ACSIS Systems
ACSIS Systems
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CNC Lathe machining and threading: 1x11-1/2 NPT external - FANUC OT-C 1998
Some interesting lathe work on a 1998 FANUC O-T controller. Machine: Supermax YCM TC-15 (North America USA)
In this video, we are turning down some 2024 aluminum for a non-aerospace company in the United States. My favorite part about this was the O-Ring groove, that was very out of reach for standard machine tools. So I made this funky carbide grooving tool on the surface grinder with the life expectancy of over 400 pcs. (I hope). Hence why it’s feeding so slow.
Be sure to check out 6:22 for a cool view of the ball screws in action during taper threading. Cool stuff!
Переглядів: 1 931

Відео

Fanuc OT OTC - P Can P Cancel procedure - YCM-TC-15 Supermax - YCI USA
Переглядів 1,3 тис.9 місяців тому
Skip to 19:30 for P Cancel. Demonstration of P Can, P-Can, PCan, p cancel, Position Cancel, whatever you want to call it; Fanuc O-T control. (O-T C) (OT) This machine is a YCM-TC-15. Similar to a YCM-TC-2. I hope this video helps out fellow CNC machinists diagnosing problems with homing and parameters. Please leave a comment if you have any questions or further information. I am from the United...
The Lathe - Complacency Kills
Переглядів 21 тис.Рік тому
In this video, we explore the more gruesome and morbid reality of lathe work. Viewer discretion is advised. 0:00 - 0:56 Introduction 0:56 - 9:24 Chapter 1 - Brief history on the lathe 9:24 - 11:57 Chapter 2 - The roaring 20s and the electric motor boom 11:57 - 13:32 Chapter 3 - Understanding electric motor power and transmission 13:32 - 26:28 Chapter 4 - The human accidents 26:28 - 30:12 Safety...
CNC Lathe hand programming - advanced threading (G76 cycle)
Переглядів 2,9 тис.Рік тому
Very interesting parts, whittling away on my 1992 Supermax YCM-TC-15 CNC lathe. Utilizing G71 and G76 as well as back side grooving on some 3/8 diameter stainless. Hope this commentary helps someone with their approach to making an entire part in one operation if possible!
Silverware - "How It's Made" manufacturing analysis
Переглядів 100Рік тому
Had a lot of fun making this video, featuring a real machine shop experiment! www.acsissystems.com
What is a modern day machine shop?
Переглядів 272Рік тому
Here's the audio version of our article "What is a modern day machine shop?" which you can find here: acsissystems.com/what-is-a-modern-day-machine-shop/ www.acsissystems.com
Fanuc O-T controller CNC Lathe
Переглядів 9 тис.Рік тому
Walkthrough of this older Supermax YCM TC-15 CNC lathe
Gigantic Christmas Trees - "How It's Made" manufacturing analysis
Переглядів 19Рік тому
Ho ho ho. Just for fun. Happy Holidays!

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @lb-wi2yr
    @lb-wi2yr Місяць тому

    why we cant see the first positioning results?? :D

  • @GnosisMan50
    @GnosisMan50 Місяць тому

    looks good....I need 100,000 of them. lol🙂

  • @gertkristensen6451
    @gertkristensen6451 3 місяці тому

    on a milling cutter, T3M6 is for moving the tool to the spindle T6 is only for calling up the next tool ,, the tool moves forward so it is ready to go into the spindle .. T3 and T6 are swapped around the next tool could be T16 Magazine the table the hold keep an eye on each tool and where it sits in the tool chain

  • @panapaul6984
    @panapaul6984 4 місяці тому

    Hello! can you help me with some images of the parameters from the tool sheds?

  • @hamzanawaz7945
    @hamzanawaz7945 5 місяців тому

    Use single block for showing programs.

