Easiest Way to Dial in a BORE HEAD | DVF 5000 5 Axis CNC Machine

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  • Опубликовано: 1 авг 2022
  • How to use and setup the Kennametal E-Bore Boring Head. Used on the DVF 5000 from DN Solutions.
    Jessie shows you there's a better way to bore out holes. From building the Kennametal E-bore Tool, setting the tool on the Haimer Microset UNO, to boring out a PERFECT intolerance hole on DN Solutions DVF 5000. Jessie will give you everything you need to know to hit those perfect tolerance holes.
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Комментарии • 233

  • @unknownplayer7127
    @unknownplayer7127 Год назад +34

    We use Kaiser boringhead's in our shop with analogue dial's and we also hit really tight tolerances with those tools. It's just all about being focused when doing precise work. You made a point by losing count yes, but when you know you are doing something exact just don't get distracted. If your buddy that came to ask you something is a machinist too he should be able to understand that you are doing something where you gotta be focused. All in all it is a cool tool and useful if you are not used to it.

    • @importanttingwei7747
      @importanttingwei7747 Год назад +1

      it's now OK to ask all sorts of questions including stupid ones using the Kennametal boring bar as it doesn't lose count

    • @matejkuka797
      @matejkuka797 Год назад +2

      because TITANS are usually only buisness model of youtubing :D bro you cannot take every word they say :) they show us so many tips and tricks i agree but i think every normal cnc machinist,programer must know these things withou TITANS if dont is not good operator,machinist,programator :)

    • @grahamkeegan2706
      @grahamkeegan2706 Год назад +4

      its not usually a workmate that's the problem.
      I usually find its management ! (Particularly the ones who came off the shop floor who SHOULD know better)

    • @GrumpyMachinist
      @GrumpyMachinist Год назад

      Damn straight!

    • @spartanpatriot3163
      @spartanpatriot3163 Год назад +3

      Exactly, some of us used to hold +\~ .0002 on 60 year old Bridgeports on a boring head with no adjustable cross slide, just a half thousandth indicator and some tappy tappy

  • @MansonMachineWorks
    @MansonMachineWorks Год назад +99

    How many of those are going to get flung off and smashed when someone forgets it on the tool?

    • @BloodThunda
      @BloodThunda Год назад +5

      Exactly, why not just make a digital boring bar -_-

    • @Th4thWiseman
      @Th4thWiseman Год назад +2

      Also I noticed he's boring both down and no Q retract from an M98 spindle position so I'm predicting he's not using a G76 boring cycle, moreso just basic plunge feed and return feed.

    • @JohnBlaze505
      @JohnBlaze505 Год назад +5

      Don't forget it on the tool then. 😉

    • @deepeshkumar5408
      @deepeshkumar5408 Год назад +1

      i was about to say that

    • @EggiXPL
      @EggiXPL Год назад +7

      We are using this stuff for years and never had one of us forgotten to remove it, i had the same thought in the beginning when we started using them

  • @daveticino1
    @daveticino1 Год назад +57

    You can immagine how often the digital dial take a fly throug the tangent 😁

    • @Stasiek_Zabojca
      @Stasiek_Zabojca Год назад +4

      I saw video about this thing long time ago on Kennametal channel. As far as I remember, it's designed to fall off as soon as the tool starts to rotate and should survive impact into wall of the machine.

    • @ImPaCTSnYpEr
      @ImPaCTSnYpEr Год назад

      That thing better be bulletproof!

    • @SE4RCHING
      @SE4RCHING Год назад +1

      That's why u just get a digital boring bar...

    • @marctapparo5049
      @marctapparo5049 11 месяцев назад

      Maybe itll find the rest of my indicator I threw a while back

  • @saschafunk1644
    @saschafunk1644 Год назад +33

    I still heared from this system, but never seen one in action before. Thank you for showing. At my workplace, we have very tight tolerances at our workpieces to produce.
    Sometimes it is not allowed to open the window or door, because the change in room temperature can affects the result of the bore diameter. Also the coolant must cooled down to 20 degrees celsius, before starting the boreing process.
    Greetings from Germany.

    • @saschafunk1644
      @saschafunk1644 Год назад +8

      @@mostlymotorized We have measuring pins for bores up to 10 mm. They are polished and manufactured with an accuracy of 0.0001 mm. Each diameter comes into a set of 100 pins with tight gradations. Every bore that has a larger diameter is measured with 3-point probes that can measure to an accuracy of 0.001 mm. The bore tools we use, are manufactured by KAISER in Germany an have an accuracy of 0,001 mm. All measuring tools are stored in an climate box and getting checkt each half year from an certified calibrating laboratory.

