Craziest Setup Ever
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- Опубліковано 31 бер 2022
- I had a part to make that required an absolutely CRAZY setup and I couldn't help but share. Hopefully you see something you've never seen before. Enjoy!
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As you all know, I strive to have the most educational BS on UA-cam. I hope you see something in this video that you can use in the future. Thanks for watching!
Most of these are groaners, but this was actually pretty clever and actually useful. Well done!
Have you seen This Old Tony's video for today? Technically true is the best kind of true.
You had to lift a rotab and a vice! The joke , i believe is on you ;-)
Funny. I had the exact same thought.
For the life of me I will never understand why public education does not combine trigonometry and shop class. Not just trig, several forms of algebra are pretty tough for kids to pick up the first time they are introduced. I had a love for math from early on, but the day I discovered setting the compound at 60 gave that dial a resolution 10x of the carriage, something just clicked for me. The two fields are inextricably linked, the lathe is the ultimate practical application of trigonometry. I think a lot of kids that have difficulty with theory would have the same click and it would all suddenly make sense. My nephews are young, I'll have to get back to you on how well that works
I’ve been using Oscar Had A Heap Of Apples for SIN COS TAN for about 40 years now. Curious if others use that one. Thanks for pumping out the tips regularly. Always useful.
You topped Tony with this one! Enjoyed your "travesty".
Oh I don't know. His was pretty compelling. Great soundtrack too.
I was having a bad day until i saw this video. Love your humor sir. That’s an automatic SUBSCRIBE and like.
Thank you very much! Glad I could turn that frown upside down.
that was wild.youve got me convinced on collets
Go ER40, you'll be glad you did.
@@jagboy69 what is the advantage of er 40 over er32
Just an idea for more accurately locating the hole... If you had additional material, you could make a hole for a tooling ball and use it to pick up locations. Then face off the additional material along with the hole for the tooling ball.
Well played, Amigo. Well played.
Muchas arigato, mein ami!
I think the trick with those ratcheting wrenches is the direction you're going to be pulling is the direction the open end of the wrench is canted towards. If that makes any sense...
Oh I'm going to check that as soon as I can. That's good stuff!
Interesting. Thanks for the tip!
@@StuartdeHaro Hope it helps. I had to put some thought into it because I'm using one to close my milling vice at the moment and I was starting to go insane.
That's.... quite the setup. Thanks for sharing and happy April fool's!
Yup. Now I get to tear it all down. Totally worth it though!
Damn that was just as informative as it was hilarious! Well done! 👌
good one..
I need to watch this one a few more times
Please do.
BTW, for those who don't know, units of measure are critical to a good machinist staying in tolerance.
Most assume that a hair is only 0.1016 mm (imperial .004") thick, but you know how assumptions go.😁
On average yes, but I've got some pretty thick, luxurious hair. Some real powerful follicles up there.
Man, you had me until right at the end.
“WTF is this lunatic actually making?” I was thinking. Turns out the answer was in fact, “all of the lulz…”
The fact that I am coming away from this video slightly more clued in than I started it is an extremely excellent thing. But still, damn you 🤣
Exactly the reaction I was looking for! Thanks for the well-deserved damning.
I can’t believe you couldn’t have been an easier way to clamp that part down and just drill that
Did you watch all the way to the end? If not, check the publication date of the video.
I suppose I'm one of the only Machinists who has never run a Bridgeport. I constantly see this complaint arise of too little z in the envelope. I've seen that some guys stick like a 10-in spacer in the column. With as often as this comes up, why doesn't everybody buy one with the extension? What downsides are there? Presumably the quill still only has 6 in or so of travel. I have a homemade machine, it also has about 6 in of travel. But the horizontal boom can be moved up and down anywhere on the 7-ft column. Is the main column in the Bridgeport just the Large hollow casting? I guess I'm trying to understand the design choice trade-offs, I've often heard the Bridgeport talked about like it's a Swiss army knife, capable of anything if not doing so excellently
The strength of the Bridgeport mill is its versatility. It's big enough to do a lot of parts. The head can be angled in many different ways. The ram can be moved in or out. The turret can be rotated. There are the various accessory head that can be put on the back of the ram. It's not the biggest or most rigid machine out there, but it can be used for a tremendous number of jobs. I rarely run out of room on the mill. I don't feel like the riser block is necessary and in fact, it can be counter productive. It decreases rigidity even further and you can run out of room on the upper end of the knee travel trying to get smaller parts high enough. The quill has 5" of travel, btw.
I was thinking this was going to be a jig for grinding some kind of cutting tool. Couldn't figure out what the holes were going to do...
Hopefully it was entertaining nonetheless.
@@StuartdeHaro Absolutely entertaining, I totally enjoyed the show!!!
But if you have a Deckel like mine, you don't need rotary table, angle plate and all that other stuff :-)
Ahh, but alas mon ami, I do not. Deckels are somewhat rare near me. You see the Pantographs every now and then, but rarely anything else.
One must really be vested in a joke to go to the trouble of tilting the head on their Bridgeport. They're a PITA to tram, and the only thing worse is to change the nod angle on the head which I notice didn't happen.
What can I say? I'm dedicated to the craft.
Good one, I was wondering through out the video, what is the purpose of the finished product.😁
I am legitimately concerned about the high number of viewers who don't watch all the way through.
Have you ever done the recalculation to first angle when the part is tipped to a compound angle . 👍
Nope.
@@StuartdeHaro Care to try?
@@jdmccorful I don't know. Seems hard. Lazy is so much better than hard.
@@StuartdeHaro agreed.
@@StuartdeHaro I don't even think there is an on line convertor . It will catch out most people when tool grinding !
Rick rolled by UA-cam... lol
Just our of curiosity, did the Rick Roll actually work?
@@StuartdeHaro I got to the very end before I realized what was going on... lol
Can I use this part to make Espresso?
As long as you're good with it tasting like Tap Magic, sure.
You left us hanging! Did the holes connect in the perfect v groove? Face it off and show your work :)
They did connect although the first hole was drilled way deeper than it needed to be.
lolz
What size is your rotary table and what would be the max size of rotary table one should go on a BP?
Mine is a 12". We have a 15" Bridgeport brand rotab at the college that easily weighs 250 lbs. You don't have much room to move the table with it on there, so I'd say that's probably the biggest. Personally the 12" is the biggest I ever want to handle alone. I need to build a crane if I'm going to use it again.
@@StuartdeHaro I just acquired a mill and a rotab just like yours came with it. I gave it away. I have a 10" and that will have to do. I am not lifting no 12".
@@J0Gu7 I don't blame you in the slightest. The reason I haven't put out another video is because I don’t want to lift that rotary table again.