Letter Punch Guide : Straight and Tidy Every Time!
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 27 авг 2024
- This episode on Blondihacks, I make a tool to help get nice looking letter stamps and punches. Exclusive videos, drawings, models & plans available on Patreon!
/ quinndunki
Buy Blondihacks stuff in my store! www.blondihacks...
Mr. Pete on square holes: • Machine Drill a Square...
Making linear patterns on a DRO: • Digital Readout! DRO! ...
1/8” Letter Punch set : amzn.to/3d8KoHJ
Here are links for many of the tools that you see me using:
(I earn small commissions on these links)
• Mill clamping set : amzn.to/2xc9vqr
• Thread checker : amzn.to/2xgO2gc
• Chamfering Tool : amzn.to/2IJsAUs
• Zero Flute Chamfering Tool : amzn.to/3bmPLPe
• NOGA Deburring set : amzn.to/2Jv3RlW
• NOGA Reversible Deburring Tool : amzn.to/2X07WX1
• Knurling Tool : amzn.to/2FblXb1
• Tapered Reamer : amzn.to/2Gn0b3G
• Chucking Reamer set : amzn.to/3odnVvh
• Nicholson files : amzn.to/2VcHkls
• Nicholson needle files : amzn.to/2BDt7ph
• 1-2-3 Blocks : amzn.to/2EvAsGq
• Dormer center drills : amzn.to/2X7U6ij
• 6” Divider : amzn.to/2GTncM3
• NOGA arm with magnetic base : amzn.to/2U2bGTI
• NOGA arm Big Boy : amzn.to/381acji
• Collet Block set : amzn.to/2UkF1vZ
• DeWalt drill and driver kit : amzn.to/2Gp6IeJ
• DeWalt portable band saw : amzn.to/2U4Mhsw
• DeWalt band saw blades : amzn.to/2H2J4X0
• High Speed Steel parting blade : amzn.to/2YcdYBv
• High Speed Steel blade holder : amzn.to/2JgO0IK
• High Speed Steel tool blanks : amzn.to/2H1qoqr
• Grizzly Pre-ground tool bits : amzn.to/2H4yr5z
• AXA tool holders : amzn.to/2V1gOHl
• Quick Change Toolpost : amzn.to/310mshq
• Norton oil stone kit : amzn.to/2EbLEH3
• Norton small sharpening stone: amzn.to/2PQwex9
• End mills : amzn.to/2U76Vsf
• Milling machine starter pack : amzn.to/2tA2M4e
• Forceps : amzn.to/2Ww5dFT
• Mill Parallels : amzn.to/2lfW82i
• GearWrench ratcheting tap & die set : amzn.to/2lMwZfV
• Step bits : amzn.to/2q54yfJ
• Starrett automatic center punch : amzn.to/2DCI7C9
• Budget transfer punch set : amzn.to/2yfDgHi
• Precision shim stock : amzn.to/34lJlME
• Jet 2-ton press : amzn.to/2SLas1s
• Gear Wrench locking puller : amzn.to/2ubBV1W
• Starrett tap wrenches : amzn.to/35jxM9e
• Goldenrod oiler : amzn.to/2TTS0En
• Acid brushes : amzn.to/36qWCo5
• Cratex (Bright Boy) block : amzn.to/38fNm72
• Scotchbrite deburring wheel : amzn.to/3ks0P2V
• Fein Turbo I shop vac : amzn.to/2vXpech
• Loc-Line (1/2”) : amzn.to/2U7JznB
• Loc-Line Pliers : amzn.to/2vWlXKf
• Machinist’s scale : amzn.to/2Zk6oVj
• Mixed metric/imperial dial caliper : amzn.to/2KKARYY
• Mitutoyo dial caliper : amzn.to/2IMIxJE
• Mitutoyo micrometer set : amzn.to/2GtICPx
• Mitutoyo depth micrometer : amzn.to/33M8aSH
• Mitutoyo edge finder : amzn.to/2G36omq
• Mitutoyo dial indicator : amzn.to/2H09gBr
• Mitutoyo dial test indicator : amzn.to/2E5lRQw
• Coaxial indicator : amzn.to/3bbBEwE
• Mitutoyo telescoping gauge set : amzn.to/2Z6houn
• Fowler dial bore gauge : amzn.to/2KQJNf2
• Fowler inside micrometer : amzn.to/2TVm7Jo
• Starrett 98-6 Level : amzn.to/38K7lMD
• Grizzly Height Gage : amzn.to/2PDTr7i
• Thread Checker : amzn.to/2CpvAUU
• The Amateur’s Lathe book : amzn.to/3jIYlwe
• Anchor Lube : amzn.to/2H9X6oQ
• Boeshield T-9 : amzn.to/2TCE0wB
• Brownell’s Oxpho Blue : amzn.to/2YhZTmR
• JAX Metal Blackener : amzn.to/2MVe8wj
• Dykem layout fluid : amzn.to/2U7KQts
