WOW. I've learned more about how to efficiently operate a lathe and cut threads in 2 hours of your videos VS. the DAYS of other videos I've watched. Seriously. THANK YOU for making these videos!
Joe, I've watched hundreds of hours of lathe videos over the past couple years and you are the FIRST person to explain this threading procedure in such detail. I always wondered how all these machinists could flip the lever exactly on the line every time--the task seemed very intimidating to say the least. You made my day! Thanks much and I look forward to watching the rest of your videos. Merry Christmas early!!
Joe, thanks for taking the time to post these threading videos. I will be using them to help my apprentices understand single pointing on a lathe. good stuff. Keep them coming.
Another great tip and well made video, I love the white board explanation followed by the demo, makes it impossible not to get it, you are by a long way the best I've ever seen, a big thank you for sharing your enormous experience and intelligence, you have helped to put food on my table and send my kids to school so I can't thank you enough. I'm thirty years with my own shop but when you work on your own it's difficult to improve without other experts sharing, I'm still learning thank you very much cheers Bert, Dublin, Ireland.
Great tip! Never knew how many places it would actually engage but I knew it was more than I wanted. The way I came up with to help me hit the mark was to start advancing the carriage when the mark is getting close to slow the dial down and help synchronize the two. The major down side of this is I would have to back the carriage further away from the work to give me room to get it engaged. Obviously couldn't do this threatening away from the chuck like you showed. Can't wait to try both tricks. Thx!!
My father taught me to do it this way about 50 years ago. It's still great trick. And for those that didn't have a lathe smart father to show them this sort of trick? Well I guess that's why we have YOU Joe..... :) it's also a great example of how feel counts for so much more than brute force in using any machine tool.
Thanks Joe for this video response.The fog has cleared, you make this topic simple, straight forward to understand and easy to follow.I feel much more confident already. I'm looking forward to colouring in my thread dial and practising away from the headstock threading this weekend.Many Thanks Greg
Thanks Joe, I've been doing this intuitively for years but this is the first time I've seen it demonstrated. You're a great teacher and I'm still learning.
I stumbled upon this trick several years ago. It sure does make threading less stressful. But, you explained much better than I could. I could really see you being a coach or teacher.
Thanks for that. I have schooled many apprentices and even taught a " Design for Manufacturability course" for UT coop students. I enjoy seeing others faces when they finally get it.
Another great video . You explain things very well , even me a retired dumb crane operator can catch on. I made your tool height setter works GREAT! Thanks again Joe.
Once again, great stuff. I aught to just go to your channel & watch every video from start to finish. I had a teacher that sort-of explained what to do with the handle but I still have the tendency to slam it down. My lathe is a smithy combo, designed differently so I haven't had the opportunity to take a look at what's going on down there an a typical lathe. This method of teaching works excellent for me, it reminds me of learning to drive a stick when I was young. I spent several days after work over 2 weeks, trying to get the hang of it, having friends try to guide me. it wasn't until a friend of mine explained what's going on between the flywheel, the clutch, the differential and the wheals that I actually got the hang of it. First time he took me out I was driving fine in about 15 minutes.
When I teach stickshift, the first day's lesson is entirely without the accelerator pedal. This includes scratchpad time talking about how and why things work the way they do. There usually isn't a third day of teaching needed.
This is one of the things many teachers just skip right over. Anybody that does this for a living probably does it this way. Did you send my stickers yet ??
Great video as always Joe. We walk upside down in my part of the world and have Metric machines eg 3mm lead screws and screw pitches in fractions of mm. Thread dials here engage thru 2 gears and are marked with letters at uneven locations and you need to have your wits about you to use them. I often cut metric threads on my old Southbend Lathe when the thread is not closely specified and convert the pitch to tpi. This produces useable threads unless you need xtra long male and female threads. I can then use your excellent method. I am in my 8th decade and thanks to you still learning. Spindly Australia.
