Please I would like to know how many hours of work does it take to do this? Do you know also if others work are done on this element (drilling threading etc.)?
hello James, I understand the rate of 12h a day because i was working on offshore drilling, but for a lot of people here in France 30h is quite a week of work!(35h/week). I subscribed , see you soon
A lot of stock removed from the original forging. It would be interesting if you added the depth of cuts and feed rates for the viewers. Keep up the good work!
Intresting work, what brand of inserts do you use? I know it's something I may not know about or have access to, but still intresting. In Scandinavia a lot of Sandvik/Seco tooling is common.
@@daos3300 You are partly right, i do know that it is a bearing housing but I do not know for what type of machinery. As from 4.51 i think that the part was turned over again as the thicker part of the housing is now clamped in the chuck.(but I am not 100% sure about that) So possible damages by the chains have been removed by final machining. Considering the beautiful finish of the completed part I am convinced that the machinist knows his job ánd customer requirements.
What they are doing is an accident waiting to happen , NO GRIP !! , trust me 44 years experience on Heavy Craven and Heyligenstaedt machine tools. Components up to 250 ton
@@daos3300 was a hmmm regarding the many many process problems getting to the finished product, and hmmm for the lack of relevant / detailed information / footage that was lacking in this engineering / machining vlog.
finished metal is just so beautiful!
Whatever the piece might be, when done, it always looks like something that belongs in an art museum!
Gorgeous!
Thanks! 👍
@@jamespark_85machiningtv :)
Nice work, James! 👍
Beautiful. Many hours in this job
Excellent work, and great vlog.
Thanks for sharing.
Lots of chips and a nice finish. Job well done.
Meant to say last time: you chose a real good match for the work with that music! :)
Looks like the finished piece might be one third of the original weight. A lot of stock was removed
those are some good steel toed sneakers hes got. not that steel toes would protect you from 4 tons of steel anyways...
Steel toad sneakers are in fact a thing now.
Who cares! It’s not always %100 about safety hey !
There’s always one that just has to pick out a “safety violation “. It’s lame, stop it !
@@davenicholson3491 lighten up Francis... 🙄😂
Amazing job, well done.
Thanks!
Please I would like to know how many hours of work does it take to do this?
Do you know also if others work are done on this element (drilling threading etc.)?
@@MtrePierre this work takes 2.5 days (30hours), and Only drill for additional work.
hello James, I understand the rate of 12h a day because i was working on offshore drilling, but for a lot of people here in France 30h is quite a week of work!(35h/week).
I subscribed , see you soon
Beautiful part well done
A lot of stock removed from the original forging. It would be interesting if you added the depth of cuts and feed rates for the viewers. Keep up the good work!
I like the safty warning, the guy is wearing shoes
nice piece of work...
Nice work!. Thank you for sharing.
you're welcome!
Very nice surface finish,what was the final weight?
Very cool man! How many hours more or less did it take? Also was it just one work piece or more?
Greetings from Perth Australia and happy 2021🤙🏻
It was a just one product, and it took more than 24 hours. thank you so much! 👍
Nice job my friend. Are you working same place with Chris Maj? Your machines and place very similar. Take care yourself. See you...
I don't work in the same place. Thank you.
what was the weight after it was finished it looks like most of the material ended up as chips
Nice job
very nice. would be fun to know where these things end up.
Nice!
Now let's see a parting cut in the middle.
2:01 you're already damaging the bottom of the part with them chains you got on there.
What yer saying is... you turned an Imperial lump into a metric piece... 🙄😂
😎👍☘🍺
Brilliant James!! What was the final weight of the product??
It's about 800kg.
Intresting work, what brand of inserts do you use? I know it's something I may not know about or have access to, but still intresting. In Scandinavia a lot of Sandvik/Seco tooling is common.
sandvik and seco is best tool! i use korloy and iscar. the cost effectiveness is good.
Why the music, IMHO it detracts from the task..
Parabéns, ótimo trabalho, 👏👏👏
How long did it take you to get from forged rough steel to the product ready to go out?? And what is used for?
대형기 하는 기술자들은 연봉이 대충 얼마정도 되나요 한 5년차 정도면..?
혹시 한국아재 아니심니까?ㅋㅋ선배님 존경합니다
What's the maximum safe rpm for a piece this size? As I understand it, high rpm and slow feed rate give a better surface finish, correct?
It depends on the condition, material, and tool. and it is better to refer to the tool maker's data.
@@jamespark_85machiningtv OK, thanks for the quick reply! Keep on keeping on dude
These videos would only be improved by the addition of the Imagine your Korea music.
Purple hair?
i would be terrified it was .5mm undersized lol
Followed by heat-treat, tempering and grinding to final size?
this product is only left drilling.
polish it shiny!
Bare chain on a machined surface, no thanks.
Normally not, but machining was not finished
you don't even know what it's for, if it matters, or what the customer needs/wants.
@@daos3300
You are partly right, i do know that it is a bearing housing but I do not know for what type of machinery.
As from 4.51 i think that the part was turned over again as the thicker part of the housing is now clamped in the chuck.(but I am not 100% sure about that) So possible damages by the chains have been removed by final machining.
Considering the beautiful finish of the completed part I am convinced that the machinist knows his job ánd customer requirements.
What they are doing is an accident waiting to happen , NO GRIP !! , trust me 44 years experience on Heavy Craven and Heyligenstaedt machine tools. Components up to 250 ton
I dont Like the Long Time Jobs by lathe Machines its Boring to Long Time thats finished
hmmmm
was that hmm as in 'that was some interesting shit', or hmm as in 'not sure about this at all'?
@@daos3300 was a hmmm regarding the many many process problems getting to the finished product, and hmmm for the lack of relevant / detailed information / footage that was lacking in this engineering / machining vlog.
@@firebug1166 hmm i see what you mean. agree that more detail would be nice. often that way with tech stuff, we want ALL the details
An unbelievable waste of material