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max runout
United States
Приєднався 29 бер 2014
Metalworking projects and related information
Tubal Crane Clone - On a Cart
Here's a simple crane to help you lift heavy objects to the table of your vertical mill, workbench, lathe or other machine. It's based on one designed by Mr. Pete of UA-cam shop video fame.
Link to Mr. Pete's first video on the Tubal Crane ua-cam.com/video/hkpSGXoP1F4/v-deo.html
Link to my video on building the hydraulic press ua-cam.com/video/ZsyOQpWtHe4/v-deo.html
Link to Mr. Pete's first video on the Tubal Crane ua-cam.com/video/hkpSGXoP1F4/v-deo.html
Link to my video on building the hydraulic press ua-cam.com/video/ZsyOQpWtHe4/v-deo.html
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Відео
Bridgeport Vertical Mill - Repair of backgear selector
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In this video we repair the backgear selector lever of a Bridgeport mill that has become jammed and will not move.
Repairing a Jacobs Super Chuck
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Repair of an old 3/4 inch Jacobs ball bearing superchuck from a swap meet. As received the chuck key will not fit!
Hydraulic Press - Easy DIY project
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Here's a short video on building a simple hydraulic press that can fit on a benchtop. My Email address: maxrunout@gmail.com Link to Steve Summers video: ua-cam.com/video/xmFoDvNbmT4/v-deo.html Go to 26:00 for a look at the Carver press Thanks to my friends Ed and Mike for their great ideas that helped this project along.
Homebuilt Offroad Vehicle Part 2 Starting Assembly
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In Part 2 of our series on rebuilding an off-road vehicle, we take a quick look at the design process, then assemble the transmission to the frame, add the outer bearing holders and the front suspension A-arms and kingpin assemblies. Link for Clearpath Motors: www.teknic.com/products/clearpath-brushless-dc-servo-motors/ Harmonic Analyzer: ua-cam.com/play/PL0INsTTU1k2UYO9Mck-i5HNqGNW5AeEwq.html&...
Home Built Off-Road Vehicle Part 1
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Part one of a series where I reassemble and upgrade a shop built vehicle similar to a JD Gator that I built from scratch
Making Gears in the Home Shop - Automatically Part 5 - Measuring and Correcting the Teeth
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In part 5 of our series on automating the gear making process, we build a device to measure the gears we have made so far, improve the process and make some new gears. www.teknic.com/products/clearpath-brushless-dc-servo-motors/ Harmonic Analyzer: ua-cam.com/play/PL0INsTTU1k2UYO9Mck-i5HNqGNW5AeEwq.html&spfreload=1 Gear formulas and definitions: www.sdp-si.com/PDFS/Elements-of-Metric-Gear-Techno...
Making Gears in the Home Shop - Automatically Part 4 - Cutting the First Gear
Переглядів 21 тис.7 років тому
In part 4 of our series on automating the gear making process, we check out the finished controller, get the motors mounted on the mill, do a dry run of the complete system, and cut the first gear. Link for Clearpath Motors: www.teknic.com/products/clearpath-brushless-dc-servo-motors/ Shaftloc pulleys www.sdp-si.com/products/Shaftloc-and-Accessories/index.php Harmonic Analyzer: ua-cam.com/play/...
Making Gears in the Home Shop - Automatically Part 3
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In part 3 of our series on automating the gear making process, we take a look at some improvements to the software, show how the electronics is being repackaged and how the individual gear designs are worked up with a spread sheet. Link for Clearpath Motors: www.teknic.com/products/clearpath-brushless-dc-servo-motors/ Harmonic Analyzer: ua-cam.com/play/PL0INsTTU1k2UYO9Mck-i5HNqGNW5AeEwq.html&sp...
Making Gears in the Home Shop -- Automatically Part 2
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In part 2 we look at the type of motors to be used to drive the mill and rotary table in order to cut the gears. Also we look at software and test the motors. Link for Clearpath Motors: www.teknic.com/products/clearpath-brushless-dc-servo-motors/ Link for Mikroelectronica: shop.mikroe.com/development-boards/full-featured/easy-boards/easypic Link for PIC controller: www.microchip.com/wwwproducts...
