Those are some sweet fixtures. Lots of stock cutting time saved using long strips of stock and less handling flipping one bar over that has 4 parts machined into it. Looks really efficient . He could shave cycle times by raising that pallet closer to spindle, lots of slow wasted z movements on haas mahines changing tools and getting back down to the table. for a large run it adds up to a ton of time .
Time is money! Sometimes it's more profitable to just buy the tool, regardless how simple. Whatever time it takes you to engineer and cut a simple pallet is time you're not making money. Often your own parts are going to be more profitable per hour than the money you're saving by DIY.
Great video again, love the elimination of wasted motion by reducing screws to an absolute minimum. Thanks Jay, looking forward to next Friday already.
I dont mean to be off topic but does anybody know of a tool to log back into an Instagram account..? I was dumb lost the login password. I love any tips you can offer me!
@Josue Issac i really appreciate your reply. I got to the site on google and I'm waiting for the hacking stuff now. Seems to take quite some time so I will reply here later with my results.
How do you tell after knocking the part into the fixture that its sitting correctly if you can't wiggle the parallels like you can with a vice? Thanks.
I've found it to be unneeded in almost all fixtures, at least for those where the clamps (like those shown in the video) have both sideways and downward pressure
Those are some sweet fixtures. Lots of stock cutting time saved using long strips of stock and less handling flipping one bar over that has 4 parts machined into it. Looks really efficient . He could shave cycle times by raising that pallet closer to spindle, lots of slow wasted z movements on haas mahines changing tools and getting back down to the table. for a large run it adds up to a ton of time .
Would love to see more videos of custom pallets
You sold a machinist a simple machined pallet? You must be one hell of a business man. I'm impressed
Time is money!
Sometimes it's more profitable to just buy the tool, regardless how simple. Whatever time it takes you to engineer and cut a simple pallet is time you're not making money. Often your own parts are going to be more profitable per hour than the money you're saving by DIY.
a treasure of knowledge I got. Tks a lot
You're welcome!
Great video again, love the elimination of wasted motion by reducing screws to an absolute minimum. Thanks Jay, looking forward to next Friday already.
I dont mean to be off topic but does anybody know of a tool to log back into an Instagram account..?
I was dumb lost the login password. I love any tips you can offer me!
@Baylor Tucker instablaster ;)
@Josue Issac i really appreciate your reply. I got to the site on google and I'm waiting for the hacking stuff now.
Seems to take quite some time so I will reply here later with my results.
@Josue Issac it did the trick and I now got access to my account again. Im so happy:D
Thank you so much, you saved my ass :D
@Baylor Tucker No problem xD
great ideas, thank you
Lots to take away from this one, I never knew about the cut to length uniforce clamps
Jay - as always, great video! However, it appears that the second OP parts are not the first OP parts, but a different (but similar) part.
Pretty sure I mentioned that at 3:32.
✅ How to get your hands on a Pro Pallet System 👉 bit.ly/3zKGWOS
What is the best way to hold something that's thin wall?
Vacuum is best for thin walls. Especially thin floors.
@@PiersonWorkholding Thanks. What about a square tube, or a thin walled box? I don't want to mar the surface, or rip out of the clamps.
How do you tell after knocking the part into the fixture that its sitting correctly if you can't wiggle the parallels like you can with a vice? Thanks.
I've found it to be unneeded in almost all fixtures, at least for those where the clamps (like those shown in the video) have both sideways and downward pressure