Sometimes The Repair is Better Than the Original........Drop the Mic...

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  • Опубліковано 26 кві 2024
  • This video documents the solution for the base receiver to lead screw misalignment. The final product looks great. Take a Look !!
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  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 160

  • @Rustinox
    @Rustinox 17 днів тому +2

    That's indeed a very creative solution.
    And you're right. The repair is better than the original.

  • @johnmeissner8715
    @johnmeissner8715 17 днів тому +6

    Having been a scale replicator in wood, I can fully appreciate your expertise in handling metal pieces. You are a master!

    • @joepie221
      @joepie221  17 днів тому +1

      Thanks. Lots of practice. :)

  • @stumccabe
    @stumccabe 17 днів тому +2

    Your solution to the problem with the boss worked beautifully. Thanks Joe.

  • @deangdmppajj4692
    @deangdmppajj4692 16 днів тому +2

    Thanks for another great video. God should have had someone like you around when he was designing human beings ❤

  • @MPenzlin
    @MPenzlin 16 днів тому +1

    Nice to watch somebody, who knows how to do things. Great tricks.

  • @johndevries8759
    @johndevries8759 17 днів тому +3

    Nice attention to detail as usual but it's what we expect from you Joe. Thanks for sharing. J

  • @TheAyrCaveShop
    @TheAyrCaveShop 17 днів тому +2

    Wow better than the original cast boss.. The brass nut insert looks awesome !

  • @AmateurRedneckWorkshop
    @AmateurRedneckWorkshop 17 днів тому +2

    I think you always make them better when you build them. Thanks for the video keep on keeping on.

  • @WildmanTech
    @WildmanTech 17 днів тому +2

    Almost all of my repairs are better than the original. However, I have also created chain-reaction breakages from overbuilding the replacement parts.

  • @raymondhorvatin1050
    @raymondhorvatin1050 17 днів тому +2

    Graet repair can't tell it wasn't original thanks for sharing

    • @joepie221
      @joepie221  17 днів тому

      Thanks. Thats a great compliment when something looks like it belongs there.

  • @cccook4819
    @cccook4819 16 днів тому +2

    Do you want a 74 year old apprentice, another great video.

  • @user-de8bu5es6f
    @user-de8bu5es6f 17 днів тому +1

    OK Joe, my hat is now getting vertically challanged and I conceed that your solution justifies more self pride than welding a blob onto the casting and milling it back to be dimensionally true.
    I am inspired as usual.

  • @jdmccorful
    @jdmccorful 10 днів тому

    Always enjoy your work arounds. Thanks for your time and skills!

  • @claybair4904
    @claybair4904 17 днів тому +1

    Lots of experience is obvious all the mistakes of the past opens the eyes to make the job better and quicker

  • @cyclingbutterbean
    @cyclingbutterbean 17 днів тому

    Once again , proof that anything can be repaired or reengineered. Well done Joe!

  • @roadshowautosports
    @roadshowautosports 15 днів тому

    I’m so proud of you, uncle Pie!
    I remember when you were just a little boy, asking me everything about machining, now look at you being a big UA-cam sensation!!!
    😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
    It doesn’t hurt to wish!
    Excellent video and, as always, with real world explanation on why do you do things the way you do!
    Thank you very much for sharing your vast knowledge with us poor mortals!

  • @mrc1539
    @mrc1539 14 днів тому

    100% right the fix does look a lot better than the original ! Thanks for the lesson on how to turn an “Ah Sh$$ “to an “AWESOME “ 😉 !

  • @grntitan1
    @grntitan1 17 днів тому +1

    100% better than the plans.

  • @ypaulbrown
    @ypaulbrown 17 днів тому +2

    Joe, You Are The Man......thank you so much for sharing your knowledge, Paul in Central Florida

    • @joepie221
      @joepie221  17 днів тому

      Thanks for watching Paul. Always good to see a comment from ya.

  • @stevebosun7410
    @stevebosun7410 16 днів тому +1

    Well done Joe, or should I say, "the master of expedient modification".

  • @TheUncleRuckus
    @TheUncleRuckus 17 днів тому +1

    Man it seems like there is a lot more porosity to that surface than there was when you initially milled it! I kept thinking it was dirt.
    That was certainly an elegant solution to the misalignment of the lead screw. 👍👍

  • @GrandadTinkerer
    @GrandadTinkerer 17 днів тому +1

    Nice video Joe, as always.
    Over here in the UK, I used to work in an electrical engineering company.
    The material that you used for the lathe jig, was known to us as 'Tufnol', which was actually a trade name for SRBF (Synthetic Resin Bonded Fibre). We used to us a cheaper cousin of this material - SRBP (Synthetic Resin Bonded Paper) that we incorrectly called 'bakelite'.
    Useless fact of the day:
    Ford in the UK and Germany, used an SRBF gear in the valve timing set in V6 engines. This was done to reduce noise. Apparently, if you replace the gear with a steel one, the engine will whine like a Karen...

    • @petemclinc
      @petemclinc 17 днів тому

      Yes, I've seen gears made from this material to be a sacrificial, wear item cheaper to
      replace than the mating components.

