Adam really really enjoyed watching this one! The cleaning is always so nice to see on these workhorses and so glad it is still original patina all over!!❤
I'm a woodturner I buy used machinery because of cost and quality then spend silly amounts of time cleaning and thinking :-) Oh wow that's a labour of love. I really appreciate you sharing this with us.
Can’t wait to see a gearbox maintenance video. The last time you did one I was fascinated by the gears and the amount of oil needed. This machine is going to become better and better as you go. I appreciate the watching you clean things up at the beginning. Honestly you can lower the music volume. Hearing the sounds of cleaning and stuff is great. Keep up the awesome work, Adam! 🤘🏻
Adam I have a pacemaker about twice as long as yours in our tool room at work. Our production lathe’s the tool post is about 400lbs I am one of the few who takes the time to clean like you are doing. Pride in our profession comes standard for some.
Even if not a complete teardown and rebuild, it will be great to see you breathe new life into another great old machine. The new shop filled up quite quickly, congratulations!
She's alive ! I agree, bearings, shims/bushings and maybe some gears are worn. I heard some added noise when the gears were working on coast so could be the bearings or shafts are beyond reasonable. I think if there is going to be a long life in the ABOM79 shop, I'd plan on replacing most of the higher wear items under the hood. That is a nice and smooth slide for sure.
I am suspicious that clatter is coming from a reverse bell mouth condition on that chuck making it knock while in the cut. putting that 4 jaw on may make it sound a lot better. Alternatively could use your tool post grinder to straighten em out and see if it fixes your runout. My 3 jaw never gives me any trouble unless it’s on something thin wall. Solid you just crank it down and it will take whatever cut you want to try.
@@bcbloc02 I understand what you mean, just never heard ''reverse bell mouth''. I always thought chuck jaws bell mouth at the front, and this is the condition they flex into when tightened. Didn't realize reverse bell mouth is a thing? Unless someone ground it that way?
Adam, if you still have that 3D printer, you might consider printing bolt hole guard inserts to keep them from filling up with gunk. It looked like a lot of hard work getting that machine so clean. Cheers and Happy Holidays!
Watching you lovingly pour work into these old machines is a beautiful thing. I can tell that you want to give full justice to the craftsmen that built it and worked on it all those years ago. I can't help but believe that they are smiling down on you from Heaven. Merry Christmas and thank you for all the great videos.
Adam its funny that I have worked on this old machinery for the better part of 32 years and now im running a cnc lathe in a small shop here in Akron,Oh. At any rate just wanted to say to check your input shaft to the gear box experience has taught me that most of the noise causing damage is in the input but only you can best tell with your ear and a piece of half inch conduit just probing around. best of luck
Just finished Christmas Eve festivities, cleaned up the house and wrapped the last of the presents. Now I get to sit by the fire and watch some Abom79 and listen to the relaxing music. Merry Christmas!
Sweet! I can imagine the lathe changed the world as society entered the industrial age - it would be fascinating to read a book on the history of the lathe.
Adam, There is a Sherwin Williams color, Urbane Bronze SW7048, that is a good match to the older dark gray colors on machines of that vintage. You can get it in the enamel in small cans. It would go well on those parts of the lathe you have cleaned. Thanks for everything you do, Merry Christmas.
What a milestone to make some chips with your own Pacemaker! Great job! I was a precision machinist many years ago and it is nice to see the classic machines kept in service. 80 millionths surface quality with a 10 millionths ID tolerance was the best I ever achieved with a Kummer ("Double chucker"), Sunnen air gauges, and a nice finishing lathe. Abom, thank you for the great content:) Cheers, Jeff (Garage Maker Guy)
Merry Christmas Adam and Abby. Thanks for another great year of content. Something very satisfying about cleaning up an old machine, seeing the scars, and wondering what tales it would tell if only it could talk. That Pacemaker is a beautiful machine. Love the old Art-Deco styling. That tool holder has similar design elements and goes perfectly on that machine.
Merry Christmas to you, Abby, and your whole family, Adam. Thanks for the education and entertainment you give us, and I hope you have a fantastic 2023!