  • @chrisschneider5670
    @chrisschneider5670 6 місяців тому

    14:35 started the program without reading the tool and offset, that could’ve been bad!! 😂

  • @abramfriesen9834
    @abramfriesen9834 7 місяців тому

    Thank you for this video i have a hardinge cobra 65 lathe with fanuc 21-t controller and haveing trouble with homing I think I lust all the pramaders 😢

    • @acsissystems
      @acsissystems 7 місяців тому

      hmm, thats tricky. Looks like Hardinge got bought in 2018 by a holdings company. Idk if they still support older equipment. YCM is still around and they were able to help me. It couldn't hurt to call Hardinge and ask them. Machine tool builders will typically ask for the serial number. If you're lucky, they'll have the parameters on a couple of notepad files they can send you for free. Also, try researching "Fanuc P Cancel procedure". I actually lost the parameters on this very lathe recently and had to do a restore. (The batteries died). I made a video on P Cancel procedure on this channel, It should work on any Fanuc control. But yeah, first try and find the original Hardinge parameters. The parameters are different for every machine tool builder. Best of luck, let me know how it goes. I'd be curious to learn if Hardinge still supports older equipment

  • @phuhuynh7006
    @phuhuynh7006 10 місяців тому

    Exellent Explaination thanks so much , your machine is cool

  • @felderup
    @felderup 11 місяців тому

    you still use A.D. how peculiar.

  • @tcauto256
    @tcauto256 11 місяців тому

    scary :(

  • @Charles-lane277
    @Charles-lane277 11 місяців тому

    Danger is involved in every living life,eating can be dangerous,for example you can choke on your food,this just goes to say there is absolutely no such thing as anything at that's not dangerous,everything we do is or can be dangerous in some way shape or form,it doesn't have to be just at work.

  • @redramage
    @redramage 11 місяців тому

    I recommend that all machinists watch the uncensored russian lathe accident video. It absolutely motivates you towards safe practices. great essay!

    • @TRiToN219
      @TRiToN219 2 місяці тому

      I did. It's freaking gruesome. The description in the video isn't dramatized, but exactly what happened. Only the wet rags were left on the shaft, the rest was akin to watching a horror movie that happened in reality.

  • @BigDaddyButthead90
    @BigDaddyButthead90 Рік тому

    Henry Maudslay was the inventer of the first modern centre lathe, capable of cutting screws to tolerance of several thousandth of an inch on a production machine, not a special hand built one off, his student Sir Joseph Whitworth would standardise thread pitch use and revolutionise rifle accuracy with his Whitworth rifle used by the confederates during the American civil war, he also designed more machine tools than most people have seen or used, the shaper machines of today still use his design.

  • @DobleWhiteAndStabley
    @DobleWhiteAndStabley Рік тому

    Yeah, puffer jacket dude. I think I was 16 when I saw that on a machining forum. Some chucklehead posted that thinking it was funny because he knew kids were going to see it.

    • @acsissystems
      @acsissystems 8 місяців тому

      yeah thats a messed up way of seeing it. in one way, im glad the footage was super crappy. but also wish there was more detail on exactly what snagged. I watched it for hours and hours. Most of the lathes i've ran, i remove the left hand side power handle. It's always in the way and its literally rubbing up against your left leg while your loading in a new part. Just stick with the right hand side power handle. Sure it's a little farther away. I always thought that design was so stupid. But again, I really can't tell what happened to puffer jacket guy. The thing may have been already spinning, who knows

  • @darrenconway8117
    @darrenconway8117 Рік тому

    I have fitted an e-stop switch on the headstock and at the tail stock. I can stand and stay at the right side of the spinning work. When I was training, the work piece started to chatter on the lathe. I turned off the power as as the chuck came to a stop, it fell onto the bed. The previous trainee had not tightened the chuck and I hadn't checked the machine properly.