    • @mendadrog
      @mendadrog Год назад +1

      you live the dream. In summer my workshop is around 38 degrees, the enclosure of my machine is at 45 degrees and I'm suppose to get tight tolerances of 0 +0.02 😓

    • @saschafunk1644
      @saschafunk1644 Год назад +4

      @@mendadrog this is absolutely bad for the quality of your product output. The foundry, I am working for, is the world leader in its market. To stay the best in the world, needing a lot of innovations and manpower. Actually we build up an second machining center and needing in the next two years 100 machinists and people for our tool management. East 1995 we are using 3D printing technology in industrial scale. All our products are Prototypes and the world is needing more and more of this hy quality products. So the future looks very good for us. We have Offices in Bangalore - India and Ann Arbor - North America. More than 1700 Custumors in 37 Countries.
      The name of the company is ACTech GmbH, located in Freiberg - Saxony in Germany. The ACT means Advanced Casting Technologies.

  • @guardmanonduty5139
    @guardmanonduty5139 Год назад +2

    Another awesone video by Titan, personally never went off the dial as a tool and die maker, always setup a tenths indicator off the side for opening up the bore. I can't even imagine working in a place with all this modern tech. My shop has such old equipment.

  • @SeraphinFox
    @SeraphinFox Год назад

    As a machinist who started out boring with boring bars both with AND without those dials, I'd have KILLED for something like that. I always dreaded having to change the inserts on my boring bar. It was a custom built bar with multiple inserts going down it and cut 5 diameters at once, each a different size. NO DIALS. Each insert had a set screw that could be used to adjust the insert and, therefore the diameter of the corresponding bore. Bringing each one into size was a chore, especially making all adjustments by feel with allen keys. I can almost guarantee that company is still using them too. Glad to see that something far better is out there.

  • @darrellhart9363
    @darrellhart9363 Год назад +5

    I am just amazed at today machines.
    I am thankful to see stuff like this it's a education on line and one of the biggest reason for the internet.
    These machines are light-years past the old bridge port, and davin port I used just out of high school none of this computer stuff I'm lost just watching this and in wonder what is ahead thanks for the video.

    • @jmowreader9555
      @jmowreader9555 Год назад

      What is ahead is dark manufacturing, where robots cut the stock, load it into your machine and run the job with no human intervention required.
      In 2009 I was hauling beer out of Anheuser-Busch’s brewery outside Syracuse, NY. They’ve got a huge warehouse where they keep the deliverable beer. Distributors send in their orders via EDI. There’s a little office that assigns these orders to particular docks. A Teamster backs your empty trailer into a dock. When it’s there, all these little robotic forklifts immediately pull your order and put it in your trailer; the only possible point of failure is if the wrong trailer was put in the dock.
      So, basically, we’re all going to be administrators in the future. Consider Titan’s shop. Titan doesn’t employ engineers; all his work comes in pre-designed. There’s no reason why a computer and robots couldn’t look at each job as it came in to assign it to a machine, order materials, set up all the tooling, load and run the jobs, do QC on the finished pieces, crate them and load the trucks with the finished work. Same thing with most of the skilled trades. However, he’d need a lot more floor space for maneuver paths for the robots.

    • @darrellhart9363
      @darrellhart9363 Год назад

      @@jmowreader9555 well that's if we let them, and yet their are no robots to fix the robots so humans aren't out of the picture yet.
      BUT ONE DAY and we know it's coming!

    • @jmowreader9555
      @jmowreader9555 Год назад

      @@darrellhart9363 Yes, "robot maintenance technician" is the growth profession of the 21st Century.

    • @spartanpatriot3163
      @spartanpatriot3163 Год назад

      Button pushers lol, I’ve never messed with CNC but it was funny watching CNC guys come into the shop I worked at, they learned really fast that they weren’t machinists.

  • @h2opower
    @h2opower Год назад +4

    That tool is nice! Thanks for posting this video as it shows we can all do better if we keep up with the times and I am sure many are like me and never knew this tool existed.

  • @atmosphericpressure3560
    @atmosphericpressure3560 Год назад +4

    I used to adjust the boring head on the spindle sweeping the insert tip against a dial indicator (.0001) This is awesome.

    • @JiuJitsuStuTru
      @JiuJitsuStuTru Год назад +3

      The best way right here!