I've had time to consider this issue further having consumed and digested a rather large portion of turkey!!...😆😆👊 I don't believe the run out on that three jaw is issue with the chuck. I believe it is the main bearing on the chuck side of the gearbox. When you critiqued the chuck, splines feel good during nip up, that would suggest chuck in good order, looks like done little work. It would suggest the bearing is the culprit considering that noise. Food for thought!! Seasons Greetings from Ireland!!
We measure liquid degreaser usage in units called "Obrochtas." So the proper amount to use per job is roughly 1 Obrochta of degreaser/solvent. This unit is primarily intended for use with brake cleaner solvent. Particularly nasty jobs may require 3-5 Obrochta of cleaner. On the other hand, sometimes you only need 500 milliObrochta of brake cleaner if you just have to give it a light little "how ya doin' mama" to make sure everything's nice and clean. 😎 Adam is using 1 or maybe 1.5 Obrochta of degreaser here so that's an appropriate amount. Pretend like you're the Old God and the dirt is everyone who couldn't get on the Ark.
Thank you Adam for the great video content you create for us viewers. Merry Christmas to you & Abby & all the subscribers, all the very best in 2023 Cheers and Blessings. 🙏❤.
Merry Christmas too you and your loved ones .thanks for sharing and creating all the wonderful vlogs for us during these trying times.wish you the best in the new years
Hey Adam I know you gotta keep moving, changing things up and learning new stuff- namely cnc machining ( a completely new and very frustrating discipline all by it’s self ). But hands down this is by far your best work.. old school machinery are things of beauty.. I appreciate the precision of modern tech, but how much more rewarding is sneaking up on a dimension with a set of callipers and a mic’ , plus if you overshoot it’s your own fault rather than a glitch in the machine…😁❤️💪🏻💪🏻💪🏻
We have a lathe like that at work except its a duplicating lathe. It has a hydraulic compound that follows a sample shaft that is mounted back behind the machine. I used to turn 8" dia x 36" 4140 shafts for overhead cranes. I would take .750" cuts at .030 feed.
Merry Christmas Adam…thanks for all the awesome content you have shared this year.. Hope you and Abby have a fantastic day doing whatever makes you happy
December 24, 2122 AD: Discovered beneath the ruins of Old Pensacola Florida an intact early 21st-century machine shop. The shop contains a mixture of mid 20th-century and early 21st-century equipment. All equipment is in immaculate condition. Except for a thick coating of dust, much of the 21st-century equipment appears as new, as if it was installed new and never was used. It cannot be emphasized how important this find is. It is rare to discover such a complete workshop showing the transition from manual to computerized creation of components. While today such parts creation would be accomplished via AI and 3D printing, it is educational to find a complete transitional machine shop in such museum quality condition. It remains a mystery as to why this equipment was never used. Records from this period indicate that this was an immensely expensive assemblage of equipment. A further mystery is the glyph of Abom79 affixed to every smooth surface. Researchers are attempting to ascertain if this has some sort of hidden meaning, or is graffiti left behind by an urban explorer in the intervening years, we may never know. The Old Pensacola Preservation Society thanks the City of New Pensacola county council for it's help preserving this once in a lifetime find for future generations. It is unlikely that a virtually untouched discovery such as this will ever be found again.
Ran an American 20 x 76 "Style D" for 14 years before they shut our mill down. Great lathe, made a lot of pump shafts, agitator shafts, bore couplings and resleeve bearings in that lathe. The feed would occasionally give me an issue when trying to run heavy feed to break the chip on 316SS. Other than that it was a great machine. 4 jaw chuck of course gives more options to hold irregular work pieces also. Good luck with your project.
Regarding your chuck, Robin Renzetti's latest video addresses self centering chuck clamping and runout problems. I'm convinced if you clean up this chuck and follow his process that this chuck will serve you very well with minimal runout.
Your American pacemaker’s finally done and dusted, Looking forward to see some serious chips happening. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to you and your family. Cheers 🎉
Congratulations Adam! I’m always impressed and entertained by your work. Attention to detail to say the least. You make me miss being a Machinist and running a Lathe!!!
This has been a long time coming! This is awesome! I've been following since about 2014 and remember you talking about a big Pacemaker back when you were at Motion, and here we are! I bet it feels nice pulling the first chips.
Great to see a little TLC on the good old iron and making some chips in the miss of all the other projects you have going on keep up the good works!, y’all have a great Holiday!