    • @acsissystems
      @acsissystems 8 місяців тому

      holy crap. thats a good save. E-stop on the tailstock is a great idea, I will definitely consider doing this

  • @wibblywobblyidiotvision
    @wibblywobblyidiotvision Рік тому

    Aaaaaargh. If you're going to start talking about technical matters, particularly with regards to electric motors, try and get at least some of it right. The person who wrote the utter bollocks in chapter 3 wants to be put in the naughty corner. - When you run a machine in low gear, you do not increase its power. Power is a function of rpm multiplied by torque - when you reduce the rpm through gearing, you increase the torque - the power remains the same (modulo losses in the gearchain). - The 3 phase (and even single-phase) induction motors used in "normal" sized machines (over 3/4 hp and under about 600hp) run at a speed determined by the line frequency, and not voltage. Speed variation is thus done by varying the frequency and not the voltage, the variac you show is useless on all but the most piss-ant little machines. There are exceptions to the use of induction motors, of course, but the use of large DC servos is generally restricted to bloody great CNC machines, and the speed variation circuitry on those is very complex. - For a typical induction motor, the power is not determined by the voltage, which is constant for a given motor ad line supply, but rather the current flowing through the motor. A 1kW motor powered at 400v will nominally draw 2.5A. A 10kW motor powered at 400v will draw 25A. Whilst in theory it would be possible to reduce motor power by reducing the voltage input, this does not typically happen as it's bloody complex to do. Reducing the frequency to reduce the motor speed does not reduce the voltage. - Teslas and (modern) cordless drills mostly do not contain a "variable voltage control". They are driven by what are effectively 3 phase induction motors, and speed is controlled, once again, by varying frequency. Goog god almighty.

  • @johnswilley6764
    @johnswilley6764 Рік тому

    I greatly appreciate your production Sir. As a retired Lt. Fire/Medic & ED-RN, I've dealt with numerous industrial incidents, many of which could have been avoided. In my retirement I've acquired 3 lathes, largest being 12x36 manual, 1 CNC mill ~1000Kg with a powerhead for "lathe" work. I've learned much from the mistakes of others, but I could not begin to cover all that info here. Best advice I ever got was from my Father; when he was teaching me to operate power tools, he said son, that tool does not care how loud you scream. I still have all my parts, and I'm always trying to learn. Thank you very much for your information.

    • @acsissystems
      @acsissystems 8 місяців тому

      I recieved the same advice, the machine will not care. sobering advice for sure

  • @johnboforsyth5970
    @johnboforsyth5970 Рік тому

    Thanks for producing this content. Saftey in the industrial world is nothing to fuck around with.

  • @piteralvarado1028
    @piteralvarado1028 Рік тому

    Muy bonita introducción de máquinas y herramientas 👍🌹🙏

  • @Orakwan
    @Orakwan Рік тому

    Thank you for reminding us the danger of death only a few inches away from us all day. How many times have I sanded or polished a part until not even half an inch away from the chuck. When you work a lathe everyday for years, you forget the danger of it, it becomes common. I remember my first months working on a CNC lathe, I was scared of everything. I was so nervous pushing the green button after writing my program. My old teacher warned me when I was at school: fear the day you are not nervous around heavy machinery anymore, because this is when accidents start to happen

    • @acsissystems
      @acsissystems Рік тому

      Well said, sir. The few guys i've had the honor of training, I always emphasize rolling up the sleeves and being very careful when typing into the DRO. Making a concious effort to walk "around" the chuck and not reaching over it. My two golden rules

  • @scroungasworkshop4663
    @scroungasworkshop4663 Рік тому

    A very good video thanks. I only have a home shop with a 36” lathe but I’m still cautious with it. I don’t like filing on it because it means one arm has to reach over the spinning chuck.

  • @sky173
    @sky173 Рік тому

    Great video. Many people forget how powerful these machines really are. In the early 70's, I was introduced to machines like these at a very young age. I was taught that it isn't a playground. It was dangerous, but I understood that quickly. As I've aged and remained in the industry, I've seen what can happen. I've pulled people from machines that tore limbs off people without slowing down. It's no joke. Stay safe out there. It's a brutal world but without it, we will never advance as a species. Cheers. EDIT - there is a horrific video out there of this happening (@12:10). I wont provide the link but it made me very sick to watch it. There was nothing left of him. (that it @25:00) Just be careful...