• Dykem dauber : amzn.to/2uoXtbm
• Tap Magic cutting oil : amzn.to/37uYzRS
• WD-40 : amzn.to/2GYV8rY
• Super 77 Spray Glue : amzn.to/2YScxZl
• Loctite 603 : amzn.to/2EYsPbi
• Loctite 242 : amzn.to/2RIt3sQ
• Way oil : amzn.to/38Gl9qW
• High pressure grease : amzn.to/2GloHTd
• CMD Extreme Pressure lube : amzn.to/36JPNy9
• Dry graphite lube : amzn.to/2U0YEZH
• 3-in-1 oil : amzn.to/36in43e
• Kroil : amzn.to/2uCf1RL
• Evaporust : amzn.to/36NSkII
• Brasso : amzn.to/3buE6yL
Commenting policy : blondihacks.co...
Want more content like this? Try these places:
Blondihacks on Instagram : / blondihacks
Blondihacks on Twitter : / quinndunki
Blondihacks on Patreon : / quinndunki
As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.
Hey everyone- to the one million people telling me the inside corners for the frame didn’t need to be square, as I said in the video, I did it that way because I wanted to try it. It was fun, and that’s the whole point of this endeavour! If you’re not having fun doing this stuff, then it’s time for another hobby. I’m removing those comments because they are boring.
To the other million people saying I should have silver soldered it- As I said several times in the video, the goal is to have the seams disappear. Silver solder won’t do that. Furthermore, Loctite is plenty strong for this application and doesn’t require getting out the torch, brazing hearth, pickling acid, and buffing wheel. But hey, you do you, this is how I did it, it was fast and easy, and worked great. Tedious comments are removed, as always. Don’t be tedious.
I'll drink to that.
I like what you did. I am keen to make one -
Exactly as you did it (but metric).
We always try to make ideas work so nothing wrong with that. Personally I would have considered a variant where different punch sizes could be supported, mostly because I have two different punch sets.
I'd like to point out that there are brass solders available for the explicit purpose of color matching, but I understand that getting all the soldering stuff out can be a hassle.
Regarding 19:18, I'd re-pin it, because I'd be banging a hammer at random angles, sometimes with force against the joint. It might take twenty years, but I've run into Loctite failures before. But that's me. You're doing you. Keep up the great work!
This one should be of interest to ToT. He stamps like I write.
TOT IS THE MAN>>> HE KNOWS HOW TO RIDE TRIALS AN THAT"S A BITCH. I THINK YOU ARE MY BROTHER AS WE SPEAK TH SAME MACHINE LANGUAGE, THANKS FOR YOUR COMMENT. RIDE BROTHER RIDE!!!!!!!
Hah true. No fucking clue what that reply above me is on about.
This is the first thing I thought of when I saw it. "TOT needs one!"
@@EllaBananas His comment is on steroids or something
I was saddened that youtube didn't recommend your channel until today knowing damn well Im subscribed to AVE, this old Tony, and abom79. I love the precision work you did.
Clickspring wouldn't broach this. Clickspring would file the square hole to within a micron by eye using a home-made file that he made with another home-made file.
He would but the home made file is made using a cold chisel, case-hardened with an ancient technique that he found in the original Library of Alexandria on an archaeological research expedition funded by the 5th Earl of Carnarvon.
TOT would do it with a sharpie.
@@leerogers6423 To paraphrase Quinn, TOT stock removal techniques are what separate him from the humans.