May need bearings. Some of the 3 jaw chucks are adjustable from the backside of the chuck. I think I would indicate the od of the 3 jaw chuck to just see if the run out is .012 also.
Can't wait to see what's causing that noise as that's when things are going to be a true learning experience as we've already heard the noise so now time to see what's causing it. This way we all will learn from this as we get to see and inspect those guts along with you. Take care and enjoy this beauty.
Feliz navidad amigo a pesar de tener esas máquinas CNC no abandonas los tornos fresadoras lo de la vieja escuela 🙏👍Dios te bendiga ATI y tu familia amigo
Merry Christmas to the Booth family. God bless & good will. Beautify old piece of history that just needs a little Adam love! May the new year find you well.
Magnifique remise en servis d'une machine qui peut encore réaliser d'inestimables travaux. Bravo pour votre savoir faire et la pédagogie de vos vidéos. Benny Rooman à Bruxelles.
I ran a pacemaker at my first job. Normal rughing was one revolution of the hand wheel about .020 feed without strain cutting 4140. The lathe was army surplus off a Navy ship and had a load meter that we thought was broken till I accidentally pushed it with a much harder feed.
What a nice relaxing video , my complements regarding your music choise ☆☆☆☆☆ Realy love the old western banjo music, as an european guy 😅 Secretly having the Anerican Dream myself .. Starting to hate the west Europeanen way of life 😢 , getting to hectic ..to much taxes and no freedom... Grtz from the netherlands Johny geerts
I will be very interested in the cleaning up of the chucks as I have a few very old and kinda large ones to do also. Merry Christmas and wishes for a Happy New Year to you and Abby.
Evap-O-Rust will be a big part of that. I was led to the stuff by both Adam and Keith Rucker...It performs exactly as they both demonstrated. It's now my go-to on rusty stuff. I had a bearing hub to remove from the hub carrier on a rusty car suspension. No hammer, no heat, no hammer AND heat would do it. Even though contaminated by penetrating oil, I just dropped the whole mess, rubber bushings, seals, and all into 5 gallons of Evap-O-Rust in a storage tub to let it think about what it had done to me. :D A couple days later, I pulled it out and hit it with my three-pound hammer. It didn't ring and bounce the hammer like it had before! it was more of a sickening thud, like from a dead-blow hammer. I gave it another smack opposite the bolt circle and it moved a heavy 16th of an inch! After that it was just a few heavy taps and the hub dropped loose! That hard rust packed in the gap between the parts had turned to slimy mush! I have a long-abandoned (30yr) seized Chevy small-block stored at my brothers shop that I'm not gonna build. I think I'm gonna have the fun of experimenting with busting it loose using Evap-O-rust next summer. I've seen many people, in video comments, saying that it's better than all of the oil-based concoctions folks have come up with over the years. I lean toward believing that after seeing what happened with my bearing hub.
That pacemaker is nice! I've also got a headstock noise and cross slide feed issue going on with my Cincinnati Hydrashift. I think the noise is pump related because it doesnt always shift gears. They feed issue I'm thinking is related to the "quick reverse" on the cross slide. Lots to learn!
Glad to see this lathe up and running again! I would not recommend using it too much before checking the head stock gears and bearings though; even from the video I can hear that something is very worn in there as you mentioned.
Merry Christmas, love the content and the old format/ Music, don't mess with perfection..... I have no idea how your gonna learn CNC and run a business incuding a RUclips channel all at the same time. God bless you.
Adam really really enjoyed watching this one! The cleaning is always so nice to see on these workhorses and so glad it is still original patina all over!!❤
I'm a woodturner I buy used machinery because of cost and quality then spend silly amounts of time cleaning and thinking :-)
Oh wow that's a labour of love. I really appreciate you sharing this with us.
Can’t wait to see a gearbox maintenance video. The last time you did one I was fascinated by the gears and the amount of oil needed. This machine is going to become better and better as you go. I appreciate the watching you clean things up at the beginning. Honestly you can lower the music volume. Hearing the sounds of cleaning and stuff is great. Keep up the awesome work, Adam! 🤘🏻
Adam I have a pacemaker about twice as long as yours in our tool room at work. Our production lathe’s the tool post is about 400lbs I am one of the few who takes the time to clean like you are doing. Pride in our profession comes standard for some.
