OVERKILL
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- Опубликовано: 14 окт 2024
- This video is of a pattern with two parting lines. The pattern is crude so this does not reflect my best work. stick around to the end of this video and I will take you for a tour of a foundry in Jackson, Mississippi that operated for nearly a century.
#soule #makersfair #madeinmississippi #soulesteam #castiron
I don't think I've ever seen a 2 parting line casting start to finish. Very neat!
Love the business card holder! That'll make an impression. Heck, it'll leave a MARK. Especially if you throw it. WOW. Fun tour of the foundry!
I thought the nails were so it could be pounded into a table and clinched over underneath so it wouldn't walk off.
Bet a dollar that the grate with the frame, at the old foundry, is a street storm drain that would be put in the rain gutter.
Fascinating is an understatement!
Cool to be there when it was running
Thanks for the video
nice casting!! I enjoy watching your vids keep up the good work!!
In a couple of hundred years some poor soul is going to be looking at this scratching his head and wondering what the hell it was used for .
Thanks for the tour. A shame the place shut down. That one l bracket with the oval holes strongly reminds me of some school desks I have that are made so the back of the seat is the desk for the next one back. No telling how many of those things were made for one room schoolhouses in the day.
Hey, watch it! I went to a school that had several rooms and it had desks made like that. That was in the 1950's that I went to that school in Southern Ohio. Greg
When I was at high school back in the 80's, I was pretty good at carpentry and technical drawing, and fairly good on metalwork. Teacher suggested a career in wood, so I started looking at being a pattern maker, however CNC was becoming a thing, so that look away that role.
My lad and I have made small things from our home made foundry, only difference was he 3D printed the patterns
nice to see the old patterns thank you
hi there that thing was a sawmill ell . the part the log went against . looks like my Frick sawmill ell .there was a rack bar that bolted to the bottom . the ovel cores were for adjusting the the rack bar . great show john
hi found this in one of my old videos shows that part pretty well . ruclips.net/video/Vk0LoAdww38/видео.html
Many years ago I did some work at the Carron iron foundry in Falkirk, Scotland that had been in operation for over two hundred years. It was just surviving by the time I visited, making cast-iron garden furniture and the like but in its day it was famous around the world for the carronade, a short-barreled muzzle-loading naval cannon used for close-in defence on merchant ships of the 18th and 19th century.
At first I thought you were casting a Tuyere for Blacksmithing. You could probably sell quite a few Tuyeres to the Blacksmithing community since all of the original ones are kind of hard to find.
Мастер, учитель, наставник)))
Благодарю тебя за твой опыт, знания, силы, твой труд, береги себя, здоровье, 10000000 просмотров)
I can almost smell the cast iron sitting in at my computer with all that grinding!!
Love the tour of the building. Maybe its because I'm almost as old :-D
Really great video. Enjoyed the tour of the foundry. Thanks for the video.
Nice card holder Clark, no chance of that blowing away! Enjoyed the tour, love the history.
Interesting video from start to finish, amazing history. Thanks for sharing. Keep smilin
I noted on the Becker and Bass pattern that it might have been for a gear blank? It had 51T (which I assume was the tooth count) and maybe 1 1/8 was the pitch. Very interesting to see that. Also enjoyed the business card holder. Great video Clarke!
I used to use some cast sprockets to replace some that would routinely fail on a set of feed mechanisms. No doubt if Grainger doesn't have spare parts... finding a guy that does piece work is extremely valuable, the quicker the better.
Michael, I think you are spot on. It says "C.P." which would be 'Circular Pitch' and I believe this would be inches. I worked for 34 1/2 years in a gear factory. This was some years ago so I checked in the "Machinery's Handbook to check my memory.
Thanks Clarke. Very enjoyable video.
Until you started using needle de-scaler I was wracking my brain where I had seen one of those before. It was only then I realised it was an antique business card holder. I still have no idea where I've seen one but know I have some time in the last 65 years
Great video! Interesting casting project. Also, the tour of the foundry brought back a lot of memories. Growing up in a steel town we had several foundries. Thank You. PS: Your next project should be cast aluminum business cards.
Nice item nice tour Clarke.
Wow. That bone was as big as Dollar. Always awesome seeing old patterns. Fun working on them also.
The long pattern with the rack on the edge and all the conical holes looks like a grate for a coal burner. The conical holes are a special grate style for coal burning (I forget the name), and the rack would be used to shake the grates to remove clinkers from plugging holes.
Thanks for sharing 👍 like the business card holder but really enjoyed seeing the old patterns.
Does iron get into your sand when you're using the needle scaler on the fresh castings?
I like the business card holder as it is also shows what your capable of doing.
Great stuff! Thanks Clarke!
hi😄 recently i surf youtube and find a young caster, he is selling some miniature engine kit, what makes him different is, he had some "healthy laziness" ideas. and he put his idea into real action. don't misunderstand, laziness is the momentum of systematic and progression, making things fast and in numbers. this young man do have something done and do it pretty good. here is his channel name, checkout his molding and casting footage.
cringle engineering
worth spend couple of minutes watch his workshop and working process.
Always enjoy a history lesson
Business card holder is cool and looks like it will do the job
And I thought it was a boot scraper !!
Very interesting! Thanks, Clark
Dang Clarke l am 3 days late🥵 on this fine video....Anyway thanks for the video and hope you and your wife are doing well 🙏👀👍
Given the date that this was published, I was sure it was an April fool video. I couldn't see how you could possibly make a mould from that pattern with the extreme undercuts. It's a setup for a joke surely! Half-way through I realised how you could do it. Bravo👍
Your place is looking good
To help keep the business cards from getting blown out of the holder, use several marbles, steel balls, or 2 or 3 rods laid in the slot against the cards. Paint the holder black with gold on the letters, snazzie.
.. Cheers to you ..
Good video
🇬🇧😐
Clark, it would have been nice to see your business card holder made of aluminum as well. I know that means more work, but I'm sure it would have looked just as impressive.
I had it identified from the get go, I think I'd have opted to make it in two seperate castings and screw together, but then I'm no where near your standard. Thanks for the vid and take care.
Dam good job young man
You need to be very careful when loading up the card hopper, mas combined with velocity might do extensive damage to the underlying support structures. Did you add any additional alloy metals to prevent stress cracks farming later due to stress loads ?
Awesome! Have you ever restored a cast iron stove?
Is that a Signage bracket for the side of the building - Joes auto shop.....
👍👍
Sir, Can you recommend any suppliers for casting/foundry equipment, especially PPE.
Clark, I think the “bracket” you found at 29:00 is actually a sawmill ell for a sawmill carriage. It looks a lot like a Frick but could be for any similar mill. It would be the part that the log rests against. The oval holes are for the bolts to pass througn to a rack and are adjustable so as to be able to align all the ells to one another while maintaining perfect parallelism to the saw blade. Ask Keith or look on his site.
hi there i think so also john
David Richards would like to see that shear......
May I ask who makes the little needle scaler?
Clark, they found a great use for the coolers, a wedding space. Now will you marry me so I can get half your stuff?
Is this a business card holder?
The elder say that sour milk in the sand could help difficult castings.
Neat card holder, make a great door stop. Enjoyed the mold making. Great to tour old structures with the remaining molds. dollars got herself a new chewy toy. Thanks for the look!