Machining Brass Components For a Miniature 1800's Shaper
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- Опубліковано 17 лис 2024
- The miniature shaper build continues with the elevating screw and crank shaft housing. Did everything go well ??? Take a Look !!!
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Taper to paralell fixture. So simple. So clever. So perfect. So successful.
I liked that little tidbit as well.Some of the simplest solutions can be ingenious
As always, what really impresses me are the HSS tools you use. I remember that you once did a video about tool grinding, but you didn’t actually show the process. When you have time can you do a video on the design, geometry and grinding method you use? Thanks
Another banger from Joe P. Really appreciate how he gets into the meat and potatoes, going over drawings, problem solving, setup logic, it’s all here and I never walk away without learning something new.
Seeing Joe Pie bugger up a small part makes me feel better about the countless times I've done it! I'm really enjoying these small machine builds.
Joe, it is very comforting to know that even you can make the odd mistake! And are man enough to show it. Thanks!
Keep smiling Joe! That part came out great too.
I "liked" this video when I was barely five minutes in I was enjoying it so much. I loved the brass part creation - and fantastic work with a big grooving tool.
Another superb job. You explain your processes well, demonstrate the execution of what needs to be done without any blah, blah, blah.
The Model is coming together nicely! Of course it is thanks to your skills and talent. I love the tips and explanations you give while you're doing this, and as more and more parts are put onto the model and I see just how perfectly they fit together, I'm getting more and more excited to see the end result. I can easily tell that you and I are kindred spirits, because you are making the parts and once they are done, you are setting them aside and leaving them. You're not leaving them attached to the model. now, I know in many cases that the parts would get in the way of your other fittings and measuring etc. but there's also something that gives an enormous sense of satisfaction by keeping all of the parts off to the side until every last one is finished and when that is done, THEN and only then will you assemble the model in its entirety as if the kit came with all of the parts ready to be installed. then you can sit down with your screwdriver sets and nut drivers and tiny wrenches, and lay out the assembly mat, and place all the parts in their own cups/holders and assemble the miniature model for the last time. It simply HAS to be done that way, to make it feel like it was done right, to get that sense of satisfaction, the engineering feeling of everything having its place and organized, ready to be assembled and placed in such a way so it can be admired and appreciated for its beauty and complexity and to show off your skills that made such a model possible in the first place, because it certainly wasn't complete when you got it, you had to make the parts needed PLUS you even modified it, putting you own personal touch to it, making it a showcase of your skills to improve upon what was provided! Looking forward to seeing all of the remaining work you're doing to this model, especially the final assembly!
I felt the 'ouch' when the brass thread problem occurred! More super work Joe - brass is so satisfying although when this small still quite a challenge. Project sure is coming along beautifully. :)
Greetings Chris,, nice to see you commenting about, Take care and cheers my friend!
Hey! I try and watch a few channels when I can - my shop time these days is about zero and so no videos - age is a nasty devil!
I learn so much about fixturing from you that I’ll always be grateful and am far more creative about it myself as a result.
Stay dry.
Joe you now are responsible for me UNLOOSNING all manor of screws and bolts i think it is fantastic others don't and that is what i like about it ill be Unloosening all sorts of stuff love it
I started using that word,just to irritate some people. I think it should be added to Wikipedia.
@@jamesdavis8021 dam straight there mate it's fantastic see what Joe has done here
Great rainy day project Joe! These miniature machine shop pieces are so intricately beautiful, great for you to show us how to meet the challenges they do produce. Enjoyed very much, cheers!
By the way, thanks for showing the follow rest, it looks way simpler and smaller than my diiy'er .
As an English fellow might say, Brilliant. Thanks for sharing. Cheers
Nice to see the pros have little learning curves too!
Great work as always! Keep it up
I could hear the crash of the broken piece against the wall as well as the numerous blue words that were spoken after you unloosened the remainder from the collet. Thanks for sharing.
I edited out a few expletives', but I save all the left over parts.
Thank you for your knowledge and insight on this amazing project
I can always cut it off at the end if it's in the way.....did you mean un-lengthen it ?
Lovely brass turning (I LOVE turning brass... such a nice material). turning
Me too!
Seeing the failures is extremely instructive. Seeing your plan and the making this part more than any other video demonstrates how the loads and forces can catch you if not very careful.
Unloosen, love it! Great to know your smiling Joe and thankyou very much for the vids, stay safe Dude. TFS, GB :)
"It is raining so hard outside I could probably walk across the parking lot and never touch the ground!" Well heck Joe, we all know you are Godlike at machining but no need to flex your other abilities. 😁
I appreciate you showing the fails, we tend to learn more from our failures than our success' and not always in an intuitive way. Thank you for sharing.