@@leerogers6423
ToT would simply karate chop. Project done. Myself I'd use the mill as a vertical shaper to square the corners up or simply make the base plate longer so the arcs at the end of the slot don't get in the way
Chris does seem to like taking the hardest hand tool route possible in his projects. :)
In some of his early videos I remember seeing him use an indexer and home made single point fly cutter to machine gear teeth, but a few videos later he'd begun cutting and filing gear teeth by hand !?!?
He's the engineering equivalent of an artisan baker who's first step in making bread is to prepare a whole field using nothing but a normal garden spade, then planting some wheat ! :D
If you have an arbor press, try using your guide and punches in that. The letters will come out deeper and clearer.
This is getting dangerously close to movable type
The ultimate answer is an engraver of some type.
@@jsteifel
When is was still working and even now when I have to stamp something I generally just clamp a piece of 1/2" keystock the right distance from the top of the letter stamp character and eyeball it. Really good lighting helps alot. Stamping straight characters got stamped into me during my apprenticeship many moons ago*. Everything we made that was a stock item that would go into the stores cribs had to have its fixture number attached to the drawing and its detail number. I made so many parts for one fixture I still remember the number (KF-3170717 DET xxx). A production environment can be very hard on tooling. Plus we made a lot of stuff out of 1o18 CRS simply because we had carburizing furnaces in house for heat treating rear end gears. The gears were 4140 or 4340.
If somebody really wanted to go crazy you could have a "die" that the stamps fit with a sliding fit. Mount that square above one of those inexpensive "milling" tables and go to town.
*My last job before I finally hung it up the kids called me "old man". I either replied the following ways
1) Somebody had to sell Noah the Wood
2) Yah, I invented dirt. But I got screwed on the patent rights
3) When he said "Let there be light" somebody had to flip the switch
Man what are you people talking about they're called punches because you're supposed to PUNCH THEM WITH YOUR MANLY FISTS
@@tonyennis1787 Depends on the size of the lettering and what you want to put the lettering on. A one ton press should be able to do decent lettering impressions with 1/4" letters in cold rolled steel.
"chanfers is what separate us from the animals" 😂 for the book..! chaMfers animal me...
When I heard this I mentally replaced "animals" with "wood workers"
@@NeneExists We all did.
In the dim distant past I worked in a engine manufacturing plant.
Once the bottom end of the engine was built the block was flipped to have the head face upper most and at that point a engine number was stamped on the block.
This was a manual operation using individual stamps. There was only one man who could accomplish this feat without using a guide , and he was able to do it so it looked like it was machine stamped as was done in the Japanese parent company with a giant daisy wheel equipped machine. He had a 90 second job cycle time to stamp the 11 character number, fit the 2 head location dowels, head gasket, cylinder head, 12 bolts and tighten them down to torque. As a leading hand I dreaded having to do this job whenever he went for a toilet break.
Cheers Eric
In CNC guitar making, we use a 1/42" inch end mill (0.6mm) to cut fret slots. They are hideously small and fragile. Spinning screaming banshees of death turn them about 30krpm.
What in tarnation is a 1/42
@@jonjohnson102 I guess it would be .6mm, as he said. Don't be Anal, it does not become you.
@@jonjohnson102... .0238, same as #73 drill (.0240)
You're the best Quinn! Really nice project. That fly cut stainless certainly is impressive . Now if you could design a jig to help me think straight, it would be most helpful.
“Chamfers are what separates us from the animals”....another one to use in my class, thanks Quinn!
I have been a machinist by trade most of my life, and I am very impressed by your knowledge.
Beautiful piece. I also love how this doesn’t make the letters too perfect, there should still be that hand made feeling to it.
Love that your product has form AND function. Shop jigs tend to be short changed on the former.
So true! "...because chamfers are what separates us from the animals.." (13:42). Now that I come to think about it, I must say I've rarely if ever seen a chipmunk using a chamfering bit when he/she is machining brass blocks on the typical chipmunk-size milling machines that are so popular among the smaller mammals living in the prairie provinces in Canada. (Love your well-hidden and perfectly delivered humorous asides)
Nice job ...MR. Pete is so Cool........Enjoy Both you and MR. Pete. Thank you to all the folks who take the time to make these videos.
Thanks for crediting Mr. Pete. I admire him. He reminds me of my shop teacher from 1958, Mr Bennett.
I am always impressed by your work. You are a talented machinist, educator and "work hard for your $$". As a Patron I recommend others support you.