    • @Ken-nv2hl
      @Ken-nv2hl Год назад

      This fancy boring head looks like a waste of money to me. Nothing wrong with using a dial indicator method on.normal boring head.

    • @TorchRed99FRC
      @TorchRed99FRC Год назад +1

      I was going to say this but found it in the comments first.

    • @atmosphericpressure3560
      @atmosphericpressure3560 Год назад

      @@TorchRed99FRC A "grayhair" taught me that a long time ago.
      Titan and crew are on some next level sh*t. Im just tryna keep up.🤣

  • @deathness13
    @deathness13 Год назад +3

    Thanks for the lesson .. that tool adjustment was at another level .. just amazing !!

  • @romekkis2776
    @romekkis2776 Год назад +2

    pffff...)))) while you are setting up, I would have time to make a rough and finish pass....
    Of course, you have good equipment, in any case, thanks for the knowledge)
    With love from Russia ;)

  • @jmowreader9555
    @jmowreader9555 Год назад +4

    What would be REALLY cool is if all this equipment was networked. In that system, instead of Jessie having to plug the numbers off the Haimer print into his mill’s console, the Haimer would transmit them directly to it…no chance of transcription errors.

    •  Год назад

      It's a pre-setter. Normally prepare tools for the next job while one is running. So not best to change tool offsets while another job is running.

    • @TorchRed99FRC
      @TorchRed99FRC Год назад

      You can get rfid tags in the retention knobs and Zoller has a presenter that can do it. I’m sure the haimer probably could too.

    • @MillTurn4Life
      @MillTurn4Life Год назад

      I might be getting confused with a different vid but I thunk you can save them to a USB stick and transfer all the tool for the job simultaneously. Again I might be wrong haha

  • @bboydrummer1
    @bboydrummer1 Год назад

    Awesome video. Something satisfying about boring especially seeing the finish after.

  • @tommytwotimes2838
    @tommytwotimes2838 Год назад +3

    We use RFID chips for all information about tool lenght, no Stickers or something! All information fully automated saved and updated. Industry 4.0 Germany :)
    Company big Kaiser has digital display tools for boring, so nothing really new ;)

  • @nicolespittler9530
    @nicolespittler9530 Год назад

    I love seeing the Haimer Microset in action! Very cool!

  • @Sara-TOC
    @Sara-TOC Год назад

    All of the high tech equipment is impressive! I have experience with Dykem, trusty Post-It Notes, and Tool Eyes (when you could trust them) hahaha
    The Haimer Uno looks like a blessing in disguise, ease of use to the operator and those who don't have eagle eye vision. Chips on some inserts can be insanely small and just as difficult to see under a standard backlit magnifying glass.
    Awesome video!

  • @joshb4544
    @joshb4544 Год назад +2

    That's so awesome. I had that happen to me on my first set of boring operations at my first job. At some point a coworker came by looking for something and being friendly. That was enough for me to completely lose my rhythm, and I think I ended up doubling up on my second cut, which took the bore just out of tolerance. I let my boss know. Unfortunately, it was a piece of like 4-5" thick steel, and we didn't have the stock to just fire off another. I felt bad about that one.

    • @chisdalton9652
      @chisdalton9652 Год назад

      I worked for a small minded company in Sheffield England after 6 months of excellent work. Despite getting them out of the suit numerous times they thought they would dock me 6 hours pay.... I left that place they say after

  • @mohammedalbattal77
    @mohammedalbattal77 Год назад

    I came late to see this video...Last week has been very difficult for me ...Thank you Mr. Jesse for such a great job that makes the mood better ....

  • @nathanthomas8184
    @nathanthomas8184 Год назад

    Calibration just became easy with your DD ,what a handy little sucker
    Titans T-Team play hard to teach with passion....BOOM.....

  • @steinarne79
    @steinarne79 Год назад +15

    Really love the way you guys use tool presetter and everything. The only thing I would say could be done otherwise - that our company got - is to get that software to print out a QR code on the lable, and install a QR code scanner into the machine. It will delete the last possible human error, not reading anything, and not puching in any digits.
    Awesome video!

    • @ktmturbo5836
      @ktmturbo5836 Год назад +1

      We have the Numbers put in the mashine by wifi. No need for qr scanner of you have wifi.

    • @daveticino1
      @daveticino1 Год назад

      Even better is a RFID chip on the tool holder that has all the data.
      We had it already 20 years ago on a Mandelli Milling center

    • @ktmturbo5836
      @ktmturbo5836 Год назад

      @@daveticino1 so tell me what is the bennefits rfid chip?

