as.
Thanks Max I have a 1/2” CH head I am restoring, I hope yours don’t use oddball threads like my Herbert eg the front plate is retained by under nominal dia. 3BA. I need to make an arbor like yours so this was very useful.
Hi Max, Nice video as always. I was trying to find a decent Capstan lathe in the UK just recently, with absolutely no luck, as soon as one comes up for sale its snapped up. Great machines for turning multiple parts especially where you have a long threaded section. CNC's are great but have their limitations. Best wishes, Mal. PS: hope you get some rain soon.
> nice work there max; looks like a handy piece of kit those thread chasing sets. its been many years, the engineering dept i worked in - we got issued paper copies of the mcmaster carr catalogs (like 4"" thick). im sure most of it is online; always enjoyed the materials research, application and specification pages. ? do they have outlets in austrailia? my opinion reading book pages corresponding to whats being looked up in the pages might be a lot easier than how stuff gets cataloged online....maybe if requested they will send you the latest edition .
Thanks . The big catalogue books were great . But like everything else , it's on line . But at least that way , it should be reasonably up to date . McMaster do not ship to Australia so i use an American forwarding address . Cheers 👍
Nice job on the adapter...a bit of relief from funky lever curve's, angles and internal slots 😁 Yeah no kidding those die heads are not cheap, had to pass on a couple..just too pricy
😮😮Morning Max, I wish I could send you some rain - we have too much of it here in Scotland ! A quick question, Can those Coventry Die Heads roll threads as well as cut them, just curious ?? Cheers, Bob.
No , thread rolling is done a different tool /machine . We could do with some of your rain though . I know that when it does finally come , i will be whinging because it's always raining ! Cheers 👍
I think you mentioned that the shank on the die head is removable. Why did you make an adaptor rather than a new shank complete, are there some features on the business end that would be hard to reproduce?
Max, I was just thinking about the die heads. I have a Geometric copy 5/16” DSA and a 9/16” Geometric DSA made for Hardinge. Man, useful chasers are so hard to get, while the useless ones are all over. The reason for my post is that I always have used these as a push off. Watching you use the Coventry as a pull off made me think about that, as it’s simpler. But I just tried that in my hand and those springs are so strong I don’t see how they can be used with anything under maybe 5/16” without damaging the threads. Are the Coventry springs that strong? Also I’ve never trusted the idea of using the tailstock as a slide as the mass is high for small threads, so I made a sleeve that allows the die to slide forwards without rotating.
Check to make sure your springs are not over adjusted . 8mm is the smallest with this size head otherwise the thread can not handle the spring release pressure . They make another variation with a different release mechanism for small threads .👍
@@swanvalleymachineshop I hadn’t looked at the manual for a pretty long time. I remember that I only use them as a push off because of the spring. So I just looked at it and there’s no way to adjust the spring tension in the manual. Now that I just read it, I see why I never tried. The 9/16th head is so tensioned that holding it in my hands, I can’t push it off. It moves, but it’s too much to release it. The 5/16th isn’t nearly as tight, but seems too tight for small screws.
@@melgross The 2 small screws behind the front plate . They can be backed out as long as their is still enough threads to retain the spring pressure . Wound too far in & the die will not release .
G'day Max, I see you parting "upside down" to how I do. Could you please talk about the why's and advantages or limitations. Thanks, Butch. ps, That stock is quality reusium grade 0.0 Also what make of file do you use? good ones seem hard to find these days. thanks
I use single cut files for the lathe & general work . I run the parting blade upside down as it gives next to no issues compared to the other way like chatter & dig in issues . You can safely feed in in a lot harder also , as you have to do when parting induction hardened chrome bar . 👍
Lol . I did not forget , just left it out to save time as the video was more about the die head than cutting a Morse taper . I will show the next Morse taper set up ! 👍
It is only just nipped . Some of the dies are a few thou too wide & the head will bind up , depends on the manufacturer . I need to grind a fraction off some of them . Cheers 👍
Another fascinating video Max.👍👍👍 If you do ever have a DRO scale on your cross slide on the small lathe, and still wanted to use the Coventry style die head you could just drill and tap the side of the slide below the scale cover and screw a machined shoulder bolt stop in a fraction proud of the scale cover as your new stop - to protect the scale cover from potentially being crushed. Alternately you could fit the stop to the front of the base of the tailstock & position it so it hits the side of the cross slide below the scale height. Either / or should work. My AL 356V has it on the cross slide I recently noticed, so not my idea. I’m not that bright. 😜😂😂😉
i detest those brazed pos things. every time i try to use one it goes right into the bin within minutes. I tossed a whole pile of new carbaloys because they would run a few inches and then spit chips. HSS or inserts.