    • @acsissystems
      @acsissystems 8 місяців тому

      oh my god, thats horrific. I'm sorry you had to deal with that in person. I haven't seen anything close to that. yeah... i've told my friends about it but i don't go around showing people. it's weird, we use to research this stuff in highschool. Blue pants was one of the only lathe accidents on the internet at that time. (the 2007~ eyeball pictures). I hate to compare it to war, or maybe police work, but in this industry it's a serious thing to be aware of. whether you have the stomach for it or not

  • @lemesianosena246
    @lemesianosena246 Рік тому

    Lathe is described in Homers Eliad. So it's very very old

  • @doglegjake6788
    @doglegjake6788 Рік тому

    Excellent video

  • @jozefbubez6116
    @jozefbubez6116 Рік тому

    Indeed, we need to think before doing anything and the classic No 1 is starting the lathe in motion with the key still in the chuck!

  • @BensWorkshop
    @BensWorkshop Рік тому

    You can, and people both have and still do, in industry and in the hobby shop make things that are square, rectangular and so on in the lathe, including angle plates, cubes, cubes withing cubes and so on, and that is without a milling slide attached to the tool post.

  • @acsissystems
    @acsissystems Рік тому

    I forgot to include this piece of advice in the video. But after a while, getting used to running lathes, you develop a 'force field' around your body, that you never let get near the chuck or work piece. Full article is available on our website! www.AcsisSystems.com with a bunch more footnotes and first-person point of view style extras. It's a work in progress Note from author: The good news is, after a couple of years as an appretice, you will develop a sort of 6th sense, or force field bubble around your body and you will become more comfortable about knowing where your abdomen and arms are at in relation to the lathe chuck or workpiece. This is very handy specifically for when you are punching information into the DRO which is usually mounted near the chuck. I catch myself all the time going to reach for the DRO or perhaps something in the back of lathe chip pan and being like, nope, 6th sense activated. Then find a safer way by powering down the machine or walking around the entire thing if you must keep the part running. Never lean over the spinning workpiece to grab something, even if your shirt is tucked in, unless you want to be turned into a raspberry slushie.

  • @JohnTrogdon-wc1gk
    @JohnTrogdon-wc1gk Рік тому

    While machining a large part in a lathe, I was working crossword puzzles to keep from wandering off. The plant manager walked in and chewed me out for reading on the job. He claimed I could clean up around the running machine. I filed for retirement that day.

    • @acsissystems
      @acsissystems Рік тому

      what are we suppose to do bossman, stare at the lathe and get .100" deep .008" IPR chips blasted into my eyeballs? I agree with your move. Crossword puzzles are awesome, a good way to stay alert. Keep out of the line of fire, sweep up when it gets too deep for a forklift. And im totally cool with cell phone use, just dont crash the thing 😂

    • @colincunningham1902
      @colincunningham1902 8 місяців тому

      You SHOULD be wearing SAFETY GLASSES!@@acsissystems

  • @colincunningham1902
    @colincunningham1902 Рік тому

    An excellent video! However, why blur the pictures? Why not state 'This could have been YOU!' or 'Would YOU like to have such an accident?' Sadly, such complacency is common, the old 'well it can't happen to ME.' Oh yes it can' and very quickly too!

    • @acsissystems
      @acsissystems 8 місяців тому

      it would definitley get censored from UA-cam. but yes I agree. We saw all that stuff in highschool... in 2012!

  • @kentuckytrapper780
    @kentuckytrapper780 Рік тому

    Great info, thanks

  • @robertbowers9856
    @robertbowers9856 Рік тому

    Sobering.