    • @daveticino1
      @daveticino1 Год назад +1

      While presenting the tool you put the data in the chip of that is attached to the tool holder, when you put the tool inside the ATC the machine reads the data. So you can swap tools between machines without risk of collisions

    • @ktmturbo5836
      @ktmturbo5836 Год назад

      @@daveticino1 we never swap Tools in our mashines. Thats the same as swearing in the church.

  • @robertminnicks1136
    @robertminnicks1136 Год назад

    Dang made life a lot easier after 30 yrs, this is cool stuff.

  • @roylucas4414
    @roylucas4414 Год назад +2

    Incredible tool. Thank you.

  • @Smiggi_Inks
    @Smiggi_Inks Год назад

    Kaiser heads are the best I've used. Digital and does exactly what you tell it to do every time.

  • @jessyltr581
    @jessyltr581 Год назад

    120k views in 5 minutes... machining's futur is bright! Keep it up :) 🤘🏼

  • @fisherholmsfly
    @fisherholmsfly Год назад

    Thank you for teaching about that very cool tool!

  • @EZ_shop
    @EZ_shop Год назад +1

    Awesome demo Jessie. Ciao, Marco.

  • @daddyfatsakz98
    @daddyfatsakz98 Год назад

    What's Krazy to me all the trial and error to get to this level machinery and craftsmanship impressive...

  • @DavidHerscher
    @DavidHerscher Год назад +2

    LOL, is it just me, or has this channel turned into QVC home shopping network for machinists?

  • @freddepauw
    @freddepauw Год назад

    Nice new technology..thanks for sharing..I still use dail indicators..

  • @harindugamlath
    @harindugamlath Год назад +1

    That's super useful.

  • @archicebunker2210
    @archicebunker2210 Год назад +1

    Smooth as Tennessee whiskey, damn good presentation Jesse !

  • @rb8049
    @rb8049 Год назад

    This is just awesome. I can imagine even more tech and automation to ease this process. Still too manual for super efficient production.

    • @blueovalfan23
      @blueovalfan23 Год назад

      You'd be shocked at what those boreheads will do. We, myself and the kid I trained, make .0001 adjustments while feeding an assembly line the old fashioned way, dial tools. It really boils down to keeping it in spec but it's not hard without the digital reader.

  • @barrysetzer
    @barrysetzer Год назад +1

    Now that is COOL. Way easier than the usual boring heads

    • @UrsusSuperior44
      @UrsusSuperior44 Год назад

      How's your eyesight my man, Jessie telling the truth? 😂

    • @MrMBinder
      @MrMBinder Год назад

      @@UrsusSuperior44 Hey, enough with the shade. A lot of us don't have perfect hearing after years of machining 🤣

    • @trevorgoforth8963
      @trevorgoforth8963 Год назад

      Hey Barry, how many fingers am I holding up ✌😂

  • @Kardos55
    @Kardos55 Год назад

    Cool and useful gadget!

  • @michaelespiritu2908
    @michaelespiritu2908 Год назад

    this clicking mechanism is awesome.

  • @ipadize
    @ipadize Год назад +2

    have you seen the "spindle inside a spindle" from Heller? thats Heller cool you can change the cutting diameter while the spindle is turning.

  • @swikocki
    @swikocki Год назад +1

    Excellent, use of technology.
    Can the display be used on multiple bars and does it remember the size of each bar?
    Also what happens if the display isn’t removed, can the machine be started?

  • @EZCUSTOMZ
    @EZCUSTOMZ Год назад

    Great video .

  • @gooblio
    @gooblio Год назад

    Oh hell yeah. I want one 🤩

  • @andreasdietrich4972
    @andreasdietrich4972 Год назад +4

    once had a tight tolerance in polyoxymethylene (POM) with 21,9 (+-0,005) mm and this tool actually helped me get them all perfect.
    and btw: your tip with loosening up the vice before you go for tight tolerances saved me really. keep the good videos up :)

    • @boerke123
      @boerke123 Год назад

      How well did the mate stay in the material overtime, in my experience its really hard to keep it at a tight tolerance

    • @andreasdietrich4972
      @andreasdietrich4972 Год назад

      @@boerke123 since it was only 8 holes total and I only had to take off .05mm in the soft material the insert was like brand new aafterwards I think it really comes down to what material you are machining and how well built the tool is