Your videos are my favorite part of Saturday mornings.
I really like the inset drawings with arrows showing the feature being machined.
keming is serious business!
Kerning is the difference between Pen Island and another place.
Kerning is what separates us from the other primates.
Had to highlight the letter to make sure I was getting the joke XD
@@aerobyrdable modem problems require modem solutions
I have seen a lot of ideas on this.
This is the best idea yet.
Chamfers are what set us apart from the animals!! Love your vids and love that phrase.
I enjoyed that one a lot, as is the tradition. I had just been losing sleep over what it is that separates us from the animals (since it obviously wasn’t toothbrushes) so thank you for that. You are always a slice of sunshine. 😎👍👀
This is absolutely brilliant. I think it needs to be over-engineered a bit, though. Maybe see if you can hook it up to your steam engine somehow.
That was funny .
Shhhhh, you're giving away the long-term "steampunk Linotype" project, to go with Tom Lipton's intaglio press!
@@ChristopherTate Oshit my b
This NEEDS to happen. Stream powered typewriter for metal!
I worked for a company back in the late 1980s that made those punches, along with embossing and debossing steel type for canned food. I used to engrave the punches on a 3D pantograph. We also made holders for those punches so you could make up to 5-character production codes.
Dammit you genius. This saves my lettering for leatherwork. firing up F360 and heating up the 3d printer.
Variation in the letters is also a function of the length of the cutting edge of each letter. Thus, the 'I' is cut more deeply than the "Q' or the "N". Now, you could make a drop hammer with a guide with a scale to allow you to deliver energy to the stamp in proportion to the length of cutting edge. Some might say that would be obsessive.
There exist commercially-made "moveable type" stamp sets where you insert letters into a fixture to 'roll your own' die - since all the letters are joined together in the fixture which receives the blow, they should all imprint to the same depth. I think that is how job shops would do parts for customers.
I was thinking that a sliding hammer would work nice. You could let it drop from the same height each time.
@@Bosbulls Since each letter has a different area, if the height was the same each time, the smaller letters would be more deeply punched than the larger letters. Hence the reason for joining the entire word into one fixture.
It's nice when you hold your breath machining Stainless and the rough cut comes out like a mirror. Very satisfying.
Quinn, not only do I learn from this channel, but even more importantly, the word cattywampus never fails to make me smile. Thanks so very much for both.
Project like these are what shapers were made for.
Gotta give props to you for using the porta by hand!!!! Most make the table and throw it in a vise
Another dose of Quinn. You guys ( Adam, Tony Keith etc) are my theropy these days. One of the few things I look forward to these days. Hugs to shop cat from England ❤💚💛💜
The CAD in the corner pointing out the feature you're working on is a nice touch. It really helps clarify what you're doing in each step.
Quinn as awesome as that little thing is and it was to see you make it it is a machinist tradition to stamp crooked letters.
ⱽᵉʳʸ ᵗʳᵘ ᵉ
Hi, something very similar to the Mr Pete method was documented by the late George Thomas for his single stamp punch holder many, many years ago. Being old school he used silver solder for the join which was in steel. I suspect the technique pre-dates even GT by many decades, if not a century or two but it is good to see it used in this application. George's two books are well worth read, combined with the modern kit like DROs and Loctite available now they give a very good solid foundation. They got me started with this wonderful hobby. It's not overstating it to say that GT was the guru's guru. Have a read folks, you will not regret it. BobUK.
This is great! Just what I needed for my super secret Bitcoin private key pass phrase thingy. They sell stainless steel cards with letters for $100+ dollars for crypto passwords. I was thinking about making my own, but was not sure if I could live with misaligned lettering on something so important. So glad I found this channel, Mr. Pete sent me.
The disappearing pin trick is magic and thanks for sharing that! My best magic trick is to make the lower half of #0-80 taps disappear, into otherwise finished parts.
This is great!!
Keming is important!
Thanks for demonstrating the method for machining the unmachianble corners. Having said that, this kind of jig with the same principle could also be designed with a machinable geometry. Oblong slot in the static part; rounded ends on left and right. Oblong slot in the carriage; rounded ends on top and bottom. When these slots intersect, they form a square well with sharp corners.
"Chamfers are what separate us from the animals."
send me one 🙋🏼♂️
Laughing my head of 😅😂
Round here I've heard they sometimes have to use crowbars! Just sayin' ....