Making Gears in the Home Shop -- Automatically PART 1
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This is the first of a series focusing on making the gears for the Harmonic Analyzer. This video from Bill Hammack shows an original Analyzer developed in the 1890's that I will be attempting to duplicate. ua-cam.com/video/NAsM30MAHLg/v-deo.html&list=PL0INsTTU1k2UYO9Mck-i5HNqGNW5AeEwq&index=1
Visit to an Old Fashioned Steam Powered Machine Shop
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Some friends and I take a road trip to the shop of Dave Richards, a working shop powered entirely by a steam engine and line shaft. See Dave's shop videos at ua-cam.com/channels/Bdj-vOveiEFWe3vnGoJUag.htmlvideos
The Saga of "Rusty" Bolts
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A tool to make the job of cleanup of old rusty fasteners easy on your next restoration project.
Injection Molding of Plastic at Home - Part 7 Molding the First Parts
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In this video we take the injector and mold built in the previous parts and try to mold some plastic parts from HDPE. Links: Information on HDPE molding temperatures and pressures: www.ineos.com/globalassets/ineos-group/businesses/ineos-olefins-and-polymers-usa/products/technical-information patents/tips_for_injection_molding_ineos_hdpe_resins.pdf Machine shop videos - If you want to learn abou...
Injection Molding of Recycled Plastic at Home Part 6 Building the Mold
Переглядів 11 тис.8 років тому
In this video we build a mold for a plastic knob with threaded shaft and then set up the injector and mold assembly for a test run. Link to information on molding temperatures and pressures for HDPE: www.ineos.com/globalassets/ineos-group/businesses/ineos-olefins-and-polymers-usa/products/technical-information patents/tips_for_injection_molding_ineos_hdpe_resins.pdf
Injection Molding of Recycled Plastic at Home Part 5 Testing the Shredder
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Injection Molding of Recycled Plastic at Home Part 5 Testing the Shredder
Injection Molding of Recycled Plastic at Home Part 4 Building the Shredder
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Injection Molding of Recycled Plastic at Home Part 4 Building the Shredder
Injection Molding of Recycled Plastic at Home Part 3 Injector Electrical
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Injection Molding of Recycled Plastic at Home Part 3 Injector Electrical
Injection Molding of Recycled Plastic at Home Part 2 Building the Injector
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Injection Molding of Recycled Plastic at Home Part 2 Building the Injector
Injection Molding of Recycled Plastic at Home Part 1
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Injection Molding of Recycled Plastic at Home Part 1
Thank You Sir
Very interesting. I enjoyed this. Not sure as to if I will try it, but still. Thanks
Very interesting. I like your channel. Good work. Opened ideas for me. Thanks
I picked up an old lathe 16x60 that didn’t come with all the gears I’m in need of and have been searching all types of ways to produce my own, happen to come across your channel. I like the direction you went with this and of course everyone will have a different variation on tweaking processes accordingly to there interests and learned experiences and I enjoyed watching. Thanks for uploading
You are most welcome. I hope your gear project goes well.
nice vid, thanks
Thanks for the comment. Hope your chuck turns out good.
Nicely done sir. 😁
POST A link of where you found this part.
It has been over 2 years since I posted this video, and I just don't remember where I got the part.. There are several sites that post parts diagrams for the Bridgeport mill. My recollection is that I got the part number from one of those and then searched that on Google to find a vendor. Sorry.
H & W Machine in Fort Wayne Indiana rebuilds Bridgeports and supplies parts for them.
If you really want to make gears, you need a gear hobber. It cuts all the teeth at the same time. I paid 600.00 for this one. Here is a video. ua-cam.com/video/d3fFn2LsS0s/v-deo.html
Thanks for sharing! I see you use chair casters, they have extra large chair casters now for a great price.
Thanks, Sam. Those casters are something I just had laying around and they are definitely the weak point on the cart. I am interested in finding some larger ones and would appreciate a link if you have one.
Welcome Back!
I didn’t know were you going with this until the end ,very clever thanks mike
Thanks, Mike. You should show off some of your projects on UA-cam.
Nice crane sir! I will save this video for future use. Thanks for sharing!
Thanks, Danny. I hope it is useful to you.
Good to see you back, Max. It has been a while. Regards, Duck
Thanks, Duck
Very simple multi-purpose tool. My shops floor isn't quite as smooth and spacious as yours or I'd be building myself one. Mine will have to be some kind of overhead system I believe.
Thanks, Kyle. Hope you get your lifting problem solved.
Cool idea. Definitely more convenient than vise grips. Another thing to do with a lot of hardware is just dump it in the rotary tumbler for several hours. Works pretty well
Thanks, Nick. I don't have a tumbler but maybe I should try to find one.