  • @camillosteuss
    @camillosteuss Рік тому

    Yeah, I have a relatively massive lathe, and a few other smaller ones... I treat every machine with respect... If a machine can work metal like its butter, you dont even want to imagine what it can do to your body if it catches you... A large industrial lathe, even a short bed one, really doesnt matter what the dimensions of the machine are, if its a strong industrial machine, it can tear you to shreds like a woodchipper or a meat-grinder... You all can theoretically conjure an impression of the power required to cut continuously say a 4mm(cca 1/8th inch) chip... You can try scraping a piece of steel with a scraper, and you can maybe dig in a fraction of a millimeter with all your power... A large lathe can remove kilograms of steel in minutes pretty much... When you hear that a car has say 250nm of torque or 400, its a decent daily driver, and you know that it can shift its 1ton mass uphill like its nothing... A large machine with 5 or 10 horsepower, with a massive gearbox likely outclasses that like a Bugatti does the VW beetle from back in the day... Just a handheld angle grinder can rip itself out of your hands like you are a child, and that is a toy when compared to a lathe of almost any size... If you have a passion for machines, you watch This Old Tony or others, and you decide to get some machines, never underestimate the immense capacity they have to obliterate you like a landmine... Machines are amazing, beautiful and magnificent pieces of art practically, but just like a car, they are pieces of art that can turn you into chunky paste... Get an apron, have it custom touched up by a tailor to fit you like a latex gimp suit if you can... You dont want to get caught by a machine capable of working metal... Some baby lathes with toothless belt drives can be relatively safe and you can stall them by hand, at least cause the belt to slip, but if there is a chuck on the lathe and a piece of work, that is a relatively large mass that you have to force to a halt, and just a few kilograms(say 6 pounds) of rotating mass at say 1200rpm will be enough to mangle you, not outright obliterate, but it can take your arm off or smash your skull into the bedways if your hair gets caught... The head smash would likely be instant death, the arm could turn into death, but you get the point... While some baby lathes may be under-powered and anemic when compared to larger machines, they are never to be treated without utmost care and respect... The same goes for any other metal working machine, be it a larger pedestal grinder, a drill, a mill or any other configuration of aforementioned machinery... Please, dont ever take risks or engage in stupid setups... If you have the slightest hint of uncertainty regarding safety of any operation, think about it, reconsider the steps, find a solution that at least feels completely safe... And i know its hard, but try finding someone with machine experience, find time and offer to ``apprentice`` under them for some time, just come, hand them the tools they ask for, bring them coffee or whatever they like and learn from them, dont annoy them, but try to get them to teach you... It will only cost you time, and the returns could not only save your life, but you will also see things that could take you years on your own to figure out how to do... And you will make a friend after a few days if you arent an asshole and if the other person isnt an asshole - avoid assholes... Machinists are grumpy, but there is a difference between grumpy and an asshole... TL;DR - just watch the video...

    • @acsissystems
      @acsissystems 8 місяців тому

      great write up. totally agree. I like your analogy with the angle grinder, most of us can reconcile our relationships with that tool, having bit us once or twice. This Old Tony and Abom79 have terrific knowledge of the trade, far wiser and greater than someone as young as us could ever present. Some lower powered equipment as you stated, like the 1/4 horse bench grinder i mentioned, you can probably stall those but man, AC motors are freaking dangerous beasts. I wish I had a junker old lathe I could run some tests on. Leaving the chuck key in and having it slam into the ways, and fly out of the chuck (or shear off completely). Just to demonstate the point. My dad always argues that mills are more dangerous... sure they can spit stuff at you, I've personally exploded a 1" diameter HSS twist drill in my face, all the shrapnel entered my shoulder thankfully. There was easily 100 pieces of fragmented drill all around the mill. Mills are scary, but I tell him, lathes dont have that forgiveness. Lathes kill people

  • @gyrogearloose1345
    @gyrogearloose1345 Рік тому

    Many thanks for this report ACSIS. A good reminder of the gruesome consequences of COMPLACENCY! Yes, we must not forget the machine is made to turn, spin, cut - whatever - and keep on going. And going! Does not care about the human operator - even 1 HP can make a mess out of you! BE CAREFUL folks, do not be complacent, please!!!