Thank you Joe, Much if the stuff as you know already I do but I am so frigging glad to see you come on line and help others and myself with things. 'One of these days if work permits I will stop by after a call. I work all over town doing fire alarm installations. Several years ago we put the system in the Frost Bank Tower in down town Austin. I was in the Wells Fargo building down town today. I simply cannot express my gratitude to you enough. If I could subscribe twice I would. Worth
This was so helpful to me I car't tell you. I put my mini-lathe away and lost interest, but now I will go back with knowledge and understanding and master it. Thank you.
GREAT VIDEO! I ran to the shop to try out your method of engaging the half nut. I have gone from panic to confident, and dead nuts accurate, with the threading dial.
I am just starting my shopping for a lathe and I’m a complete amateur so your videos have been very useful to me. I know enough old sourdoughs to know that you aren’t teaching them anything even if they didn’t know it. Guys like me that need the simple stuff explained are just loving your videos.
You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make them drink. My material has value if you choose to listen the try it out. Glad you find them helpful.
Thanks a zillion! You’ve just made what seemed like sorcery, a simple slight of hand. I’m just a garage curious machinist and now I wish I would have done this as a career. Thanks again Joe!!
Having a good feel for your machine is important. Practice with the half nut on something that doesn't matter and it will become second nature. Thanks for the feedback.
Because of you Joe, Keith Fenner and Doubleboost I am going to buy a small lathe 250x500 for small gunsmithing and gunrange jobs. Hopefully watching you guys I can make some repectable parts and maybe keep all my body parts.
My shop teacher was a retired Navy machinist. He caught me working the half nut like a squirrel on speed one day and showed me what you just demonstrated. That was nearly 30 years ago and since then I nearly sleep while threading. Good demo Joe.
Joe, there has not been one of your videos that hasn't taught me something new. You have great teaching skills. Keep those videos coming, BIG thank you for sharing them!
Amazing videos, I am not even in the machining industry, but I watch your videos and they are awesome! I am actually thinking about buying a metal lathe just to play!
New to the machine lathe milling business, your how to are awesome, I've learned a ton of info from you. THANK YOU much better then by guess & by golly hope I'm running this thing right & not destroying the equipment.
I really enjoy and appreciate your no nonsense, no BS way of getting things across. You are A DAMNED GREAT INSTRUCTOR. THANK YOU ! Wish you were in Spokane, I'd drive ya nuts, or else we'd go racin'.
Thanks for exposing an old secret. In my early days of threading, when cutting low pitch square threads, I would shut the machine off. The threading dial spins like a top! I then move apron to engage half nuts in "free space" then turn the machine on, then rock on!
This is one of those things the old guys do unconsciously and never bother to pass on. I hope somebody gets something out of this video. Its a good practice.
I had 1-4 and intermediate lines. Putting a sharpie mark in between those lines really helped me. Made my first set of external 5/8x24 threads yesterday. Felt good.
I have done this for years and I actually managed to talk myself into it being a bad habit and started to stop doing it. I'm so glad to see that I'm not crazy.
This vid is a lifesaver. I have an Enco lathe in pretty good condition but for the life of me i could never, NEVER get the half nut engaged at the right place. after watching this vid, I marked the threading wheel as in your vid, and OMG, it was immediately obvious the pointer arrow on the lathe was in completely wrong place!!!. No wonder i could never hit the mark! i moved the marker arrow and now all is well. Excellent video Joe. sometimes the simplest and most obvious things are those that bite us...
Thak you Joe. I have never made threads on my lathe due to fear and lack of understanding on how to use the half nut. You have made it seem easy. Also I like your idea of threading away from the chuck.
I have been doing it your way all along: But it is good to have it explained as you have done. I still probably will not go as fast as you can. :-) Also, I will be practicing threading toward the tail stock - that seems much safer to me. Thanks for the great videos!
Another really informative video Joe, almost as good as being in a classroom environment. Thanks so much for the clarity of explanation. Cheers, Gordon, AUS
Joe I opened my you tube tonight after a long Monday threading, and this was right on top. I haven't threaded on the engine lathe in years and I'll be honest I totally forgot this trick. So needless to say the acme thread I ran today was stressful. Thanks for all these great videos. I've been machining for over 20 years and learn something new from every video of yours I watch.