You are very good at what you do! Please do not show speeded up video's, just edit out if needed. If you want to watch a fast Jack Ass, poke a hot soldering up his yahoo and whistle Dixie.
Hey MAX. I wanted to send you some of those spiral wound sanding rolls that I mentioned in your last video. I found them on McMaster-Carr, and I know that they do not service the Australian continent, so I figured I would send you some to try, but I am unaware of how to find your postal address. If you could let me know where to send them, I'll send them to you, a long with the small arbor shank required to use them. I feel quite sure you will love them. If you want me to email you I can do that, but I currently do not have your email address, but I think I've heard you say what it is before, not sure though. Let me know, and I'll be in touch, Eric Patterson from Phoenix, Arizona USA
Inches and Deg F ! The tapers for the arbor are a no brainer with Tangent Engineering's compound slide sine bar . Saves all the dicking around adjusting . Cheers 👍
@@swanvalleymachineshop hmm. I’ll have to look into that. Well, if a degree F is a banana, then a degree C is about 1 5/8 bananas. That’s a clumsy measurement system.
Great video. You do an amazing job making us feel like we're just in your shop chattin about it, or leanin over the machine with you.
Thanks 👍
I haven't seen any other videos that go into geometric dies with such detail. Very informative.
Cheers Rob . 👍
Yes a great explanation, the best I have seen!!!
Micro 100 was founded and based in my hometown Meridian Idaho USA. It’s great that products from a small town being used on the other side of the world. My dad repaired the machine that soldered that carbide to that shank.
They seem to be good tools . I will be getting some more , that's for sure . Cheers 👍
@@swanvalleymachineshopI have a couple of their carbide end mills and a small carbide boring bar that have held up rather well. I love your content keep it coming.
😂.כייף לראות אותך עובד,זה מזכיר לי את שנת 1984 כשלמדתי בתיכון מכניקה,מתגעגע לימים האלה,הלוואי ויכולתי לעבוד אצליך...בהצלחה חבר ושהקב''ה יברך אותך בכול מכול כול אמן.🤲👍👌💞🇮🇱🙋♂️
Thanks 👍
your effort into the camera angles is awesome, makes ya really feel as if your right on the subject and not some distant tripod view.. keep at it brother, love watching your content.. Much love from an American machinist.
No worries , Thanks 👍
Great Video, Used geometic heads alot back in the 1970's and 80's. You are lucky to have all the cutting dies for those heads. I love the camera shots, and the closeups were for real. But the Slow-Mo shots. WOW. I need to work on that technique. Your videos are always special, But this one Really Stood Out. Thanks for shareing.
Thanks 👍
very good job friend MAX
Thanks 👍
Thanks Max, I'm just a backyard basher and have always wondered how these worked.
No worries 👍
Really interesting tool Max
Cheers Matty . 👍
Well, over here some parts of the country are flooded. Talking about rain...
And it looks like it's not the first time you make a tapered adaptor :)
Rusty , get yourself one of the Tangent Engineering lathe compound sine bars . They make the tapers easy . 👍
Ingenious device! Loved the tip about aligning the existing center hole.
Thanks! 👍
Very interesting, Max. You make cutting a precision taper look so easy.
Cheers . Have a look at Tangent Engineering's lathe compound sine bar . Takes out most of the mucking around involved with setting the angles . 👍
@@swanvalleymachineshop Yep good product for sure.
This is one of the finest video's on tool making i've seen so far, exellent work Max, cheers mate have it good. Chris.
Thanks 👍
Taper turned out beaut. Capstan/ turret lathe, that 2D of yours would love that
Thanks . Two of the heads are earmarked for that machine . 👍
@@swanvalleymachineshop let me know if you need parts for it when you get up to it, I think I’ve got the parts your missing
@@number2664 Hey , no worries thanks . There are a few bits missing for the capstan slide apron . I will look in my parts book when i get time . My email is theswanvalleymachineshop@gmail.com
That tailstock adapter is a good idea. I need to make one. I run my die heads in boring bar holders on the tool post like Keith Fenner demonstrated a while ago. Stopping against the carriage looks easier than my current process of running to a zero on the DRO.