    • @acsissystems
      @acsissystems 8 місяців тому

      thank you so much! spread the word to the younger generation, that's all we can do.

  • @oohookoo
    @oohookoo Рік тому

    Egyptians floated the blocks into place with the use of a causeway and sealed locks, checkout pyramidsreallybuilt for the video.

  • @westasleep
    @westasleep Рік тому

    Why doesn't every manual lathe have a deadman's pedal connected to the brake?

    • @Al-Fiallos
      @Al-Fiallos Рік тому

      Excellent question. On my personal tools, especially my table saw and routers, I picked up foot switches from Harbor Freight. They don't cost much and you can get them in 'momentary' and 'power maintained' formats. I have never seen a deadman's switch on a lathe.

  • @marioelburro1492
    @marioelburro1492 Рік тому

    My job hired me and my co-worker without training despite hydraulic equipment and other dangerous equipment being present. (Its my 1st job and i never have been in any similar environment, even at my stem school) We had to learn on the spot from co-workers (or getting injured or near death lmao). Despite many warnings and safety protocols, the company lets shit get by. Until they freak out for steel toe boots not being used or if the owner is around (who seems to care more about our personal well being than my supervisor who treat us like robots). I dont think ill last more than another 2 months here but my respects to machines, electricity, and people who work across dangerous equipment

    • @acsissystems
      @acsissystems Рік тому

      Yeah definitely find a better place to work. Sounds like you’re about my age, I had the same experience my first 4 years or so, getting yelled at all the time, bad leadership, frustrating times for sure. But as I began to learn and grow up, it’s kinda like any other career. The first few years (in place of undergrad college) are a huge grind. I’m our case it’s just an extremely dangerous grind 😂 If you can find a place where you can start small, loading parts into CNCs for a year and really seeing how all the tools work, that also helps teach you how to later on run manual machines somewhat correctly off the bat. I did 6 solid years of manuals before I ever got to programming the CNC, but in those really tough years man I learned everything I know. And currently, I tell my foreman what to do at work 🤘 lol.

    • @acsissystems
      @acsissystems Рік тому

      My 2nd job in the industry was a lot like what you’re describing. I had an apprentice for like a month but the shop was so old and worn out I was like, dude this isn’t the place to get any good learning experience. While some more seasoned gentleman will argue, “learning on an old machine is the way to go” yeahhh, but if the ways and ball screws, lathe chucks, are so worn out that you break taps all the time or holes don’t drill center, yeah that’s fkn impossible to learn on. I could barely do the work they wanted done, nevermind trying to teach a young stud how to do it on these lathes that were missing entire gear teeth

    • @PaxHeadroom
      @PaxHeadroom Рік тому

      Don't be afraid to file OSHA reports.

  • @maxwellbarnhart1375
    @maxwellbarnhart1375 Рік тому

    Wow, what a wealth of information on this rather niche subject. I always found it morbidly intriguing. Love the fact that you include excerpts from obscure literature. Thanks.

    • @acsissystems
      @acsissystems Рік тому

      Thank you! It was a challenge to actually find any real data. This one shop that closed down (the creepy images of the big VTL and huge horizontal boring mills), If those walls could talk… this subject truly deserves a more in depth researching. Maybe I’ll do a part two one day if I can find any cool sources in the library

  • @Mr.SisterFisster
    @Mr.SisterFisster Рік тому

    Look up "russian lathe accident". Extreme gore, NSFW.

    • @oohookoo
      @oohookoo Рік тому

      thats a good one 😬

  • @kingjames4886
    @kingjames4886 Рік тому

    wouldn't want things to get all blurry...

  • @kingjames4886
    @kingjames4886 Рік тому

    how do you outfit a lathe with a light guard? don't think whoever thought that was a reasonable idea has ever used a lathe...