Even if not a complete teardown and rebuild, it will be great to see you breathe new life into another great old machine. The new shop filled up quite quickly, congratulations!
She's alive ! I agree, bearings, shims/bushings and maybe some gears are worn. I heard some added noise when the gears were working on coast so could be the bearings or shafts are beyond reasonable. I think if there is going to be a long life in the ABOM79 shop, I'd plan on replacing most of the higher wear items under the hood.
That is a nice and smooth slide for sure.
Cant wait to get a look inside the gearbox of the A.P.
I am suspicious that clatter is coming from a reverse bell mouth condition on that chuck making it knock while in the cut. putting that 4 jaw on may make it sound a lot better. Alternatively could use your tool post grinder to straighten em out and see if it fixes your runout. My 3 jaw never gives me any trouble unless it’s on something thin wall. Solid you just crank it down and it will take whatever cut you want to try.
Reverse bell mouth? So bigger at the back?
@@Orgakoyd yes that would let it hold the part but when you start pushing on it it will shove it to each jaw as it goes by making a rythmic knock
@@bcbloc02 I understand what you mean, just never heard ''reverse bell mouth''. I always thought chuck jaws bell mouth at the front, and this is the condition they flex into when tightened. Didn't realize reverse bell mouth is a thing? Unless someone ground it that way?
I love seeing professionals do a job properly
Love your American Pacemaker, such a wonderful machine. I'm confident that you will sort the gearbox noise out.
If it was Fenner, I would share your optimism.
Adam, if you still have that 3D printer, you might consider printing bolt hole guard inserts to keep them from filling up with gunk. It looked like a lot of hard work getting that machine so clean. Cheers and Happy Holidays!
Could you fill them with silicone.? The silicone would pop out easy when needed to loosen screws. 😃
I’m not a machinist but I find watching your channel very cathartic to watch. Keep on keeping on!
Watching you lovingly pour work into these old machines is a beautiful thing. I can tell that you want to give full justice to the craftsmen that built it and worked on it all those years ago. I can't help but believe that they are smiling down on you from Heaven. Merry Christmas and thank you for all the great videos.
Kind words. And true. Merry Christmas.
@Kevin Hornbuckle Thank you, and Merry Christmas to you as well.
Yay just what I was looking for... Merry Christmas Adam and Abby and a Merry Christmas to all
Adam its funny that I have worked on this old machinery for the better part of 32 years and now im running a cnc lathe in a small shop here in Akron,Oh.
At any rate just wanted to say to check your input shaft to the gear box experience has taught me that most of the noise causing damage is in the input but only
you can best tell with your ear and a piece of half inch conduit just probing around. best of luck
Just finished Christmas Eve festivities, cleaned up the house and wrapped the last of the presents. Now I get to sit by the fire and watch some Abom79 and listen to the relaxing music. Merry Christmas!
I know this is a special video for you, I did not expect it to be a christmas presant four us, your viewers. Thanks.
Sweet! I can imagine the lathe changed the world as society entered the industrial age - it would be fascinating to read a book on the history of the lathe.
Adam,
There is a Sherwin Williams color, Urbane Bronze SW7048, that is a good match to the older dark gray colors on machines of that vintage. You can get it in the enamel in small cans. It would go well on those parts of the lathe you have cleaned.
Thanks for everything you do, Merry Christmas.
What a milestone to make some chips with your own Pacemaker! Great job! I was a precision machinist many years ago and it is nice to see the classic machines kept in service. 80 millionths surface quality with a 10 millionths ID tolerance was the best I ever achieved with a Kummer ("Double chucker"), Sunnen air gauges, and a nice finishing lathe. Abom, thank you for the great content:)
Cheers,
Jeff (Garage Maker Guy)
Merry Christmas Adam and Abby. Thanks for another great year of content. Something very satisfying about cleaning up an old machine, seeing the scars, and wondering what tales it would tell if only it could talk. That Pacemaker is a beautiful machine. Love the old Art-Deco styling. That tool holder has similar design elements and goes perfectly on that machine.
Back to the basics of where we started, I like it. Can’t wait to see what comes off it.
I really like the look of this lathe. Hope you can make some vids of the gearbox investigation!!😮
Beautiful seeing it move some metal! Well done 👍👍
Great to see an old machine brought back to its original potential and see someone who knows how to appreciate it
Nice work. Those big cuts with a nice finish. Looks like hours of fun ahead.