  • @jamiemacdonald436
    @jamiemacdonald436 Год назад +5

    Poor Barry. 😢

  • @bsealer
    @bsealer 3 месяца назад

    We use those bar style for roughing and finishing, but I don't think they hold up as well as the older style finish bars
    But our bars get used hard.
    And I always make my adjustments in the tool setter
    But it would be great not having to take the bar out to make the adjustments

  • @shutupstoopid4518
    @shutupstoopid4518 Год назад

    Good stuff....thanks

  • @Enrios
    @Enrios Год назад +3

    just use the dial. you don't need a 35 000 pre setter

  • @jessearendse9557
    @jessearendse9557 Год назад

    We use d'Andrea and Sandvik, and I can wholeheartedly say that d'Andrea is way better than Sandvik. I'll have to be making adjustments after every part with the Sandvik and I've never touched the d'Andrea since changing the insert 60 parts ago!

  • @12rew
    @12rew Год назад +3

    I want to learn from you. Boom💖

  • @jamesfarrell2084
    @jamesfarrell2084 6 дней назад

    That's something I need

  • @JD-hh9io
    @JD-hh9io Год назад

    I just used an old Parlec pre setter.

  • @MisterHPI
    @MisterHPI 3 месяца назад

    If trying to hold a close tolerance AND make the best possible finish, is it still normal practice to bore through the part then feed back out again? Doesn't the tip of the insert cut more material on the way up and/or compromise the finish you produced on the way down?

  • @sangeenshahkhan
    @sangeenshahkhan 3 месяца назад

    You can also use a dial gage on the cutting edge of the boring head to measure for the backlash. 1, Set your boring head. 2, cut a test whole and measure the whole for actual cut settings. 3, set a dial gage on the cutting bar3, 4, final set the boring head and make sure the dial gage readings confirm the radius you are dealing in on the boring head.
    I know its cumbersome but certainly doable without breaking the bank.

  • @brassmonkey6942069
    @brassmonkey6942069 Год назад

    i used that setter at Columbia Machine in Vancouver,Wa

    • @trevorgoforth8963
      @trevorgoforth8963 Год назад

      I used to live in Vancouver, WA! Ever heard of a company called US Digital?

  • @royzomer6729
    @royzomer6729 Год назад +2

    Love your video's!!! But with all the respect, I've been using digital boring heads for over 20 years now. Even the newer generation were you are able to read your size out on your phone. I really hate to ad stuff to tools that rotate at those speeds.

  • @Dot.774
    @Dot.774 Год назад

    What a a coincidence or what I was doing a part that looks almost the same at work drilled and bored but doing the old fashion way.

  • @TommiHonkonen
    @TommiHonkonen Год назад +1

    we have tool setter but it broke about 5 years ago after a blackout

  • @darylh8657
    @darylh8657 Год назад

    A way to improve efficiency is to print a QR-code on your tool labels that you can scan directly into the machine's tool set.

  • @MrMBinder
    @MrMBinder Год назад +1

    Very interesting, not at all boring 🤔

  • @Suckmyjagon
    @Suckmyjagon Год назад +14

    Wait you mean a home made gig with a fine thread bolt as the jack isn't the industry standard.

    • @wordwyrd
      @wordwyrd Год назад

      I'm pretty sure it's not entirely uncommon..

    • @wordwyrd
      @wordwyrd Год назад +1

      ..and to be honest, most things can be corcle milled on a CNC and be well within tolerance.

    • @MrMBinder
      @MrMBinder Год назад

      @@wordwyrd They sure can.
      A lot of things are just more practical than circle milling, though. At a previous workplace, I was producing these big cast bronze parts with one crazy tolerance after the other in some very deep holes.
      I would hate making a 400mm deep hole with a smooth finish with anything but a tool like this.

    • @wordwyrd
      @wordwyrd Год назад

      @@MrMBinder oh definitely. I meant "most" to mean there are obviously exceptions.

  • @Revilokab
    @Revilokab Год назад +2

    When using a boring head in a CNC machine how does the retract work.? Do you just feed it out? I would think it would take a small spring pass cut on the way out then. Probably bad for the finish and could introduce chatter. Any insight would be greatly appreciated

    • @jetfire5991
      @jetfire5991 Год назад

      Most CNC mills have monitored spindle orientation, so you can easily just tell the machine to stop the tool, set the spindle to a preset orientation, move the cutting edge 0.1mm away from the bore diameter and retract in rapid. We got a ~30 year old cnc mill with a sub-routine for that out of the box, where we just tell it how deep to bore with a parameter and all we have to do beforehand is mount the boring head in the right orientation

    • @Revilokab
      @Revilokab Год назад

      @@jetfire5991 Ok thanks. That makes sense. I’ve been curious about this for a while. I thought I saw at one point in the video the tool spinning as it came out. It may of even been on the finish pass.