  • @lohikarhu734
    @lohikarhu734 Рік тому

    Early on, I did electrical work in a sawmill, which included working on a LOT of "rotating" equipment... Even unpowered, one could simply get a machine rotating, to inspect it, or clean it, and the sheer rotating mass could drag a hand into gearing, or into a blade... A 600 hp chipper has a 1.5 m diameter rotor, with sharp blades, spinning in a housing... Open the access door, push on the rotor, and just slip a little tiny bit, and part of your hand gets amputated by those blades, with a 300 kg rotor... Speaking from experience, unfortunately, but fortunately, just lost skin on two fingers, however a couple of seconds difference, and could have lost all of the fingers!

    • @acsissystems
      @acsissystems 8 місяців тому

      jesus. 600hp is freaking insane power, even subtracting the sharp blades. That's wild. Electricians deal with waaay higher dangers than just the every day hole driller. I hope your digits are all okay these days!

  • @railgap
    @railgap Рік тому

    I learned to operate lathes from large to enormous while still in high school, because my (very old) H.S. metal shop had scored many tons of outmoded machinery after WW-II. My shop teacher was a retired career industrial machinist / tool & die maker, and he had a seemingly endless collection of lurid, hair-raising stories of industrial accidents involving every machine there is, including a few we didn't have. To top that off, he very nearly had an accident himself in our school shop, while I was attending school (but not when I was in his class) from wearing a tie on dress-up day! I've had a few near misses with all kinds of dangers but I credit that instructor for making sufficiently paranoid that I am so far still un-blinded, still have all my fingers, etc. O_O

    • @acsissystems
      @acsissystems Рік тому

      Glad to hear you made it out with all 10 digits😅 yeah so many of those stories have been lost in time... it's really unfortunate. I wish i had access to stories like that...

  • @lohikarhu734
    @lohikarhu734 Рік тому

    Quick correction needed: About 12:40, it's mentioned that speed of an AC motor is related to voltage, but it's actually determined by line frequency and construction.. 50 or 60 Hz line frequency, and the number of poles or windings, determine the operating speed..

    • @acsissystems
      @acsissystems Рік тому

      Thanks, that makes more sense. I had no idea how to articulate "what the RPM of the motor would be". Lol, thanks for clearing that up

    • @b0rd3n
      @b0rd3n Рік тому

      @@acsissystems oh and.. as a general rule, avoid using "lol" at all costs unless filler material is your jam or you actually are Laughing Out Loud. Sorry i had to say, nothing against you personally. also, today is my birthday and for the past 40 odd years, i got into the habbit of using that entire day to be the worst person i can be, without forcing anything. It makes up for the rest of the year where i genuinely believe in kindness and act as i would love others to act around me. 22 hours and 20 minutes remaining - i feel strong for a successful day of equalizing the scale. Haha. (not lol) I'm so french.

    • @acsissystems
      @acsissystems Рік тому

      @@b0rd3n thanks for the comment on our video. "Lol" in the modern sense of the acronym, is a tool to diffuse a lot of tension in the engineering industry. I was not literally "laughing out loud" at his correction, I was merely agreeing with the commenter and making them feel more at home by being right. Thanks though

    • @Rocketman88002
      @Rocketman88002 Рік тому

      @b0rd3n, your correction of the use of Lol is interesting😂 You're only the worse person on your birthday? You should tell my wife! I wake up grumpy, grouchy, grinchy, crabby, irrascible, irate, angry, mad and furious every day all day long! My wife doesn't even see the difference between when I'm awake or asleep. She claims I shout scream and chew out people while I sleep. So don't be too hard on yourself on your birthday.😂😂😂

  • @lohikarhu734
    @lohikarhu734 Рік тому

    Nice... I stopped wearing rings, even my wedding ring, at work, seeing how an entire finger just disappears into a mill, or lathe, or even just jumping down from a truck! With a big lathe, if a ring drags a hand a bit further, the entire arm is at danger! People might scoff, but anything that spins, has horsepower {or torque!} behind it, can "eat" a part of your body!