I laughed out loud at this. Good, but not good when watching before work and wife is still asleep. :)
THAT WAS THE BEST WAY TO DO PUNCH NUMBERS!!! THAT WAS A BIG PROBLEM FOR ME!!! THANKS LC.23
This is a brilliant tool. Stamping neatly is a next to impossible task.
Loved the visual balls out reference!
People always think it means... something else. 😬
Is it the same reference as "balls to the wall?" Makes way more sense than . . . . "something else. 😬"
@@foleycomposer Balls to the wall refers to aircraft throttles being pushed all the way forward to the panel.
@@brianhaygood183 Nope, not originally. It is a centrifugal governor term used in the steam boiler biz.
@@paulcopeland9035 "Balls out" is a reference to governors. "Balls to the Wall", which I was giving an answer to, is a reference to aircraft throttles.
Great job. I was trying to figure something like this. I think putting a vee on the bottom though so it can be set on a round surface would be a nice addition
Good idea!
An attractive and functional tool.
Her name is... oh... nevermind.
Slick application of the Mr Pete method and excellent tool. I have been dissatisfied with my letterpunch abilities... now I know there is a cure. Thanks! 😁
Thanks for letting me know that I am a font nerd. Now I have to live with that!
"Watch me eat crow on this in 9 minutes." Oh my god that killed me hahaha
I did enjoy watching you do the Mr Pete method!very nicely done
An approachable approach. You may be pleased to know that I prioritize your videos the same way I do when a ToT video comes out. They get premium queue placement and normal (100%) play speed.
I am very pleased to hear that! That’s high company indeed. ☺️
I love your videos because your not afraid to share your mistakes and challenges. Most dont do this, and they are missing out on a lot. In the end it makes your videos for more educational, and the subject far more accessible for those of us who are learning, even someof us who dont own a lathe or mill..... yet ;) Cheers and keep up the good work!
But why do you *need* square ends on the slot? Wouldn't it work just as well with rounded ends?
Beautiful, as always. Appearance counts. Love the bearing hack for truing up the material for the pins!
If you use a dead blow hammer it might improve the stamping quality by taking some of the "bounce" out of the hammer strike. Another great video.
Haha… ’chamfers is what separates us from the animals’ … great video! You are skilled!!
I learnt so much from a single video, thank you so much for narrating all the decisions you're making along the way!
Being a watchmaker, that "big facing mill" comment, AWESOME. LOL!!!!!
You can also true up the stock in the lathe by running the lathe backward and using the back of a tool to nudge it into place.
3:07 nice tool box!
7:39 like that one !
19:08 the crow part ?
Very Nice !
Nice looking tool. Something that I'd try to 3D print.
This is such a neat idea. It is almost one of those things where you can't believe it wasn't already a thing.
EXCELLENT video! Clear and well spoken. Very enjoyable.
That's an excellent solution young lady. Well done. Nicely executed also. You're an excellent mechanic/machinist.
Now you need to make a letter punch guide for punching letters onto letter punch guides :)
Random recommendation, then I saw all the measuring and I'm sold. :) Subbed
I learned that when punching letters or numbers, 1 hard blow gives a better result than many small blows, even with a guide, punches have the tendency to float and ident blunt characters.
From a old ironworker it all looks fandamntastic!
It’s simple and gets the job done. That makes it a success. Nice job!
Some of these methods look dangerously like woodworking 😁
That did cross my mind as I was installing dowel pins 😂
@@Blondihacks with glue...
For that matter RUclips is showing me a list of related topics, and the second one is Woodturning (first is Lathes)
The Official Sponsor returns!
i love this. I feel like the number one reason I want a lathe and cnc is to make tools that go way beyond “good enough.” This perfectly fits the amount of frustration of using punches without a guide. Not just good. Not just enough of a soliton to line them up like 4 pieces of wood. A solution that just annihilates the problem.
Gorgeous blonde that knows her way around a shop! The magic we could accomplish.
Excellent technique! And well executed. Thanks for posting!
Back in grad school, I needed to make a rectangular microwave cavity with sharp internal corners and used what we called the “baseball stitch” method. Like the Mr Pete method, you make two “U” shaped pieces that fit over one another when one is rotated by 90 degrees. Solder them together and drill a coupling hole in one face and you’re done!