Joe, another great learning experience for me. You mention being anxious when dropping the handle on the half nut...no kidding man. I owe you about another 5 years to my life span....LOL
Joe THANKYOU for this you have no idea the amount of stress I go through when I know I can't mess up a thread because I don't have anymore of that material left......This helps out soooooo much I thankyou from the bottom of my heart sir!
This is really a useful tip! Thank you for posting it. I am a complete newbie, haven’t even purchased a lathe yet, and thought one had to hit the number exactly. I also thought it would take quite awhile and a lot of practice before I’d feel the least bit comfotrable single point threading. You’ve alleviated a lot of my concerns and, while I can still see it will take some practice to get it right, it no longer appears to be an almost insurmountable task.
@@joepie221 I was going to post the same as what Bob has just written here, so I'll just say that my thoughts are the same as Bob's as I'm another newby thats about to buy my first hobby lathe. Thanks again Joe. Oh I will just say that your vids (and This Old Tony, Abom79, Blondihacks and Stephan Gotteswinter's vids) have increased my knowledge immensely. Thanks.
Yes another complete noob trying to pluck up the courage to buy that first lathe, who’s been petrified about thread cutting. I was thinking I’d just give it a miss and use a die and hand thread with a tap / die follower with lots of stick out and a fixed steady, rather than risk learning to cut threads on the lathe on my own. Now maybe I would be tempted to have a go - having watched this. I think I will save this one for once I do bite the bullet & pull the trigger.
@@ianmoone2359 If you buy a lathe, buy one with a cam lock chuck, or a keyed nose and threaded collar. Chucks that just thread on are normally less likely to run safely in reverse. Watch this for even more inspiration to learn to thread. ruclips.net/video/Z-dqOi_z5bk/видео.html
I appreciate your channel in how you explain more of the tool theory and engineering behind machining. You describe it all in a way that a laymen, like myself, interested in the trade can understand.
hi joe, all your videos are great and very informative. im surprised you didnt mention to always swing the dial away from the lead screw via the thumb screw when not threading it keeps the brass gear on the dial from premature wear. i was taught this as a youngster and have always done it. i see old timers that wasnt even aware that they swing off the screw.... keep up the good work! Rick
I like the explanation. I could not get my head round the idea that the half-nut could be engaged anywhere as it appeared in some videos. Choice of words I know was the problem. We used to draw threads in Technical Drawing, back in the seventies, so this has tied the two ideas together nicely. Very good video thank you jb
Excellent video I think the biggest tip you've given is turning the threading tool upside down. I have not found any situations where I could not use it yet.
Thank you for this Joe. I finally got myself a small lathe (King Canada 7x12) that has threadcutting capabilities. Going to try my first single point threading this weekend on some scrap aluminum, and your videos are an enormous help in taking away some of my anxiety.
Just discovered your videos and getting a lot of good technique from them. I'm a hobbyist with a Jet 9x20 that I play with. This was a great video and awesome info for me. Greatly appreciated!!!
I sort of discovered this myself by accident this weekend. Now seeing this video is totally what I needed to understand why what I was doing worked or did not. For the thread I was needing to cut I ended up keeping the half nut locked because I was having trouble hitting the mark. Once again Awesome content Mr. Pie.
"I will not be going out to the lathe (Yes I will). LMAO! Keep it entertaining and educational. I worked in a machine shop in high school and I loved the work but the people in the shop ruined it for me. They led me to believe it was a miserable field full of miserable people, a dead end job with no possible future. I moved on, but now I'm rediscovering feelings towards it.
I have worked in many shops like the one you described. It was never a good experience. I completely understand your desire to distance yourself from that. The ability to create something from nothing had me from day one. You are only limited by how many machine you have available and the ability to run. Fundamentals are good. Twisting them and coming up with creative ways of getting things done is the best part. I can't imagine not being in some type of manufacturing or fabrication.
Thanks Joe. I've accidentally discovered this but didn't know the why of it working. Never really thought about it but now I know. i will have to play with my lathe a little more to get a better feel. One other thing, my dial engagement doesn't fall exactly on a line so I also had to compensate for that. That is how/why I discovered your explanation. Al
Brilliant video's on lathe operations. Many thanks for sharing your practical tips. I recently purchased a Colchester Master from the early 1950's and now retired from Rolls-Royce have started to use it to make replacement parts for my vintage car.