The metal square with the hole in it that was cracked in half is a part that allows you to adjust the clutch engagement depth. I couldn't see yours but on mine there is a set screw that allows you to loosen it and slide it up and down. As the clutch wears you can move that square up which moves the Hi - Neutral - Lo lever up more so it engages the clutch better and eliminates the rattle that can sometimes be caused by the loose clutch engagement. Here is a link to a youtube video that I learned it from. Mine was rattling terribly and this fix did the trick. ua-cam.com/video/zjKO-nVxhSM/v-deo.html
Thanks, Cody, I don't recall seeing a screw in the broken part but it is possible I missed it. I threw out the broken pieces so no way to check now. It looks like Bridgeport made a number of changes over the years.
Thanks, Cody. I have not had the rattle problem, but now I know what to do if it does happen.
Got a #19 Super Chuck that has one jaw that will not extend with the other two and is jammed in so the chuck will only retract - open? - half way. The chuck isn't rusted or been beaten on. Any suggestions how to get the thing apart so I can assess the damage, clean and lube the thing? I tried pressing it apart as usual but there was clearly something jammed by the out-of-position jaw.
I'm afraid I can't help much there. I had the jaws fully open on my chuck before pressing off the outer ring. I have only taken apart two of these chucks so I am far from an expert. One of the commentators on this video seemed to be well versed so you might ask him. Other than that you might try contacting a more experienced machinist like Tom Lipton ua-cam.com/users/oxtoolcovideos or Steve Summers ua-cam.com/users/SteveSummersvideos. As I recall, both of them have videos on repairing chucks Good luck with getting it fixed.
Thanks for making this video. Ive been wanting to make something similar
Glad you like it. It's sure been handy for me.
I got a used Bridgeport and mine needed to be repaired in the same area. The part was the same as what yours was originally. Mine was missing the entire square. Bridgeport must have figured out that the version with no moving parts was a better (or cheaper) design. At any rate thanks for sharing.
Glad it worked out for you. Now we can both "Git er done"
Is there more video of you putting the rest together?....its looking awesome so far....your axle extension mite be a weak spot...if so...could use a coupler over the axles to beef them up.
Yes, I do have more video but just have not got around to editing it. It's on the to-do list, though. The outer axles slip over the inner ones and there is a bearing right next to the wheel that supports the weight of the vehicle. It has worked out well so far. Thanks for the comment.
Daves channel?
Not sure what you're talking about, Adam. No Dave here.
You could possibly make a cover out of plywood that straddles the whole cutter and rests on the base. It could come up to just above the wheel. That would keep your fingers out of the way An angled piece inside would direct the plastic toward the cutter's teeth. The plastic would need to be cut into small enough pieces though, which might negate the whole point of having the cutter in the first place. I was thinking that the pieces would jump around a bit inside the 'funnel' but should eventually cut themselves into small pieces without you having to hold anything.
Thanks for the tip. I may give that a try next time I set up for a plastic project.
Do the outer bearing supports have a bearing on the inside as well?
No, the outer axles telescope with the axles of the transmission with a good slip fit. The sturdy axle bearings of the transmission serve as the inner bearings. Thanks for your interest. I am way overdue to finish this series and will soon.
Thanks for sharing.....People from around the world, like me, are enjoying your videos...For sure!!
Thanks so much, Salomon. I'm sorry I could not make more but still trying and making a few.
Many thanks for making this video! I found this helpful for my project.
Glad I could be of assistance. Send me an e-mail when you get a chance and let me know how you are doing on your project. maxrunout@gmail.com
Good on yah!
Thanks, Tony
Interesting method. Back gear on bridgeport, I assume? Looked like absolutely minimum RPM?
This is my first video ever and goes back to before I had a Bridgeport. It was actually done on an old drill press. I had installed a three phase motor and a variable frequency speed control. The motor is running on about 5 Hz here. Not a lot of torque but plenty for this job. I have used and modified this tool at least 4 times since then. It is really handy. Thanks
@@eyevalve what kind of HP were you running? 5hz in direct drive, my Bridgeport isn't going to take a cut like that- I'll trip the VFD, and it's a 2 HP motor with a ~5hp VFD.