Nice job joe, apart from the little mishap the follow rest was a good idea. Machining brass is always satisfying and looks good as a contrast to the aluminium. The brass hinges you made make a big difference to the appearance. Probably end up being the best shaper ever made.
Thanks.
I want to be happy with it and know its the best I could do, but ultimately, we all come up with things we would do differently if we did it again.
I think your method of threading left to right,is one of the best pieces of knowledge you have shared.
I did however,make a modification to my lathe to eliminate the possibility of crashing the carriage.My machine has a jog button that I never use so, I replaced it with a selector switch that locks out forward rotation of the spindle,as a extra layer of protection for myself and my lathe.It just makes me more comfortable,knowing that I can’t possibly crash the carriage at a high rate of speed.
Jog buttons are good for metric carriage threading positioning and for large surface contact form tool cuts. I used to use the one on my Victor 1640 all the time.
@@joepie221 I avoid metric threads like the plague because, I would have to change gearing in the headstock. I once owned a 6x24 Atlas.Although it was a good learning tool, I swore I would never own a lathe without a quick change gearbox again.🤣
Thanks for the bonus footage, I was going to ask about it if you didn’t provide it.
Hi Joe, that is a very elegant way to hold the screw assembly.
nice video
Rich
Always a pleasure to watch your craftsmanship! Nice to know you are human. Mistakes are always happening.
Thanks Joe
Thanks Joe, always appreciate and look forward to seeing your videos. really appreciate the setup tips and tricks you always take time to share for your viewers. Take it ez brother god bless.
Sweet video Joe. The tooling and fixtures are brilliant. The shaper is coming along nicely. Thank you.
Definitely a win. Apart from the lessons learnt watching your videos it's a pleasure to hear the joy in your voice when you are pleased with the results.
The mistakes are an integral part of any process. It does not seem possible for us to learn without failing. But if I check my facebook feed, there are no mistakes. And if I live on facebook, where no mistakes occur, I will soon believe that any mistake is a failure, and thus will never dare to try anything I do not already know how to do.
Mistakes are part of being successful, it's how we learn. The failure is in not even trying. So thanks for showing the mistakes, helping me keep in mind that my facebook feed isn't reality.
Beautiful. Glad you are getting some good rain.
Excellent work as usual.Thank you Joe.We need the rain here.
Lovely work!
Another great vid and pick up some tips as always! Thanks Joe!
Love the miniature steady rest. May have to copy that!
Beautifully done Joe!
Glad you liked it!
Nice assembly nugget’s ! Bravo 👍
Thank you Joe for another great and informative video.
Awesome build and again a video PACKED with lessons…tks for sharing
Glad you enjoyed it Chuck. Thanks for stopping by.
Fantastic work, as always. Joe, your dedication and commitment really shines through.
I love your fixture work, a great way to hold a tapered part.
Impressive work. Like the work holding, particularly for fixing the bevel gear.
Always a pleasure to watch yours video! Thanks!
Elegant solutions. Thanks for sharing!
Beautiful workmanship and very nice techniques. Thanks.
very good video joe..thanks for your time
You are amazing Joe, the detail at which you are able to work is to me unreal although thirty years ago maybe???. Thanks for another great video!
9:00 - I've never seen material deliberately moved in a spindle collet while the spindle is running. I don't think it would ever have occurred to me to try that. No blood, no flaming debris, I guess that goes in the trick tool box too.
Only lever type closers will permit that, but I do it all the time. Be careful inserting material into a spinning collet. It has to be very coaxial or it may have a tendency to helicopter and hurt you.
Thanks for the video.
Beautiful work Joe!! I just wanted to mention that I was impressed with your "1-72" work! The smallest screws I ever had to deal with while I was working was 0-80 x 0.125" S.S. socket caps. Don't blink or they're gone...LOL
The look exactly like mouse poop. Actually, mouse poop may be bigger. :)
Thanks for sharing 👍
What! You didn't single point the internal threads!? LOL, great job as always Joe! Can't wait for the next part. I look forward to these videos all week
Thank you so much for sharing this journey and your knowledge with us.
Nice job, Joe...and great recovery from the "unexpected." Rain was nice. Cool front even nicer.
Yay! I feel like a kid eagerly waiting for the next episode of knight rider or magnum p.i, always happy when it lands! Thanks Joe!
Great job Joe. Good techniques that can be used elsewhere.
Absolutely!
again, Lots to smile about Joe.
Makes the point of how important fixtures are in machining parts...often taking more time than the part its self.