No worries . Any which way you can ! 👍
Hey mate you are on par with Matty's Workshop for making me piss my pants with your one liners. Great aussie slang, love it . Cheers from Mt Hawthorn, Perth .
No worries 👍
G'day Max, just up on Sunday morning, fresh coffee and a video from you, happy days! Thanks for sharing buddy and best wishes to you and yours
Edit: Having watched this, I have to say what a job well done mate, lovely stuff
Lol , you are just up & i am about to crack a beer for Sunday arvo !!! Cheers 👍
I have a small die head I will have to put on the list of things to do and collect the smaller common threads
Also
Ended up with some larger thread chasers
Thanks top video as aways.
Cheers 👍
Great video Max. Acquired one of those years ago in a box of bits that I bought. Never understood how they worked until you just explained it. I’ll go out and have another look now but as you say, without the dies it’s a bit like having a car without wheels…………
Cheers 👍
Great video Max
Cheers Chris
Thanks 👍
Great video Max! I’ve wondered how they work and about the dies for ages. Spot on. Thanks 👍🇳🇱
No worries 👍
thats a nice way for threading max.
cheers
ben
No worries 👍
To secure a contract from Coventry fasteners is a machinist dream job.
Avoided nut & bolt section as apprentice & chose fitting.
Did use a turret & robotic instincts can cause problems if finger are not careful.
True thread eater all my experience was done at the Haros Boiler Company. They were a great start in a new state.
Definate showing that a run of threaded parts is no problem for Max's shop.
Cheers 👍
Great video Max! I'd never known what these were called till now. They're similar to the dies I'd use on a pipe threading machine at a factory. Lol I can still smell the toluene we'd use to clean off the cutting oil.
Yes , they are similar to my pipe threader as well . Cheers 👍
Nice one Max 👍
Thanks 👍
Thanks Max. Always re;event to the stuff I do, albeit on a smaller amateur scale. Great lessons every episode.
Thanks 👍
Amazing how similar AUS. Is to where I live in South Africa. We also haven't had a winter yet, still swimming at 06h30! No rain in month either, not expecting any until Oct/ Nov.
Our winter starts in about 2 weeks , wonder if it will rain then ! It has been a good 6 months with nothing more than 1or 2 mm 👍
Right on. Great video. That Bridgeport (two heads) is now stuck in my ponderings😁
Lol , two heads . Cheers 👍
Great job Max! I love those Coventry style geometric die heads. My late brother was a precision thread grinder, apprenticed at the firm of LAL ( Lehman, Archer and Lane) literally a mile and a half down the road from me, I think they made thread chasing dies but I'm not exactly sure. Sadly the firm went under in the early 90's like so many British engineering companies did around that time. I love your work and Aussie humour and as someone else commented it's on a par with Matty's from Matty's workshop from beautiful Eden. Keep the vids coming Max, they're really good to watch and are extremely informative. Cheers from England, Sam
Thanks 👍
I wonder what the guts of that head looks like. I'll have to see if I can find some patent drawings and decide if it's something that can reasonably be shop made. Great job on the video, as usual!
I had this one apart but did not film it . I should video the strip down & clean of one of the other ones . It could be made , but would be more than a tad tricky ! Everything is hardened & ground so it will last . Cheers . 👍
Hi Max I'm a hobbyist from the UK and your channel is very informative. I enjoy watching and learning from you. Thank you for all your effort.
You mentioned in this video that you honed the ball mill before you used it but unfortunately you didn't show how? If possible could you show how you hone your tools. If I have missed a video that you have done so already could you point me in that direction.
Many thanks and please keep up the great videos. Dazzer. 👍
No worries , i will put it in next time . I just did it by hand on a diamond lapping wheel , a bit like touching up a drill bit . 👍
We have had 2 days consecutive with no rain here on the mid north coast of NSW, I have several of those die heads and a box of dies, one day I will get around to working out how to use them. You have explained it better than a lot of other videos I have watched, I feel I could now attempt using them, a lot are just thrown in a box, I do have some boxed sets
No worries 👍
Very neat tricks. I liked how you centered the piece so as not to break your center drill.
Thanks 👍
Now that is the way you can bang out some threads! Always knew that something like that existed, but it’s the first time I’ve seen one in operation. Single pointing films great, but if you have to do five or fifteen of the same size and pitch…….😮. I’m guessing that retail is stiff for setting up initially, but what a tool! Thanks Max
Yes , they are good but not cheap to set up . Worth their weight in gold ! 👍
When it come to scrap... sorry stock material I have a shed full of Sh1(one)T
Great video again. thanks for taking time to post it
Cheers . 👍
I had no idea these were a thing, they are awesome
No worries 👍
Hey Max, another great video. I need to do the same for my 3/4" Die Head. I need to get the Capstan up and running as well in amongst everything else. Cheers.