Hello John, me too I have a HLVH, just finished treading 1 &1/4" x 16 tpi on some surface grinder wheel arbours I am making, was a doddle to do as you well know, Feel sorry for guy's with a standard lathe, all this half nut sodding about.
WOW. I've learned more about how to efficiently operate a lathe and cut threads in 2 hours of your videos VS. the DAYS of other videos I've watched. Seriously. THANK YOU for making these videos!
Excellent. Glad it helped.
Joe, I've watched hundreds of hours of lathe videos over the past couple years and you are the FIRST person to explain this threading procedure in such detail. I always wondered how all these machinists could flip the lever exactly on the line every time--the task seemed very intimidating to say the least. You made my day! Thanks much and I look forward to watching the rest of your videos. Merry Christmas early!!
It's those little tricks that make life easier, thanks Joe
So true. Thanks for watching.
Joe: i been a tool maker for many years, i really like your videos, we employ young people all the time, i make them watch your channel, lead on !!
I'm just starting out, restoring a lathe from 1850-1870 to learn how it works. Your videos are an awesome resource for me. Thanks.
Thank you
Joe, thanks for taking the time to post these threading videos. I will be using them to help my apprentices understand single pointing on a lathe. good stuff. Keep them coming.
Another great tip and well made video, I love the white board explanation followed by the demo, makes it impossible not to get it, you are by a long way the best I've ever seen, a big thank you for sharing your enormous experience and intelligence, you have helped to put food on my table and send my kids to school so I can't thank you enough. I'm thirty years with my own shop but when you work on your own it's difficult to improve without other experts sharing, I'm still learning thank you very much cheers Bert, Dublin, Ireland.
Hi Bert. thank you for your flattering comment. I am pleased to know these videos are making a difference. Stay well.
Great videos. I'm learning to use my lathe after 20 yrs of it sitting idle in the basement with your simple and direct explanations. Thanks
Great tip! Never knew how many places it would actually engage but I knew it was more than I wanted. The way I came up with to help me hit the mark was to start advancing the carriage when the mark is getting close to slow the dial down and help synchronize the two. The major down side of this is I would have to back the carriage further away from the work to give me room to get it engaged. Obviously couldn't do this threatening away from the chuck like you showed. Can't wait to try both tricks. Thx!!
2nd best video on you tube... the first was your video on threading away from the chuck.. Legend stuff.
Thank you very much.
My father taught me to do it this way about 50 years ago. It's still great trick. And for those that didn't have a lathe smart father to show them this sort of trick? Well I guess that's why we have YOU Joe..... :)
it's also a great example of how feel counts for so much more than brute force in using any machine tool.
Thanks Joe for this video response.The fog has cleared, you make this topic simple, straight forward to understand and easy to follow.I feel much more confident already. I'm looking forward to colouring in my thread dial and practising away from the headstock threading this weekend.Many Thanks Greg
Thanks Joe, I've been doing this intuitively for years but this is the first time I've seen it demonstrated. You're a great teacher and I'm still learning.
Thank you.
I stumbled upon this trick several years ago. It sure does make threading less stressful. But, you explained much better than I could. I could really see you being a coach or teacher.
Thanks for that. I have schooled many apprentices and even taught a " Design for Manufacturability course" for UT coop students. I enjoy seeing others faces when they finally get it.
Not only are you familiar with your equipment, but you can communicate your knowledge, THANKS! . Been threading that way for years.
Love the tips rather than just showing off machining skills. Invaluable :)
I'll try to keep them in there.
A tip : watch series at Flixzone. Been using it for watching loads of movies during the lockdown.
@Lawson Pablo Definitely, have been using flixzone for since november myself :)
Great explanation, I know I'll have more confidence the next time I thread. Thanks and keep em coming!
I listened to what you had to say and I went straight out to the shop and tried it. Sooooooooooooo smooth and so easy. Absolutely awesome. Thank you
Outstanding. Glad to hear it is going to help you.