    • @jetfire5991
      @jetfire5991 Год назад

      @@Revilokab it might have been, since a spring pass is just a result of tool deflection. That boring head they're using in the video looks really rigid, and they are only removing like ~0.1mm each side, so I imagine that spring pass that would happen to be next to non-existent.
      I'm just speaking from my experience, since we're usually trying to hit the dimension with a single pass to save on cycle time, and depending on the material, that spring pass for us could make a difference of 0.01mm in mild steel (~0.0005") or 0.05mm in stainless (~0.002"), so we're usually using the routine for pulling away to avoid that.

    • @pablov9212
      @pablov9212 Год назад

      subroutines are great, but most newer machines have a handful of canned cycles just for boring. writing a subroutine would have the same result. IIRC, theres a cycle to orient the spindle and retract a spscific distance in I and J, dwell at the bottom and feed out, feed in and feed out at different rates, feed in and rapid out maybe? probably for spring loaded tools on the rapid out. it's been a while for me, so I don't know them off hand.
      as with mosy things, it always depends on the job. is it a short run of one offs? are you trying to shave seconds off a production cycle that rapid is worth risking? is there a surface finish callout? maybe they want a cross hatch on the cylinder walls that an abrasive will touch up minor scuffs afterwards. have pride in your work, but make sure you're not doing unnecessary work for free.

  • @andrewmillyard3162
    @andrewmillyard3162 Год назад

    Set mine using a clock against the bar. Universal solution

  • @jtrent3960
    @jtrent3960 Год назад

    LMAO elderly like Barry.. wish I could come from KY and show you the old man luck lol. Great video and great work guys

  • @ahfreebird
    @ahfreebird Год назад +3

    I could tell he was trying to hold back a smile when the size right off the presetter would have put the part in tolerance. Of course, you don't go straight to size with your presetter, but in this case he totally could have.

    • @advil000
      @advil000 Год назад

      It's not that simple exactly. If you already know what material you are boring, and you already know how much stock you are leaving, and you know what the setting needs to be with a certain amount of stock left to have just the right amount of tool pressure... then sure you could offset the number straight from the tool presetter and hit it bang on (Can I justify one of those for my garage? LOL). But that requires the exact thing these tools are meant to fix: You need a specific operator who knows the quirks of the specific tool in a specific material and knows what voodoo numbers to use for a particular job. That's all well and good and in a small shop environment it can work, but not ideal when you need 20 different people to be able to knock out a new random part out of a random material and hit the tolerance the first time.

  • @ArikaStack
    @ArikaStack Год назад

    The problem with using a presenter to set boring bars, in my experience, is that the presenter doesn't measure the tool as it's cutting with the cutting pressure on it.
    I normally go .002 undersize to be safe and then work my way up. More for sub .0005 tolerances.
    Also, alot of boring bar adjustment is in how you tighten the set screw. Everyone has their own way. Kaiserheads aren't as bad but in my shop I rarely see them.
    Also spring passes. The nice thing is once a boring bar is dialed, it's dialed.
    The digital gauge would help with adjusting it though. You can note where your original adjustment left you and comp for your spring pass on the current and your first pass on future parts separately.

  • @seanmostert4213
    @seanmostert4213 Год назад

    The problem with this video is that I can’t hit the like button twice.

  • @raphrath8561
    @raphrath8561 Год назад +1

    ok but like dial indicator in the shank measuring the tool

  • @QurttoRco
    @QurttoRco 8 месяцев назад

    how well does it survive being yeeted into enclosure by centrifugal force ?

  • @MrJugsstein
    @MrJugsstein Год назад

    Next step is a WiFi one.
    Thanks for the video 😊

  • @bandunagalbone5562
    @bandunagalbone5562 Год назад

    Hi, sir we are using Wholehapter Boring head, we are getting same issue.