Lol , i have that issue as well . Need to get the Capstan sorted ! 👍
great content as usual Max. A pleasure to watch👍
Thanks 👍
Thank you Max!
No worries 👍
Proper job Max, great photography 👍
Thanks 👍
Great video max, I wish I could send ya some of this rain,damn near washed the garden plants out of the ground, lol 😂...
Thanks 👍
👍👍😎👍👍 - crackin nice job - Cheers - Praying that some rain stops by your way.
Cheers . The bloody rain goes everywhere except here ! Thanks 👍
Nice work
Cheers 👍
Max, you're too modest. I ALWAYS get something out of your videos! Trouble is, I'm an old fart who wishes he'd done this stuff years ago. Regards from Townsville, Col.
Thanks 👍
Great explanation and your content is always top notch, thank you! Cheers
Thanks 👍
Once again you made it look easy. 👍
No worries 👍
That was very interesting.
I've never used die heads, the guys on capstans were very jealous that they knew something 'we' didn't.
I do have a set of 1/8" Whitworth chasers I bought for some reason but so long ago I forget what I needed them for (a 'Saturday morning special')
I was more into British bikes back then, even though I had a Honda to get back and fore to work.
Only Vincent's and Brough Superiors were collectible classics (probably others I can't remember)
BSA, Triumph and Norton's were mainly just old leaky bikes rusting in back yards.
Wish I had a few nowadays though seeing the crazy prices they go for.
1977 Triumph Bonneville was my transport as a younger bloke ! If it did not start by second kick , there was something wrong ! 👍
@@swanvalleymachineshop Hi Max, I was working at a Honda, Yamaha, Triumph dealers when the Jubilee Bonneville was launched. We had one come back where they 'forgot' to put circlips in piston one side and gudgeon pin wore a slot between cylinders. Very difficult to get apart. Almost all of them came back for faulty chrome. Meridan wasn't doing a very good job. A friend was racing a Bonneville with Weslake 8 valve top end though, said being passed by Kawasaki Zed's' at over 130 was depressing after all the work he put into it. Did go around corners better than the Kawi's though. Until about 1998, I worked on various 'old' Triumphs every few years, when running right they are really good fun, the low speed torque was great, particularly in traffic (much better than Yamaha's XS650 in my opinion)
G'day Max. The 3 MT adapter worked out really well, but ... looking at the Coventry Die cutting the thread, then opening up to stop cutting at the exact marked point is very Impressive.
Well Done, & a Very Professional Tool.
No worries 👍
That thread cutting tool is really cool ! ! How nice is that it will disengage itself and not mess up the threads. . NICE !!!
Thanks 👍
If you want some rain Max, you can have some of ours. Its done nothing but piss down here in Yorkshire, UK, for about the last 18 months. Though the last week we have seen 21C and some sun, almost forgotten what the sun was.
Another lovely little job done again. Really must try and find some decent 2nd hand tapping and die heads.
Lol , no worries . A bit of Yorkshire precipitation would be fine ! 👍
I can send you some rain. We have had a lot over the last 2 weeks. Probably 5 to 6 inches. Everything is green and growing strong being we are in late spring here.
Our Winter starts in about 2 weeks , wonder if it will rain then ! They say rain on Friday , we shall see . 👍
Good job there Max.
Love making kit for the shop, every time it Does come out is a smile.
Cheers 👍
Great video as usual. Great photography and commentary.
Thanks 👍
Thanks for the show Max 🍻
No worries 👍
Thanks again for a great video 😁😁😁😁😁
Cheers 👍
Enjoyed
Cheers 👍
for the benefit of those that haven't or cannot visit Max's Machine Shop - the fast forward segments are actually His real speed ! 💥, Max only slows down while speaking and thinking
Lol , slow is good ! 👍
Very enjoyable, I always wondered how those were.
No worries 👍
Hi Max, we are screaming out for the wet season to start here in Philippines, currently in drought conditions.
The die head produces an excellent finish and cuts to an accurate length, easy as.