Oh hey, tell Abby her Chiefs won.🎉
A full rebuild would be awsome to see. Have a Merry Christmas all.
That was great! We have been waiting a while to see the pacemaker throw some chips. Merry Christmas
Merry Christmas to you, Abby, and your whole family, Adam. Thanks for the education and entertainment you give us, and I hope you have a fantastic 2023!
So glad that you are back on the Pace. Hoping we won't go months before we see more. Thanks very much for sharing.
Merry Christmas from across the pond.
I'd be willing to bet this machine has never gotten this type of love since it came off the show room floor🥰.
Never clicked a video sooo fast!
I've had time to consider this issue further having consumed and digested a rather large portion of turkey!!...😆😆👊
I don't believe the run out on that three jaw is issue with the chuck. I believe it is the main bearing on the chuck side of the gearbox. When you critiqued the chuck, splines feel good during nip up, that would suggest chuck in good order, looks like done little work. It would suggest the bearing is the culprit considering that noise. Food for thought!!
Seasons Greetings from Ireland!!
the APs first turning was very impressive! gawd I'm jealous again 😋
There's a man making full use of his CRC degreaser sponsorship 😆
We measure liquid degreaser usage in units called "Obrochtas." So the proper amount to use per job is roughly 1 Obrochta of degreaser/solvent. This unit is primarily intended for use with brake cleaner solvent. Particularly nasty jobs may require 3-5 Obrochta of cleaner. On the other hand, sometimes you only need 500 milliObrochta of brake cleaner if you just have to give it a light little "how ya doin' mama" to make sure everything's nice and clean. 😎 Adam is using 1 or maybe 1.5 Obrochta of degreaser here so that's an appropriate amount. Pretend like you're the Old God and the dirt is everyone who couldn't get on the Ark.
Great video. The filming was as good as usual. The music during cleaning was a plus. I enjoyed the video. Thanks
That's awesome. Really looking forward to you pulling the lathe apart.
Thank you Adam for the great video content you create for us viewers. Merry Christmas to you & Abby & all the subscribers, all the very best in 2023 Cheers and Blessings. 🙏❤.
Merry Christmas too you and your loved ones .thanks for sharing and creating all the wonderful vlogs for us during these trying times.wish you the best in the new years
Hey Adam I know you gotta keep moving, changing things up and learning new stuff- namely cnc machining ( a completely new and very frustrating discipline all by it’s self ). But hands down this is by far your best work.. old school machinery are things of beauty.. I appreciate the precision of modern tech, but how much more rewarding is sneaking up on a dimension with a set of callipers and a mic’ , plus if you overshoot it’s your own fault rather than a glitch in the machine…😁❤️💪🏻💪🏻💪🏻
Good video. Looking forward to seeing the clutch works and inside of the gear box. Great work
Merry Christmas to you and yours! Thanks for the exceptional content!
Merry Christmas to you and Abby, Adam. I love seeing a beautiful made in the USA beauty brought back to life.
Mr. Booth I wish you and your family Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year . Greetings from germany.
Me too 🖖
We have a lathe like that at work except its a duplicating lathe. It has a hydraulic compound that follows a sample shaft that is mounted back behind the machine. I used to turn 8" dia x 36" 4140 shafts for overhead cranes. I would take .750" cuts at .030 feed.
We use a Mazak cnc lathe now and it is much faster for finishing but the old american will eat it alive for roughing.
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to you and yours, Adam and Abby Booth.
Thanks for the videos.
Merry Christmas Adam…thanks for all the awesome content you have shared this year.. Hope you and Abby have a fantastic day doing whatever makes you happy
Merry Christmas from Finland!
Love to see these old machines.
Almost like he planned to have his new lathe be his Christmas present! Merry Christmas and Happy New Year everyone!
December 24, 2122 AD: Discovered beneath the ruins of Old Pensacola Florida an intact early 21st-century machine shop. The shop contains a mixture of mid 20th-century and early 21st-century equipment. All equipment is in immaculate condition. Except for a thick coating of dust, much of the 21st-century equipment appears as new, as if it was installed new and never was used.