  • @ratzor_x1923
    @ratzor_x1923 Год назад +2

    We use big kaiser with a built in digital display
    Btw: why no spindlestop and spindleorientation when you reach the final depth and a small offset to get out of the hole?
    Sry, english is not my first language

    • @romekkis2776
      @romekkis2776 Год назад +1

      He doesn't know about it)

    • @GrumpyMachinist
      @GrumpyMachinist Год назад

      We all get trapped in our ways sometimes and the simplest thing goes right over our head. In another comment a guy says he uses an indicator to adjust the boring tool in the machine. I do this method all the time for a lot of other tools but for some reason I was a dumbass and never thought of it because there is a dial. Screw the dial, I'll start using the indicator method, it's much more precise.

    • @Hani13ful
      @Hani13ful Год назад

      @@romekkis2776 😂

  • @adammiller4879
    @adammiller4879 Год назад

    Does the display show the true radial movement or is it diameter . Like let’s say you have a 5.0000 hole, the first cut was at 4.995, would it be .0025 or .005 adjustment ? (Not accounting for tool pressure)

    • @TorchRed99FRC
      @TorchRed99FRC Год назад

      According to the video it goes off diameter.

  • @k9slayer
    @k9slayer Год назад

    you guys must cream yourselves with all that fab tooling and machines.

  • @ryandarrah4247
    @ryandarrah4247 Год назад +1

    i lock the spindle, set up a .00005"indicator anto the head and adjust that way

    • @GrumpyMachinist
      @GrumpyMachinist Год назад

      OMG, I feel like a dumbass. Doh!! I use this method for a bunch of our other tools, I can't believe it went over my head to use this method for an adjustable boring tool.

  • @landonjacobs8392
    @landonjacobs8392 Год назад

    I have a question how does the Haimer Uno know the length of the tool? Is the length of the tool the height of the tool or the diameter of the tool in the offset page for tool geometry?

    • @GrumpyMachinist
      @GrumpyMachinist Год назад

      It's the height. I've never used a tool setter like that but it's a safe assumption there is a machine zero that is set from a standard dimension of a CAT40 tapered holder.

  • @holdilocks
    @holdilocks Месяц назад

    What are the odds that any machine shop will make a good invesment like that?

  • @danhnguyen435
    @danhnguyen435 Год назад

    Boom

  • @christianrees9564
    @christianrees9564 Год назад +1

    Big Kaiser did that in like 2011 😬

  • @Joe___R
    @Joe___R Год назад +1

    That is a great feature to have, just don't forget to remove it before you turn it back on. That would be an expensive mistake.

    • @shaneparties1
      @shaneparties1 Год назад

      You’d be surprised, our operators forget it time to time and it has held up so far so good

  • @chetanpadia4421
    @chetanpadia4421 Год назад

    You can't beat the Germans in this

  • @Kolokotrones
    @Kolokotrones Год назад

    I want to buy this just to somehow adapt it to work with my clapped out knee mill.

  • @richardjurgens4511
    @richardjurgens4511 Год назад

    Just to point out, no machinist worth his salt will trust the boring head dial alone. I would always use a dial on the tool as it is adjusted.
    That said, it’s a pretty sweet system.

  • @BPond7
    @BPond7 Год назад +3

    Poor Barry! I love that boring head, though. Can you say how much it costs?

    • @ipadize
      @ipadize Год назад +2

      yeah i wonder if it will cost a kidney :P

    • @MrPeteda
      @MrPeteda Год назад +1

      Yes we need to know the price.

  • @tymekgoral4219
    @tymekgoral4219 Год назад

    If your employer won’t buy a boring head like this would putting a clock on your insert do similar job ? With spindle locked in place . Just wondering 💭

  • @efraimmarcora1960
    @efraimmarcora1960 Год назад

    sandvik have motorized boring head, you can control it by your smartphone.

  • @bigdave6447
    @bigdave6447 Год назад

    Always use a Wohlhaupter!!

  • @mr.thomas6128
    @mr.thomas6128 Год назад

    Maybe a little thing for automation.
    you are printing a label from the measuring machine.
    Then manually typing in that data on the label.
    Why not just have the measuring machine print a barcode 1D or 2D and then have a scanner on the mill, to scan said data in. This way you can't make a mistake in typing in said data from the tool

    • @TorchRed99FRC
      @TorchRed99FRC Год назад

      The operator could mess up transferring the length for Z or he could touch it off on the tool eye. I am assuming the program is going off the centerline of the tool so it won’t matter if the operator fat fingers the X and does t double check.

  • @spartanpatriot3163
    @spartanpatriot3163 Год назад

    I’ve never used a dial on any boring head, always used a .0001 indicator but then again that was many years ago lol, that’s pretty much all this is though.