@@cdorcey1735 this was a long time ago, and without the benefit of good modeling, it was impossible to know in advance the balance between soldered joints vs. poor Q due to rounded corners. Then there was the cavity loading with the frozen (1.2K - 20K) protein solutions, so I was thrilled that it worked at all.
A very neat bit of toolmaking
Gday Quinn, this is a brilliant idea, it’s a real game changer now, thanks mate, throughly enjoyed watching, cheers Matty
Excellent! Many years back I made a simple guide that I clamped in a quick-change toolholder of my lathe. It was fabricated from mild steel with a square hole to suit my punches. It worked far better than expected, with horizontal adjustment via the carriage giving complete control over kerning. Vertical alignment was courtesy of the toolpost adjuster.
Thanks for your great videos. :o)
I love the use of the pins especially that they were purpose made for the project.
Love your tiny end mill. The smallest I've used is 0.125". In my own letter/number punching adventures, I've found that a short length of 1" angle firmly clamped to the work gives me a solid ruler for character alignment, and I tune the kerning by eye. I try to strike each character only once. All my cars have aluminum tags on when the fluid was last changed! 😁
Really enjoyed this project, best thing ive seen for holding letter punches straight - surprised I havent seen something like this in the hardware stores etc.
This is a brilliant solution to a widespread problem. You even see commercial products with crummy stamping. You could just leave radii on the end of your square slot Or mill a T slot with a small cutter to open the corners. Nice job.
Really enjoy your video format with the narration to them👍🏻
Your content is excellent and greatly appreciated.
I used to use letter stamps on a daily basis and with practise and time you only need a line on the bottom to keep them level and you can eye the spacing perfectly
Hurry to the patent office ! Very well done !
I like to see different ideas on holding punches. Well done.
I like to hold mine like cigars. It does shit for accuracy, but I feel classy as all heck.
Hello Quinn,
Nice little project tonight... Following any of the Mr. Pete methods is generally a smart move...
Have a good weekend.
Paul,,
Great video. This is a pretty neat little tool. Thanks for sharing with us. Dan
This 'method' of squaring the inner corners is blasphemous. No respectable machinist would ev...
(What? Mr. Pete did this?)
This method is genius!
@@Stefan_Boerjesson I watch all of the Tubalcain videos. I'm not being sarcastic. Just having a bit of fun, but I'm not being clear enough, it seems - oh well, better next time :/
Relax. It was just a silly joke...
Sounds like the name 'Respectable Machinist' would rile some feathers, maybe that is valuable somehow, like companies that trademark fancy sounding fictional product names to squeeze money out of big companies.
@@MaximilianonMars next big RUclips channel, The Respectable Machinist.
@@ErikBongers . I got it straight off. Humour is a tricky thing particularly in a second language . Maybe just don't do it in front of the children?
Cool project and nice work, Quinn. I do punch things with lettering quite a bit - until I find a cheap, used $50k-when-new laser engraver - so this will come in handy. Thanks for sharing this!
Brilliant solution to a common problem! Thank you. For those of us who have not your skills and tools, however, we’ll need to wait for a mass produced item or try something Q&D/DIY (quick and dirty) with a pair of Picatinny rails, set and squared on a mounting surface, with a couple of crossbars holding the punch in line - details not worked out yet.
I love watching a fly cutter in action, especially on brass.
K - A - T - Y - W - O - M - P - U - S
Machinists do not want their work described as this under any circumstances. This is a word for wood elves.
@@BobBlarneystone Lack of ability and training, usually. Not the elves, the complainant.
I have sets of these punches but hardly use them because of the ransom note like output. Great idea! For a prototype it came out really nice. 👌
Quinn! Quick - patent that thing I think I hear Fireball Tool firing up the water jets and other monsters in his shop! Love your work. Now get those files and stones busy on those stamps.
Excellent piece! That works so good.
Crazy how the universe works i literally just got a letter punch set and was wondering how I'd go about making a jig for it!
Great project Quinn!! I think i may have a go at it. Thanks for the idea...i will definitely give you the credit!! Take care!!
Hey, that was a one handed "this is Blondie hacks". keep it up you are wonderful to watch. L.C.
Those are nice letter punches if the letters start the same distance from the top/bottom.