Another great video . You explain things very well , even me a retired dumb crane operator can catch on. I made your tool height setter works GREAT! Thanks again Joe.
Thanks for the comment. Glad you like the tool setter.
Once again, great stuff. I aught to just go to your channel & watch every video from start to finish.
I had a teacher that sort-of explained what to do with the handle but I still have the tendency to slam it down.
My lathe is a smithy combo, designed differently so I haven't had the opportunity to take a look at what's going on down there an a typical lathe.
This method of teaching works excellent for me, it reminds me of learning to drive a stick when I was young. I spent several days after work over 2 weeks, trying to get the hang of it, having friends try to guide me. it wasn't until a friend of mine explained what's going on between the flywheel, the clutch, the differential and the wheals that I actually got the hang of it. First time he took me out I was driving fine in about 15 minutes.
When I teach stickshift, the first day's lesson is entirely without the accelerator pedal. This includes scratchpad time talking about how and why things work the way they do.
There usually isn't a third day of teaching needed.
Thanks Joe... not having much lathe experience I was reluctant to try threading on my lathe. your tips have really helped. Keep em coming Mystro
Hi Joe,
Fine tip... Nice to say out loud how we do things naturally with experience........... ;)
Pierre
This is one of the things many teachers just skip right over. Anybody that does this for a living probably does it this way. Did you send my stickers yet ??
The stickers got mailed yesterday from Plattsburgh they should be there soon...
Thanks
Great video as always Joe. We walk upside down in my part of the world and have Metric machines eg 3mm lead screws and screw pitches in fractions of mm. Thread dials here engage thru 2 gears and are marked with letters at uneven locations and you need to have your wits about you to use them. I often cut metric threads on my old Southbend Lathe when the thread is not closely specified and convert the pitch to tpi. This produces useable threads unless you need xtra long male and female threads. I can then use your excellent method. I am in my 8th decade and thanks to you still learning.
Spindly Australia.
Thank you Joe,
Much if the stuff as you know already I do but I am so frigging glad to see you come on line and help others and myself with things.
'One of these days if work permits I will stop by after a call.
I work all over town doing fire alarm installations.
Several years ago we put the system in the Frost Bank Tower in down town Austin.
I was in the Wells Fargo building down town today.
I simply cannot express my gratitude to you enough.
If I could subscribe twice I would.
Worth
Thanks Worth. Stop in if you're ever in town.
I was in the dark ,now i can see the light.THANK YOU.
This was so helpful to me I car't tell you. I put my mini-lathe away and lost interest, but now I will go back with knowledge and understanding and master it. Thank you.
Very well done. Had never thought about the thread dial in this way. Much appreciated, Thank You.
GREAT VIDEO!
I ran to the shop to try out your method of engaging the half nut. I have gone from panic to confident, and dead nuts accurate, with the threading dial.
Thats a win for both of us. Thanks for watching.
Your videos are pure gold Joe. Thanks for taking the time.
Thanks for watching!
Another great simplistic BRILLIANT idea.... Thanks Joe
Been using this method for 25 years, great explanation for beginners! Great video Joe!
I am just starting my shopping for a lathe and I’m a complete amateur so your videos have been very useful to me. I know enough old sourdoughs to know that you aren’t teaching them anything even if they didn’t know it. Guys like me that need the simple stuff explained are just loving your videos.
You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make them drink. My material has value if you choose to listen the try it out. Glad you find them helpful.
Thanks a zillion! You’ve just made what seemed like sorcery, a simple slight of hand. I’m just a garage curious machinist and now I wish I would have done this as a career. Thanks again Joe!!
Joe ,thanx so much for your video and tips...You have managed to take a lot of fear of threading away...Great job
Having a good feel for your machine is important. Practice with the half nut on something that doesn't matter and it will become second nature. Thanks for the feedback.
Because of you Joe, Keith Fenner and Doubleboost I am going to buy a small lathe 250x500 for small gunsmithing and gunrange jobs. Hopefully watching you guys I can make some repectable parts and maybe keep all my body parts.
Ask questions if you have to. I know I'll help you. And....keeping body parts is a good thing!
very informative, this makes it SO much simpler!