It cannot be emphasized how important this find is. It is rare to discover such a complete workshop showing the transition from manual to computerized creation of components. While today such parts creation would be accomplished via AI and 3D printing, it is educational to find a complete transitional machine shop in such museum quality condition.
It remains a mystery as to why this equipment was never used. Records from this period indicate that this was an immensely expensive assemblage of equipment. A further mystery is the glyph of Abom79 affixed to every smooth surface. Researchers are attempting to ascertain if this has some sort of hidden meaning, or is graffiti left behind by an urban explorer in the intervening years, we may never know.
The Old Pensacola Preservation Society thanks the City of New Pensacola county council for it's help preserving this once in a lifetime find for future generations. It is unlikely that a virtually untouched discovery such as this will ever be found again.
Headcanon accepted.
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
As usual the archaeologists concluded it was a tomb and temple to worship the gods. And the structure was made using copper chisels
Ran an American 20 x 76 "Style D" for 14 years before they shut our mill down. Great lathe, made a lot of pump shafts, agitator shafts, bore couplings and resleeve bearings in that lathe. The feed would occasionally give me an issue when trying to run heavy feed to break the chip on 316SS. Other than that it was a great machine. 4 jaw chuck of course gives more options to hold irregular work pieces also. Good luck with your project.
Regarding your chuck, Robin Renzetti's latest video addresses self centering chuck clamping and runout problems. I'm convinced if you clean up this chuck and follow his process that this chuck will serve you very well with minimal runout.
Yes I saw Robin’s video and agree that his procedure would work wonders for this chuck.
Sounds more like the head stock bearings beating themself to death when you put pressure on it.
My thought too. 80 year old bearings are just that. Time for a replacement.
Awesome! 👍 Definitely enjoy watching you work on this machine when you have time.
Your American pacemaker’s finally done and dusted, Looking forward to see some serious chips happening.
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to you and your family.
Cheers 🎉
Congratulations Adam! I’m always impressed and entertained by your work. Attention to detail to say the least. You make me miss being a Machinist and running a Lathe!!!
Merry Christmas Adam and friends! Thanks for sharing your trade and passion with us all. All the best in the coming years- mjm
This has been a long time coming! This is awesome! I've been following since about 2014 and remember you talking about a big Pacemaker back when you were at Motion, and here we are! I bet it feels nice pulling the first chips.
I was eager to see the pacemaker in action. Marry Christmas and Happy New Year
Great to see a little TLC on the good old iron and making some chips in the miss of all the other projects you have going on keep up the good works!, y’all have a great Holiday!
May need bearings.
Some of the 3 jaw chucks are adjustable from the backside of the chuck.
I think I would indicate the od of the 3 jaw chuck to just see if the run out is .012 also.
Nice Christmas present for your subscribers, Adam. I learn a lot watching you operate a lathe, especially the Pacemaker. Merry Christmas!
Can't wait to see what's causing that noise as that's when things are going to be a true learning experience as we've already heard the noise so now time to see what's causing it. This way we all will learn from this as we get to see and inspect those guts along with you. Take care and enjoy this beauty.
Dear Abom, I always enjoy your videos and work. A pleasure.
@abom7949 Not a problem. I have been watching you for years now. A real pleasure.
Thank you Adam, guess I am liking the upcoming tune up you put on the Pacemaker. Merry Christmas to you and Ms. Abbey (sp)!!!
merry Christmas , thanks for the quality videos as always
Time for a new shop tour!
Happy Christmas Adam and Abby. Its really cool to see the old lathe up and working.
Merry Christmas Adam!
Good to see it is finally running again.
Greetings from Ukraine!
Good to see CRC being showcased in stereo from the outset. I love that stuff!!!!
Feliz navidad amigo a pesar de tener esas máquinas CNC no abandonas los tornos fresadoras lo de la vieja escuela 🙏👍Dios te bendiga ATI y tu familia amigo
Thanks for sharing and Merry Christmas to you and the Mrs.
Merry Christmas to the booth family
when are you going to produce with your CNC?
Merry Christmas to the Booth family. God bless & good will. Beautify old piece of history that just needs a little Adam love! May the new year find you well.
Greetings from Germany 🇩🇪👍
Thanks Adam. Merry Christmas to you and yours
Magnifique remise en servis d'une machine qui peut encore réaliser d'inestimables travaux.