NICE WORK
It's looking beautiful. Brass is such lovely material! But so expensive these days 😪
Awesome recovery..
I can walk on water too, but you have taught me heaps. Thanks Joe
Being that I work on a boat, I walk on water as well. To bad my tools don't float.
Well worth staying on for the bonus clips, thanks Joe!! Its a great mini project, but its not mini in any shape of the word!!!
Good luck from Spain!!
Always inspiring Sir..
Be more than happy to take any of that rain that you don’t want up here in Northern Calif. 😉 !
I enjoy all your videos. Thanks !
Loving these videos; I’m gonna be sad when you’ve got the whole mini machine shop built!
When he's done, he is going to have a fully operational, steam driven, line shaft shop on his desk in the office.
@@kyfho47 Nah! Then he's going to build the micro-mini version to sit on the mini office desk in the diarama he's going to make for this series of mini machines.
You get all that? Joe? You still there? 👍🇨🇦🍌
No, he will have to build the steam engine and boiler. Looking forward to that!
@@bruceanderson9461 he already built a steam engine. I believe it was the first model. It's possible he might go and build the larger one that BH has just finished but I don't know for sure. Let's leave it for him to decide our fate. As to what we get to see. Personally, I'm just yankin' his chain.
Well done; thanks Joe.
Thanks again Joe, enjoyed as always! I've been watching since way before the models, and learned a lot from you! Cheers bud!
Very enjoyable once again, thank you
Ya gotta love brass!!!
I like working with it.
Hey Joe, Nice tricks to remember.
Awesome job as usual Joe.
Thank you.
Combination lock is getting closer ...😀
Like 340! Another rewarding job, Joe! Thank for sharing!!
"I could probably walk across the parking lot and never touch the ground"
-Jesus
Love it Joe! Keep doing God's work!
I saw some great tips. Hopefully I learned those great tips. Thanks.
beautiful, thanks for sharing
We’re the winners here 👍👍😎👍👍.
No problem is unsurmountable, for the trully inventive mind👍
very nice
I particularly enjoyed the speeded up curse at 16:28 🤣
Coming along great. Not too much longer before it becomes a shaper.
20:21 You can always cut it off if it isn't too long enough 🤣🤣🤣 Greetings Joe from Suffolk, England. Sorry, I couldn't resist. We have a lot of similar local sayings to bamboozle those from elsewhere 😉
Appreciate leaving the mistake because tbh the hole time you was threading that tiny ass 6-40 I was mind blown i struggled with a 10-24 once about 2 inches long took three try’s at about .002 per pass
looks like those radii in that impossible feature really weren't a problem after all.
Great video as always, Joe. I do not have a follow rest for my South Bend. And they seem to be selling for as if they were made from unobtainium (or I might just be cheap) - what would you say is the limit of using phenolic as a DIY substitute?
Awesome Job...!
Hey, The contrast of the shiny brass and satin aluminum are always a pleasure to the eye for sure. That first 'damn' thread confirms your human side eh. We all get them now and then to confirm our humility as a reminder eh. No problem, , , 2nd one's a charm eh, LOL. I have a loupe I use on coins but never considered it for machining. Thanks for yet one more tip. The designers of this project have points from me as with you for executing their thoughts and wishes. Our news was showing the flooding around and in Dallas. Are you affected as well ? If so I/we are thinking bout you and yours my friend. Take care eh.
“Looks like a little Stanley Cup Trophy”. LOL, I thought the same thing just before you said it.
Awesome 👍
Like Nigel said. "So, so"!
Joe you never cease to amaze. Beautiful work despite the SNAFU. Good thing your follow rest was capable of being alternatively set up. I'm assuming that's a "home built" follow rest. Some more detailed video as to how it's made would be educational when you're looking for an alternative subject one day.
Thanks for what you do.
Regards from Canada's banana belt. 🤔🇺🇲💩🤞🕊️🇺🇦🍌🇨🇦👍.
Second this, that follow is brilliant. All of my machines are like a billion years old and not a single one of them has a follow rest so that’s definitely on my project list already.
See his video, "Extended Small Diameter Threading Using a DIY Follow Rest."
Don't feel bad about the thread messing up the best make errors,Abom had one mess up on him sometime back.
Joe Pie Has a Calibrated Eye pick's up a mic now -n- then Just to confirm what his Eye already Told Him !!!! Nice Job Mr. Pie
New game for the next Bash: Beat Joe Pie centering up a part held vertically in the mill!
Another win
Joe, one question about something I noticed; you never seem to tap your workpiece in the vice to the parallel's used. Can you explain why you do so? Thank you Joe! All the best, Job