Real good practical idea. I remarked mine before but this explanation will really help. Old Bob
My shop teacher was a retired Navy machinist. He caught me working the half nut like a squirrel on speed one day and showed me what you just demonstrated. That was nearly 30 years ago and since then I nearly sleep while threading. Good demo Joe.
As I recall, the guy who showed me the slide and drop method was also a Navy machinist. Chet Z. Good man. Thanks for watching.
A squirrel on speed...…. I just love that!!!
Thanks Joe another practical procedure. Take care. Doug
Joe, there has not been one of your videos that hasn't taught me something new. You have great teaching skills. Keep those videos coming, BIG thank you for sharing them!
I'm new to threading, thank you for a great video it'll come in very useful
Amazing videos, I am not even in the machining industry, but I watch your videos and they are awesome! I am actually thinking about buying a metal lathe just to play!
Great stuff Joe. From an old timer that's been threading forever!
New to the machine lathe milling business, your how to are awesome, I've learned a ton of info from you. THANK YOU much better then by guess & by golly hope I'm running this thing right & not destroying the equipment.
Awesome, thank you!
Outstanding explanation, thank you for all your videos so far.
Great explanation Joe...Thank you.
sammy mezzacapo
Great tip, and a great circle too ! Thank you for a very clear explanation.
Thanks. Got lucky on the circle!
I really enjoy and appreciate your no nonsense, no BS way of getting things across. You are A DAMNED GREAT INSTRUCTOR. THANK YOU ! Wish you were in Spokane, I'd drive ya nuts, or else we'd go racin'.
Thank you for that. Be careful racing!
Thanks for exposing an old secret. In my early days of threading, when cutting low pitch square threads, I would shut the machine off. The threading dial spins like a top! I then move apron to engage half nuts in "free space" then turn the machine on, then rock on!
This is one of those things the old guys do unconsciously and never bother to pass on. I hope somebody gets something out of this video. Its a good practice.
I had 1-4 and intermediate lines. Putting a sharpie mark in between those lines really helped me. Made my first set of external 5/8x24 threads yesterday. Felt good.
Excellent. Did you also use the "away from the headstock" method ??
@@joepie221 sure did!
How
excellent demonstration really made a lot of sense to me thanks words can't explain
I have done this for years and I actually managed to talk myself into it being a bad habit and started to stop doing it. I'm so glad to see that I'm not crazy.
Maybe we're both crazy?
This vid is a lifesaver. I have an Enco lathe in pretty good condition but for the life of me i could never, NEVER get the half nut engaged at the right place. after watching this vid, I marked the threading wheel as in your vid, and OMG, it was immediately obvious the pointer arrow on the lathe was in completely wrong place!!!. No wonder i could never hit the mark!
i moved the marker arrow and now all is well.
Excellent video Joe. sometimes the simplest and most obvious things are those that bite us...
1st thank you for taking the time you take to make the videos. 2nd this video confirmed what I have been doing is ok. Thanks
Any new machinist should practice this. Its a good way to reduce the stress of hitting that line.
Another great video. Great tip I didn't know before watching. Much appreciated thanks.
Thak you Joe. I have never made threads on my lathe due to fear and lack of understanding on how to use the half nut. You have made it seem easy. Also I like your idea of threading away from the chuck.
I have been doing it your way all along: But it is good to have it explained as you have done. I still probably will not go as fast as you can. :-)
Also, I will be practicing threading toward the tail stock - that seems much safer to me.
Thanks for the great videos!
Thanks for watching. If you're threading out, set a carriage stop to align the thread start point every time and thread away from it.
Another really informative video Joe, almost as good as being in a classroom environment. Thanks so much for the clarity of explanation. Cheers, Gordon, AUS
When I had a pretty decent Taiwanese lathe this was never a problem. Now that I have a cheap Chinese lathe this is going to help a whole heap! Thanks.
Joe I opened my you tube tonight after a long Monday threading, and this was right on top. I haven't threaded on the engine lathe in years and I'll be honest I totally forgot this trick. So needless to say the acme thread I ran today was stressful. Thanks for all these great videos. I've been machining for over 20 years and learn something new from every video of yours I watch.