Your weather must be effected the same as ours . Might have been the El Nino thing that caused it . 👍
Thanks Max I have a 1/2” CH head I am restoring, I hope yours don’t use oddball threads like my Herbert eg the front plate is retained by under nominal dia. 3BA. I need to make an arbor like yours so this was very useful.
Lol , inside , their are a couple of small threads inside with springs under them . If they are screwed in too far , the head will not release . 👍
Thanks Max I didn’t know that.
We have had your rain in the UK.
You can have it back.
Lol , no worries 👍
Thank you very much all you share.
No worries 👍
Hi Max, Nice video as always. I was trying to find a decent Capstan lathe in the UK just recently, with absolutely no luck, as soon as one comes up for sale its snapped up. Great machines for turning multiple parts especially where you have a long threaded section. CNC's are great but have their limitations. Best wishes, Mal. PS: hope you get some rain soon.
Thanks . I wish my Capstan was running . I will get to it one day . 👍
Like shifting in bed and kicking it out with sox on !! Great job young man
Lol , Cheers 👍
I like the die heads but there are very expensive. Something like £600 -700 each plus the chasers at £80 per set. Cheers Max for the video.
Thanks 👍
Thanks for sharing 👍
No worries 👍
> nice work there max; looks like a handy piece of kit those thread chasing sets. its been many years, the engineering dept i worked in - we got issued paper copies of the mcmaster carr catalogs (like 4"" thick). im sure most of it is online; always enjoyed the materials research, application and specification pages. ? do they have outlets in austrailia? my opinion reading book pages corresponding to whats being looked up in the pages might be a lot easier than how stuff gets cataloged online....maybe if requested they will send you the latest edition .
Thanks . The big catalogue books were great . But like everything else , it's on line . But at least that way , it should be reasonably up to date . McMaster do not ship to Australia so i use an American forwarding address . Cheers 👍
Nice Job, one more step closer to HBM,
Yes , one more step ! Cheers 👍
absolutely fantastic, however for a few it is a lot of work but for a gross + it's a winner.
Thanks 👍
Nice job on the adapter...a bit of relief from funky lever curve's, angles and internal slots 😁
Yeah no kidding those die heads are not cheap, had to pass on a couple..just too pricy
I was lucky to find these ones & they came with a heap of dies . Cheers Dean 👍
😮😮Morning Max, I wish I could send you some rain - we have too much of it here in Scotland !
A quick question, Can those Coventry Die Heads roll threads as well as cut them, just curious ?? Cheers, Bob.
No , thread rolling is done a different tool /machine . We could do with some of your rain though . I know that when it does finally come , i will be whinging because it's always raining ! Cheers 👍
Very interesting tool Max. Cheers PS On the mic what is the little pointer for on the thimble?
The pointer is for when taking repetitive readings on the same setting . Cheers 👍
I think you mentioned that the shank on the die head is removable. Why did you make an adaptor rather than a new shank complete, are there some features on the business end that would be hard to reproduce?
An adapter was a quick & easy way to go as i will use that head in other machines . 👍
Hello,how did you cut the taper?right on fistgo
With the compound slide . 👍
Coventry die heads take me back further than I care to admit.
Lol , i used to use them on a Ward No 7 turret lathe back in the 1980's ! Cheers 👍
Thx for the vid.
No worries 👍
Max, I was just thinking about the die heads. I have a Geometric copy 5/16” DSA and a 9/16” Geometric DSA made for Hardinge. Man, useful chasers are so hard to get, while the useless ones are all over. The reason for my post is that I always have used these as a push off. Watching you use the Coventry as a pull off made me think about that, as it’s simpler. But I just tried that in my hand and those springs are so strong I don’t see how they can be used with anything under maybe 5/16” without damaging the threads. Are the Coventry springs that strong? Also I’ve never trusted the idea of using the tailstock as a slide as the mass is high for small threads, so I made a sleeve that allows the die to slide forwards without rotating.
Check to make sure your springs are not over adjusted . 8mm is the smallest with this size head otherwise the thread can not handle the spring release pressure . They make another variation with a different release mechanism for small threads .👍
@@swanvalleymachineshop I hadn’t looked at the manual for a pretty long time. I remember that I only use them as a push off because of the spring. So I just looked at it and there’s no way to adjust the spring tension in the manual. Now that I just read it, I see why I never tried. The 9/16th head is so tensioned that holding it in my hands, I can’t push it off. It moves, but it’s too much to release it. The 5/16th isn’t nearly as tight, but seems too tight for small screws.