@@noiwonttellyoumyname.4385 Actually, it was only a 1/2 HP motor and drive. I have an ancient drill press that had motor issues so I bought a motor and drive combo like this one dealerselectric.com/-50-HP-1800-RPM-115-Volts-Input-Package-.asp It was only $170 at the time. The frequency when the video was taken may have been a bit higher, perhaps 10 Hz but not more than that. I have the three speed belt drive set to the lowest speed but it crawls along just fine even with large bits so long as I don't try to break any speed records.
Good video and it's really interesting that people are doing injection moulding at home. I have one thing to say though. But uhhhhhh And uhhhhhh Or uhhhhhh It's uhhhhhh Because uhhhhhhhhhhh Now uhhhhhh Goodbye uhhhhhh
Paul. That was a quick fix , I thought at first you would have to take the top of the head off.enjoyed the video keep them coming Mike
Thanks, Mike. You are right, I was lucky (this time)
Hey Paul, Nice repair. I find that since I also have "vintage" power tools I spend about 25% of my shop time repairing or restoring them. Still a day is the shop is better than any day at work. Fred
Thanks, Fred. Yeah, any excuse to get down in the shop!!
I wonder why they made one different? Must have been trying a new idea. The replacement is a lot simpler. Of course I can see how that would allow the high speed gear to align further in or further out.
It might have been an experiment by Bridgeport. It looks like the original paint job was gold which I never saw before. My unit came from a college shop, though. Maybe a student project?
Always nice when a plan comes together right. Looking good Sir!!!
Thanks, Danny. Hope it helps someone with a similar problem.
10/10 truly valuble content
Thanks, hope was useful. Let me know if you make a similar press.
Real cool video! It’s great to see how you got to where you were when we came to visit.
Hey, Alex. Great to hear from you. I didn't know you were a subscriber :-)
Paul That is going to be a valued addition to your shop ,the press and the chuck. Enjoyed the video. Mike
Mike, Glad you liked it. I enjoyed fixing the chuck as well as building the press. Thanks for the tip on the punch press dies.
Thanks, Mike. And thanks for the tip on the punch press die sets.
do you have a video of you press build?
Yes, it's the one just before this. ua-cam.com/video/ZsyOQpWtHe4/v-deo.html
Welcome back. Glad you're feeling better. Looking forward to more videos.
Thanks, I hope to make many more :-)
That was a good cleanup on the chuck. A nice addition to your shop.
Thanks, Harold. I was surprised how easy and well it turned out.
The 18N chuck looks great! You could look up into the spindle bore for a defective collet key, wear and rust before indicating the taper.
Thanks for the tip. I always run my finger up into the taper before installing a collet but I have not really examined it.
Good to see you in front of the camera again Paul, errrr Max. Great project and simple enough for most home machinists to recreate. Thanks for sharing.. Fred
Thanks, Fred. I have been using the press for all kinds of things.
Glad to see a video from you. A hydraulic press is a very handy tool.
Thanks, Harold. It took me a while to get going again, but I'm having fun!!
Paul loved the video ,I liked the idea of the hooks and springs to return the ram Mike McEwen
Thanks, Mike. The springs were Eddie's idea and the punch press dies were yours, of course.
I thought the spring and hook might be Ed’s idea.stacking the two together to put the holes in is a good idea and a time saver mike
I have been admiring that press also and have been putting materials together to build one. I am interested in seeing how you put yours together. I plan to use channel iron to fabricate mine.
Send me a picture when you get it done. Thanks
@@maxrunout2989 I will be doing a video of it.
Looks and works good 👍 Thanks for the mention. Subscribed and hit the bell. Look forward to seeing more from you.
Thanks, Steve,. Your channel has been an inspiration to me.
can i see the diagram please
Sorry for the delay, I missed your original post but found it when cleaning up. Send me an e-mail at maxrunout@gmail.com and I will reply with a copy of the electrical diagram
Hey Max runout what happened? You stopped making videos and now I am concerned about your health. Please drop me an email to hswatersatyahoodotcom.
Did you ever learn about Max, his heath or other? I enjoyed his videos
@@matthewhagans4372 he has had some medical problems but is recovering and said he will be back on youtube soon.
Paul, what pressure angle are your cutters 14.5 or 20?
Doug, Pressure angle is 20 degrees. I found the cutters on E-Bay from a vendor in Ukraine. Paul
Thanks for the reply and information Paul. Great video!
nice!!! good Job.
awesome !!!
Thanks, Ron !!
God I’m glad I don’t live in the states, when do you have time to do anything ! Stop talking lol