Thank you very much. I hope you'll consider subscribing.
Just what this Newbie needs to know! Thanks for your tips and your Channel, Joe.
Amazing! Going to try this as soon as I get to work! Great Great GREAT video!! Thank you!
Love your explanations, love your topics. So simple but soooo worth knowing. BIG THUMBS UP
Joe, another great learning experience for me. You mention being anxious when dropping the handle on the half nut...no kidding man. I owe you about another 5 years to my life span....LOL
Great stuff Joe, as a beginner, I'm learning everyday and your videos really simplify and clear the mud for me, Thank you, from Alice, Texas
Excellent. Thanks for watching.
Just watched this and ran to my lathe to try it. GREAT idea. Thanks
Congrats on 6000 well-deserved subs! Thanks for another great video.
Thank you. That's just since June 2016.
Good, easy to understand info. As always. Thanks Joe.
Joe THANKYOU for this you have no idea the amount of stress I go through when I know I can't mess up a thread because I don't have anymore of that material left......This helps out soooooo much I thankyou from the bottom of my heart sir!
Excellent. glad I could help.
This is really a useful tip! Thank you for posting it. I am a complete newbie, haven’t even purchased a lathe yet, and thought one had to hit the number exactly. I also thought it would take quite awhile and a lot of practice before I’d feel the least bit comfotrable single point threading. You’ve alleviated a lot of my concerns and, while I can still see it will take some practice to get it right, it no longer appears to be an almost insurmountable task.
And remember, the slower the machine RPM, the slower that dial will turn. Increase your cutting speed as your skills develop.
@@joepie221 I was going to post the same as what Bob has just written here, so I'll just say that my thoughts are the same as Bob's as I'm another newby thats about to buy my first hobby lathe. Thanks again Joe.
Oh I will just say that your vids (and This Old Tony, Abom79, Blondihacks and Stephan Gotteswinter's vids) have increased my knowledge immensely. Thanks.
@@scott6896 3 out of the 4 give some solid advice, the 4th is winging it and should always be double checked.
Yes another complete noob trying to pluck up the courage to buy that first lathe, who’s been petrified about thread cutting.
I was thinking I’d just give it a miss and use a die and hand thread with a tap / die follower with lots of stick out and a fixed steady, rather than risk learning to cut threads on the lathe on my own.
Now maybe I would be tempted to have a go - having watched this.
I think I will save this one for once I do bite the bullet & pull the trigger.
@@ianmoone2359 If you buy a lathe, buy one with a cam lock chuck, or a keyed nose and threaded collar. Chucks that just thread on are normally less likely to run safely in reverse. Watch this for even more inspiration to learn to thread. ruclips.net/video/Z-dqOi_z5bk/видео.html
I appreciate your channel in how you explain more of the tool theory and engineering behind machining. You describe it all in a way that a laymen, like myself, interested in the trade can understand.
Thanks Joe another great tip. Will definitely use it. Cheers Mike
New Zealand
hi joe,
all your videos are great and very informative. im surprised you didnt mention to always swing the dial away from the lead screw via the thumb screw when not threading it keeps the brass gear on the dial from premature wear. i was taught this as a youngster and have always done it. i see old timers that wasnt even aware that they swing off the screw.... keep up the good work!
Rick
Hi Rick. That is a good habit to get into. I keep mine out if I am not threading. It only takes a minute. Thanks for watching.
Thank you Joe. In all honesty you have simplified what was once complicated, not only in this video but in all your RUclips videos. Thank you!
thanks for watching.
Love your videos, Joe! I just got my first lathe, and your videos are making the learning curve *much* flatter. Thanks so much!
Thanks for watching.
I like how you explain basic theory.
Excellent. It was good on the white board, much better on the machine. Thanks.
I like the explanation. I could not get my head round the idea that the half-nut could be engaged anywhere as it appeared in some videos. Choice of words I know was the problem. We used to draw threads in Technical Drawing, back in the seventies, so this has tied the two ideas together nicely. Very good video thank you jb
Thanks
Great Tip. Would you consider doing some videos on multi start threading? Methods for getting the pitch right ect? Cheers Crispin
Damn I love learning from you. Thanks Joe.