@@melgross The 2 small screws behind the front plate . They can be backed out as long as their is still enough threads to retain the spring pressure . Wound too far in & the die will not release .
@@swanvalleymachineshop thanks. I’ll check that. Still don’t know why the manual doesn’t mention that.
G'day Max, I see you parting "upside down" to how I do. Could you please talk about the why's and advantages or limitations. Thanks, Butch.
ps, That stock is quality reusium grade 0.0
Also what make of file do you use? good ones seem hard to find these days. thanks
I use single cut files for the lathe & general work . I run the parting blade upside down as it gives next to no issues compared to the other way like chatter & dig in issues . You can safely feed in in a lot harder also , as you have to do when parting induction hardened chrome bar . 👍
why doYou tighten all three scrolls on the 3 jaw chuck? Thank You
Just a habit , starting from the master jaw . May keep the wear somewhat even . 👍
Great, but you forgot to shew us setting up the taper turning!!
Lol . I did not forget , just left it out to save time as the video was more about the die head than cutting a Morse taper . I will show the next Morse taper set up ! 👍
where did you buy the anchor lube from
Had it for years , someone bought it back with them from USA . 👍
Mr Squiggle's, medium to Shithouse, Mild Steel bars coming to a town near you....🤣🤣
Lol , Cheers 👍
How do you de-burr the inside of a round part like that ?
I use a fine curved needle file . 👍
💯✅
Thanks 👍
Check the retaining plate, it looks loose.
It is only just nipped . Some of the dies are a few thou too wide & the head will bind up , depends on the manufacturer . I need to grind a fraction off some of them . Cheers 👍
I live in Coventry uk I can’t find one of them here for love nor money
One would have thought there would be quite a few floating around there . Cheers 👍
Another fascinating video Max.👍👍👍
If you do ever have a DRO scale on your cross slide on the small lathe, and still wanted to use the Coventry style die head you could just drill and tap the side of the slide below the scale cover and screw a machined shoulder bolt stop in a fraction proud of the scale cover as your new stop - to protect the scale cover from potentially being crushed.
Alternately you could fit the stop to the front of the base of the tailstock & position it so it hits the side of the cross slide below the scale height.
Either / or should work.
My AL 356V has it on the cross slide I recently noticed, so not my idea.
I’m not that bright. 😜😂😂😉
Have to get a DRO first ! Cheers 👍
i detest those brazed pos things. every time i try to use one it goes right into the bin within minutes. I tossed a whole pile of new carbaloys because they would run a few inches and then spit chips. HSS or inserts.
Try the Micro 100's . I only ever use brazed carbides for finish work & form tools . 👍
👍
Cheers 👍
You sure that's not Rustonium?
It could be ! 👍
MS=Mystery steel
Mystery all right ! 👍
Exactly what I thought it was, I've got a box full of it 😂
Max what’s going to stop the morse taper pulling out when the Coventry comes, to the stop?
It takes way more force to pull out a correctly fitting Morse taper than what the die head requires to release . 👍
You are very good at what you do!
Please do not show speeded up video's, just edit out if needed.
If you want to watch a fast Jack Ass, poke a hot soldering up his yahoo and whistle Dixie.
Thanks . It is done to save time & so you still see roughly what is going on , other than l load of disjointed clips . 👍
Hey MAX. I wanted to send you some of those spiral wound sanding rolls that I mentioned in your last video. I found them on McMaster-Carr, and I know that they do not service the Australian continent, so I figured I would send you some to try, but I am unaware of how to find your postal address. If you could let me know where to send them, I'll send them to you, a long with the small arbor shank required to use them. I feel quite sure you will love them. If you want me to email you I can do that, but I currently do not have your email address, but I think I've heard you say what it is before, not sure though. Let me know, and I'll be in touch, Eric Patterson from Phoenix, Arizona USA
Hey thanks . theswanvalleymachineshop@gmail.com is my email . Cheers 👍
Hey, I thought bananas were inches, not degrees. What gives? By the way, that arbor was way too easy.
Inches and Deg F ! The tapers for the arbor are a no brainer with Tangent Engineering's compound slide sine bar . Saves all the dicking around adjusting . Cheers 👍
@@swanvalleymachineshop hmm. I’ll have to look into that. Well, if a degree F is a banana, then a degree C is about 1 5/8 bananas. That’s a clumsy measurement system.
First rate...
Thanks Dave . 👍
Definitely not MS 😂😂
Scraptonium !
Thanks Max, great learning session.
No worries 👍