  • @ryanbaker6059
    @ryanbaker6059 Год назад

    Did you bore all the way in then all the way out again? Do you not have spindle orientation? Just stop at the bottom, stop spindle, orientate, move off centre then rapid out. Halving the life of the insert doing it your way.

  • @MetrologyEngineer
    @MetrologyEngineer 7 месяцев назад

    What happens if you forget that on???

  • @slitaitana6212
    @slitaitana6212 Год назад

    Do newer bore heads still have backlash or is there newer better technology? Seems like they should have covered removing the backlash in the adjustment.

    • @slitaitana6212
      @slitaitana6212 Год назад

      Well seems they do! Was wondering why he didn't mention it on the tool setter.

    • @GrumpyMachinist
      @GrumpyMachinist Год назад

      It sounded like it has backlash but the digital readout won't register movement until you move forward, or rather increase boring diameter.

    • @slitaitana6212
      @slitaitana6212 Год назад

      @@GrumpyMachinist yea i noticed that during the digital adjustments. pretty awesome tech not gunna lie!

    • @zHxIxPxPxIxEz
      @zHxIxPxPxIxEz Год назад

      Everything has backlash. Backlash isn't your enemy, worn/sloppy ways are. Drunk threads and ignoring the foundations of mechanical accuracy are your enemy.
      Also there's no way to fit a ball screw arrangement in that small of a package, without it costing half a million.

    • @zHxIxPxPxIxEz
      @zHxIxPxPxIxEz Год назад

      Getting accurate results with lots of lash isn't a problem if the ways have propper guidance and no sticktion do to in proper thrust design.
      Read foundations of mechanical accuracy and precision hole location by Wayne f Moore.

  • @turtlebeef
    @turtlebeef Год назад

    i just adjust my D-offset

  • @travelnotes7950
    @travelnotes7950 Год назад

    Bro rpm feed

  • @EggiXPL
    @EggiXPL Год назад +3

    Pro tip, use a torque wrench to tighten up the lock on the boring Head to get more equal results

  • @jessyltr581
    @jessyltr581 Год назад

    Can you test at what rpms it flings off? If it flings off quick it aint no problem :)

    • @jessyltr581
      @jessyltr581 Год назад

      If it flings off at 6000rpms than its dangerous but if it flings off at 100 it might be just fine.

  • @phipsomat9915
    @phipsomat9915 Год назад

    Can you show us, what happens, if you dont pop it off!?

  • @miker648
    @miker648 Год назад

    This is a beautiful tool, but realistically what is the cost of this set up, and how many small shops can afford this?

    • @Gottenhimfella
      @Gottenhimfella 8 месяцев назад

      Yes, it's bordering on offensive to label mechanical boring heads as "obsolete" just because a more convenient option has been developed (probably driven more by marketing than by innovation). These guys are just trying to monetise a sort of fifth column marketing effort, trying to induce the machinist's equivalent of penis envy, and I for one am not particularly interested.

  • @flyffpsy
    @flyffpsy Год назад

    Does your machine not have a Fine Boring cycle? G76

    • @GrumpyMachinist
      @GrumpyMachinist Год назад

      Fanuc? I'll have to check it out.
      When we are trying to hold a surface finish and a tight tolerance we usually G85 because the bore out helps reduce tool pressure.

  • @BrilliantDesignOnline
    @BrilliantDesignOnline Год назад

    Elderly machinist like Barry...LOL 🙂 I am sure he has one for you.

  • @tombeer9
    @tombeer9 Год назад

    I understand that you guys are sponsored by kenametal and you review and demonstrate their products, but there is a company called diabore that produce a boring tool with a integrated digital screen that is permanent with the tool and not a separate add on device.

  • @lakersboy8248
    @lakersboy8248 Год назад +1

    Dont forget to take the backlash off

  • @bryceking8010
    @bryceking8010 Год назад

    I prefer kaiser boring heads

  • @GrumpyMachinist
    @GrumpyMachinist Год назад

    It would be nice to have that equipment but we wouldn't use it enough for it to efficiently pay off in the time saved. (*edit* What is extremely affordable? That's certainly a debatable topic when it comes to buying machinines) We set boring tools the old fashioned way... On the surface plate, sweeping the insert to find the high, and adjusting accordingly or in our optical comparator(

    • @Gottenhimfella
      @Gottenhimfella 8 месяцев назад

      Yeah, I sometimes resort to honing, lapping or ballizing when I'm just under a very tight tolerance band.