Joe, Thanks for the tip... It will serve to be a great confidence builder
Gary 73-year-old Home Shop Machinist in North West Arkansas
Once you get used to it, you won't even realize you're doing it. Good luck.
Ain't that the truth.
The other day I engaged the half nut not even knowing I did it.
What the--- oh okay it is fine.LOL.
Thanks, this has made my day better :-)
Your a very good instructor buddy! Thanks for the lesson...Razor!
Thanks for watching Razor.
Thanks Joe. When I was in school I was puckered so tight doing threads. Love to be on a manual to get some hands on work with this. Again great video.
Some of those old school shop teachers really should embrace some new material. Threading doesn't have to be an exercise in controlled panic.
Excellent video I think the biggest tip you've given is turning the threading tool upside down. I have not found any situations where I could not use it yet.
After breakfast I’m going to try this on my Atlas10f lathe. This has always caused me some concern and a few trashed threads. Thanks
very informative Joe thanks 👍
That is one really helpful piece of information for me..... I really thank you on that one
Thank you for this Joe. I finally got myself a small lathe (King Canada 7x12) that has threadcutting capabilities. Going to try my first single point threading this weekend on some scrap aluminum, and your videos are an enormous help in taking away some of my anxiety.
Excellent. Glad you got something out of the material.
Just discovered your videos and getting a lot of good technique from them. I'm a hobbyist with a Jet 9x20 that I play with. This was a great video and awesome info for me. Greatly appreciated!!!
Glad to hear it. Thanks for the support.
I sort of discovered this myself by accident this weekend. Now seeing this video is totally what I needed to understand why what I was doing worked or did not.
For the thread I was needing to cut I ended up keeping the half nut locked because I was having trouble hitting the mark.
Once again Awesome content Mr. Pie.
ThankJoe
I have that same lathe and love it in my home shop.Makes it easier to learn with good tools
I like mine too. I wanted the 15", but this one was too nice to pass up.
Great vid as always, Joe! Thank you for taking the time. Always try to hit your LUT (sorry, I couldn't resist).
Thats OK. I deserved that. I was just too lazy to shoot that part over. At least I owned it. Thanks for the shot.
"I will not be going out to the lathe (Yes I will). LMAO! Keep it entertaining and educational.
I worked in a machine shop in high school and I loved the work but the people in the shop ruined it for me. They led me to believe it was a miserable field full of miserable people, a dead end job with no possible future. I moved on, but now I'm rediscovering feelings towards it.
I have worked in many shops like the one you described. It was never a good experience. I completely understand your desire to distance yourself from that. The ability to create something from nothing had me from day one. You are only limited by how many machine you have available and the ability to run. Fundamentals are good. Twisting them and coming up with creative ways of getting things done is the best part. I can't imagine not being in some type of manufacturing or fabrication.
Thanks for the good info and demo.
Have a day
Thanks Joe. I've accidentally discovered this but didn't know the why of it working. Never really thought about it but now I know. i will have to play with my lathe a little more to get a better feel. One other thing, my dial engagement doesn't fall exactly on a line so I also had to compensate for that. That is how/why I discovered your explanation.
Al
Its OK to make a new line. I did. Just make sure your half nut is engaged when you pick a new spot.
Brilliant video's on lathe operations. Many thanks for sharing your practical tips. I recently purchased a Colchester Master from the early 1950's and now retired from Rolls-Royce have started to use it to make replacement parts for my vintage car.
Its a very capable and diverse machine. One of my favorites.
Another great video for a beginner like myself. Did not know you could gently drag the screw until the number. Thanks again Joe!
Great video. Really enjoying and learning a ton from your threading videos! Haven’t seen anyone else cover this. Thank you very much. 👍
Great video Joe, I am a lucky guy who uses a Harding so I don't worry about the split nut.
Thanks.
John
Hello John, me too I have a HLVH, just finished treading 1 &1/4" x 16 tpi on some surface grinder wheel arbours I am making, was a doddle to do as you well know, Feel sorry for guy's with a standard lathe, all this half nut sodding about.