    • @railgap
      @railgap Рік тому

      Why would you allow any part of your body to come near the work or tool?? You can get badly hurt with or without a ring being there; chips/turnings will grab your flesh and wrap it around the work just fine, no ring required. Rings get blamed for idiotic behavior, but it wasn't the ring that did it, it was the wearer. Stop trying to clear chips with your hands and fingers, sport.

    • @maxwellbarnhart1375
      @maxwellbarnhart1375 Рік тому

      ​@@railgapwho said anything about clearing chips with their bare hands? How about don't wear a ring AND don't put your hand near the workpiece.

  • @kaylebutler8034
    @kaylebutler8034 Рік тому

    El controlador OT Fanuc permite maquinar ejes excentricos? (eccentric shaft)

  • @theflydies
    @theflydies Рік тому

    love the quick notes with sharpie. When ever there was machine specific info that I would need, I'd just sharpie it on the controller.

    • @acsissystems
      @acsissystems 10 місяців тому

      Thanks for the genuine comment :) yeah I use those mainly for changing inserts, if I need to work on tool 3 I’ll actually call out tool 12 or 11 to make it accessible

  • @fredwu8613
    @fredwu8613 Рік тому

    On the 2nd thread that’s closer to the chuck jaws it should be done with a left hand threading tool holder mounted upside down. That way you can thread it with M4 (threading away from chuck)therefore you will avoid the awkwardness of ramping in.

    • @acsissystems
      @acsissystems Рік тому

      That’s great advice, yeah I don’t have that tool holder unfortunately. I’ll have to get one of those for next time. I don’t know if my tool magazine would allow for that to be centered mounted upside down though that’s the main problem

    • @fredwu8613
      @fredwu8613 Рік тому

      Those wedge clamps can be removed and mounted upside down using the tapped holes on the upper side. At least all the turrets I have seen in the past will accommodate that. You’re welcome. You definitely have the right approach on a work piece like this! The best part of being a machinist is everyone is willing to share their experience and knowledge. Keep up the good work!

  • @DavidtheSwarfer
    @DavidtheSwarfer Рік тому

    oh man that text display takes me back to yeah, about 1992, programming a differential gear preloader that needed a small CRT (about 12") to fit the cabinet plus big characters for easy reading. I created a bitmapped font and bit banged it into video memory, each characeter was 8 'DOS' lines high and 7 characters wide, no graphics, just text, all written in C.

    • @acsissystems
      @acsissystems Рік тому

      Lol, good deal. Yeah this screen kinda strains the eyeballs after awhile it’s about 7” diagonally

  • @markyu70
    @markyu70 Рік тому

    Your machine is wonderful!

  • @adamsevcik7708
    @adamsevcik7708 Рік тому

    1. imperial system is the worst bullshit i've ever been forced to work with - 3/8 diameter.. what the fuck does that even mean? i've to spend more time counting some fucking usa hamburger per mexican immigrants system numbers than making parts - just to have some fucking idea how big that really is, i've no fucking idea how big 3/8 or 0.375 is, when i get fucking us braindead larded drawings, i spend fucking 15 minutes before i rewrite all dimensions into normal metric system just to know what the fuck am i supposed to machine 2. whole fanuc and coding parts in G-codes is worst bullshit i've ever been forced to do - this system is just japanese cheap ass copy of original coding invented back in 60's, it's usable only for chinese sweatshops where they write program and run that bitch part in millions of pieces for decades, if you use that shit for single job production, you spends whole freaking day on some fucking dumb rod with 2 threads and parting and have 99% chance you forget some bullshit like G0G28U0 and send your machine to scrapyard before it even makes a single part, this shit is so fucking overcomplicated even for 90's, you must read a 500 pages book just to do a fucking thread and not to crash the machine - that decade systems like mazatrol were made, in comparsion to this bullshit it's fucking heaven