Bravo pour votre savoir faire et la pédagogie de vos vidéos.
Benny Rooman à Bruxelles.
Merry Christmas Adam , don’t mind watching the clean up stuff at all, satisfying watching the shine come out of the old machine.
Nicely done Adam. Merry Christmas to you and Abby
Just needs a LOT of Love and we know that you will give it to the machine
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year
Always a pleasure to watch you work. Thanks for taking us along. That skyhook is looking better and better isn't it?
Loved the music with this video guys!!!
Merry Christmas Adam to you and yours. Nice to hear the big Pacemaker fire up. You'll have it tip top in due time, I know you will.
Feliz Navidad from Spain to everyone! Thanks Adam and Abby for another year of great content!
I ran a pacemaker at my first job. Normal rughing was one revolution of the hand wheel about .020 feed without strain cutting 4140. The lathe was army surplus off a Navy ship and had a load meter that we thought was broken till I accidentally pushed it with a much harder feed.
What a nice relaxing video , my complements regarding your music choise ☆☆☆☆☆
Realy love the old western banjo music, as an european guy 😅
Secretly having the Anerican Dream myself ..
Starting to hate the west Europeanen way of life 😢 , getting to hectic ..to much taxes and no freedom...
Grtz from the netherlands Johny geerts
@5:17 Video starts.
I will be very interested in the cleaning up of the chucks as I have a few very old and kinda large ones to do also. Merry Christmas and wishes for a Happy New Year to you and Abby.
keith rucker has done a few videos on that.
Evap-O-Rust will be a big part of that. I was led to the stuff by both Adam and Keith Rucker...It performs exactly as they both demonstrated. It's now my go-to on rusty stuff.
I had a bearing hub to remove from the hub carrier on a rusty car suspension. No hammer, no heat, no hammer AND heat would do it. Even though contaminated by penetrating oil, I just dropped the whole mess, rubber bushings, seals, and all into 5 gallons of Evap-O-Rust in a storage tub to let it think about what it had done to me. :D A couple days later, I pulled it out and hit it with my three-pound hammer. It didn't ring and bounce the hammer like it had before! it was more of a sickening thud, like from a dead-blow hammer. I gave it another smack opposite the bolt circle and it moved a heavy 16th of an inch! After that it was just a few heavy taps and the hub dropped loose! That hard rust packed in the gap between the parts had turned to slimy mush!
I have a long-abandoned (30yr) seized Chevy small-block stored at my brothers shop that I'm not gonna build. I think I'm gonna have the fun of experimenting with busting it loose using Evap-O-rust next summer. I've seen many people, in video comments, saying that it's better than all of the oil-based concoctions folks have come up with over the years. I lean toward believing that after seeing what happened with my bearing hub.
@@Bluswede don't leave in the EvapoRust too long.
@@davidsellars646
What do you know that I should know?
@@Bluswede I left some rusty tools in it for days and they are worse than before.
Merry Christmas Adam mate, followed you since covid times. Been great to see how you've evolved and grown over the last few years, good luck for 2023.
Nice video for a Christmas Eve! Loved it.....
you changed the song man i loved the old one awesome video as always, you're the best merry Christmas to you and family wish you the best
Excellent video again Adam. Great demonstration of the difference of a 3 jaw vs a 4 jaw.
Happy holidays, Adam. Thanks for the classical guitar. I noticed it right away when I clicked on your video.
Awesome machine, Adam. Thanks for sharing the first chips with us. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to you and Abby!
That pacemaker is nice! I've also got a headstock noise and cross slide feed issue going on with my Cincinnati Hydrashift. I think the noise is pump related because it doesnt always shift gears. They feed issue I'm thinking is related to the "quick reverse" on the cross slide. Lots to learn!
Glad to see this lathe up and running again! I would not recommend using it too much before checking the head stock gears and bearings though; even from the video I can hear that something is very worn in there as you mentioned.
Merry Christmas, love the content and the old format/ Music, don't mess with perfection.....
I have no idea how your gonna learn CNC and run a business incuding a RUclips channel all at the same time. God bless you.
Probably won’t lol, he’s going to do what brings the views. The guys that got him where he is don’t want to watch that garbage content.
@@rjstiles80 What content is garbage?
RUclips is his business, there's very little else.
Should the curved unmachined portions of the compound be painted?