They are exactly what they say they are. They are screws designed to lift the opposite side of the clamp, in order to give it a downward tilt to clamp onto a part. If the clamp were tilted too far back, it wouldn't be able to force the part against the face plate.
Mesmerizing lighting on cutting the knurls and the motion speed ramp up and down to the final cut, Brilliant!! Outstanding videography and as always your fit and finish off the chart! I love how these "Clips" allow us to appreciate and dial in on the small bits of a project. Congrats on the 100K. Thanks always, Chris!
It's not lost on me that this knerling job could have been much less exacting without using maths of any type. However, I have come to expect nothing less from this true master of design and machining execution.
If there's such a thing as reincarnation, I think I'd want to come back as a ceiling fan in this shop. Just to be around this amazing work all the time.
Tempted to click the vertical ellipsis and then “report” for your use of “around”. May I have the pleasure of introducing you to _Scott Prop and Roll_ for the full list of penultimate punishable pubs?
I don’t know how the YT algorithm works, but every time Clickspring appears, the adverts on my feed change from the normal stuff to fine jewellery and watch adverts.
Awesome quality work and production as usual, and also undoubtedly a stupid question, but why did you choose to use the dividing head instead of a knurling tool?
i attempted to replicate this, and had these results... 0:50. stock too short, hit chuck. resharpen tool... 1:20 despite the trial cuts and double checking, somehow its 1/4 tooth out on the final pass. 1:42 the excess overhang from previous step makes stock deflect, snag, and fly out of chuck. 1:52 bang. now how on earth did brass snap a piece of HSS? 1:58... where did it go? it fell down that gap between the wall and floor, didnt it? again... ffs.. 2:20. crunch. more scrap. right. next one! 2:36. screech. hmm, tight as i can get it, but its still slipping... 2:45... sigh. m5 in brass is always torque sensitive... now how to get that out of the die? 3:05. pink. more scrap. next! 3:27 repeat last few steps... 4:07. impressive CAD rendering... "why doesnt mine look like that!!!???" some people just have the ability, dont they?
Does that screw even lift, bro?
My heart sinks everytime a new video drops and i see thats its 4min long.. i need 1hour videos of Chris making beautiful things…
I have no idea what a Lifting screw does, but I do know these ones are beautiful. Everything you do just comes out so pretty
I assume it's a screw that lifts
They are exactly what they say they are. They are screws designed to lift the opposite side of the clamp, in order to give it a downward tilt to clamp onto a part. If the clamp were tilted too far back, it wouldn't be able to force the part against the face plate.
Other people have spirit animals, Chris has a spirit metal and it’s definitely brass. As always, beautiful work flawlessly presented.
Congratulations on this channel reaching 100k subscribers.
Chris, have you EVER made anything that looked ugly? You’re an inspiration, for sure, but an unattainable one. Thank you for all the videos. Les in 🇬🇧
I could watch videos like this endlessly.
My dwarven soul trembles at the sight of such shiny metal and such clear edges of excellent workmanship.
You know those “satisfying” loop animations, this looks like something that would be being made in one of those. Such beautiful work
Mesmerizing lighting on cutting the knurls and the motion speed ramp up and down to the final cut, Brilliant!! Outstanding videography and as always your fit and finish off the chart! I love how these "Clips" allow us to appreciate and dial in on the small bits of a project. Congrats on the 100K. Thanks always, Chris!
Why do all your tools, screws, gizmos and gadgets all look like fine jewelry? Amazing attention to detail!
It's not lost on me that this knerling job could have been much less exacting without using maths of any type. However, I have come to expect nothing less from this true master of design and machining execution.
If you want to know what some of the best ASMR content on RUclips is, this is it right here.
If there's such a thing as reincarnation, I think I'd want to come back as a ceiling fan in this shop. Just to be around this amazing work all the time.
Tempted to click the vertical ellipsis and then “report” for your use of “around”. May I have the pleasure of introducing you to _Scott Prop and Roll_ for the full list of penultimate punishable pubs?
The workshop he does this in isn't big enough for a ceiling fan....
@@cmdrredhawk Yep :) A small wall mounted AC unit, high up, is about it. Encouraging for all of us with limited space :)
Superb as usual Chris. The work, whatever it is, videography and music are just stunning. Ta mate Go well
Perfect a new video to watch with a cup of tea
PG Tips. First upvote (and it’s from a Yank).
I watch that being machined up pretty much perfect! And I remember I should have paid more attention in math class! Amazing to watch this thanks. 🙂
It is never too late to learn. There are heaps of excellent online resources for learning maths.
I don’t know how the YT algorithm works, but every time Clickspring appears, the adverts on my feed change from the normal stuff to fine jewellery and watch adverts.
I’m surprised he hadn’t been banned for making adult videos! You tube censors seem quite insane.
Awesome quality work and production as usual, and also undoubtedly a stupid question, but why did you choose to use the dividing head instead of a knurling tool?
thank you mate - I decided to cut rather than knurl, for the better quality of surface the cut gives - Cheers :)
Screws like that would look really nice under a tune-o-matic. Beautiful.
I agree wholeguitaringly! 😊🎸
Pretend the fender emoji is a Gibson.
Another set of beautiful parts!
Mesmerisingly beautiful.
Fantastic work! Everything you make looks great.
Joe Pie: Never hold a workpiece by the threads.
Chris: [laughs in clickspring]
Pure art. As always.
the lathe looks so huge in the intro and then you put a piece of 20-25(?)mm brass in it to then realize the scale
I would like to make gears with single bit. I have a Sherline Mill with manual rotary. I need to figure out the angle and size diameter to cut.
Nice job. Im curious why you never single point thread?
Magic!
I still can't work out how he gets the computer renders into his lathe..... ;)
Unsurpassed video quality. Clickspring. 👍
Chris is basically the human equivalent of a $400,000 CNC machine.
i attempted to replicate this, and had these results...
0:50. stock too short, hit chuck. resharpen tool...
1:20 despite the trial cuts and double checking, somehow its 1/4 tooth out on the final pass.
1:42 the excess overhang from previous step makes stock deflect, snag, and fly out of chuck.
1:52 bang. now how on earth did brass snap a piece of HSS?
1:58... where did it go? it fell down that gap between the wall and floor, didnt it? again... ffs..
2:20. crunch. more scrap. right. next one!
2:36. screech. hmm, tight as i can get it, but its still slipping...
2:45... sigh. m5 in brass is always torque sensitive... now how to get that out of the die?
3:05. pink. more scrap. next!
3:27 repeat last few steps...
4:07. impressive CAD rendering... "why doesnt mine look like that!!!???"
some people just have the ability, dont they?
👍😎
⭐🙂👍
Awesome a new vid
We're gear cutting because we're too good for knurling???
He answered that in another comment, it gives a better quality cut.
No comments 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Gotta get a foredom setup.
Just think what we'd miss if we had hooves instead of hands with opposable thumbs.