    • @andystopps
      @andystopps 17 днів тому

      @@petemclinc Harrison used one in the leadscrew gear train, I'm not sure why, possibly sacrificial in case of a jamb-up.

    • @user-de8bu5es6f
      @user-de8bu5es6f 17 днів тому

      All 4 facts perfectly true.
      .

  • @aaronhammond7297
    @aaronhammond7297 17 днів тому +2

    I'm a bit surprised you didn't drill that out before screwing it in to avoid the hole in the base, given it was possible once it was a separate part.

  • @danielfilion225
    @danielfilion225 17 днів тому

    My god Joe is there anything you can't do in a machine shop.
    Beautiful

  • @72chevelle156
    @72chevelle156 14 днів тому +2

    I ask myself "what would Joe Pie do ?" all the time .

    • @joepie221
      @joepie221  13 днів тому +1

      I'm flattered. Thank you.

    • @fxm5715
      @fxm5715 11 днів тому +1

      I think I'll make a shop sign reminder for that,

  • @matthewfort3740
    @matthewfort3740 День тому

    Nice way for the fix Joe

  • @ChrisB257
    @ChrisB257 17 днів тому +1

    Extra work yes - but, for sure this is definitely way more sophisticated now and super job on the knee leadscrew - great result Joe. :)

  • @thomasbraeking6225
    @thomasbraeking6225 17 днів тому +1

    What surprised me is that Joe didn't make the head of the bushing a "tombstone" shape to match the lug with an 'anti-rotation' flat.
    It only would have taken another day of set-up and machining to blend into the lug profile. 😁

    • @joepie221
      @joepie221  17 днів тому +1

      I considered it, but have never seen anything but round bronze bushings under a bridgeport table for the knee screw.

  • @StuartsShed
    @StuartsShed 17 днів тому +1

    Beautiful work - and a very effective and elegant solution to the boss. Definitely better than the original. Goes without saying (but I'll say it anyway) as to the genius of the support tool for threading / parting. I made one using small bearings but it really doesn't work very well - a simpler guide like yours supports better.

  • @sevenninthsfabmachine
    @sevenninthsfabmachine 16 днів тому +1

    Hey Joe, would love a short video about why you finished that pocket conventional on one side but climb milling on the other. Good stuff. Thanks!

  • @Radiotexas
    @Radiotexas 17 днів тому +2

    You are amazing my friend!

  • @QuinnQ-ry8lg
    @QuinnQ-ry8lg 17 днів тому

    "Doing what you can, with what you got." Great looking solution to that issue! 👍

  • @quinntalley1681
    @quinntalley1681 15 днів тому

    Always a joy to watch your work, with or without unloosening something :-)

  • @jimrichey5919
    @jimrichey5919 17 днів тому +2

    I have a 18 inch shaper in my shop.. the table lift screw sticks out the bottom of the machine almost a foot when all the way down. So I had to drill and sleeve the floor so it had room to go down.

  • @dzolotas
    @dzolotas 17 днів тому +1

    Wonderful! By far better than the original.

  • @mech023
    @mech023 17 днів тому +1

    looks much better than the origional part

  • @PATRICK-zj9xb
    @PATRICK-zj9xb 15 днів тому

    Hi Joe, another enjoyable video. I've started a book, I've titled it "Joe's Jigs and Setup Tips" I try to add something with every video of yours that I watch! Learning while watching is a great thing, keep 'em coming! I'll keep watching!!

  • @Dagonius.
    @Dagonius. 17 днів тому

    Beautifully solved!
    Great idea with the sand blasting, too!

  • @bcbloc02
    @bcbloc02 5 днів тому

    Nice work around.😎

  • @rchristie5401
    @rchristie5401 16 днів тому

    Beautiful to watch!!!

  • @BarryLitherland
    @BarryLitherland 17 днів тому +2

    impressive, as usual. Cheers!

  • @redgum1340
    @redgum1340 17 днів тому +2

    Very nice.

  • @russellmcclenning9607
    @russellmcclenning9607 17 днів тому

    Another great video from the master thank you Joe .

  • @jamesciampi6392
    @jamesciampi6392 17 днів тому

    You always amaze me,You the man!

  • @arminloesch2652
    @arminloesch2652 17 днів тому +1

    Beautiful!
    Work of art.

  • @angelramos-2005
    @angelramos-2005 16 днів тому

    Great fix,Joe.Thank you.

  • @be007
    @be007 17 днів тому

    i love it when a plan comes together...
    cheers
    ben.

  • @Rheasound
    @Rheasound 17 днів тому +1

    straight out of the park!

  • @alanrichardson1672
    @alanrichardson1672 17 днів тому +1

    Fantastic stuff as usual, thanks for your efforts.

  • @edwardaloftis6705
    @edwardaloftis6705 17 днів тому +2

    That was cool.

  • @TrPrecisionMachining
    @TrPrecisionMachining 15 днів тому

    very good job Mr Joe Pie

  • @ianhand4845
    @ianhand4845 16 днів тому

    Another fantastic tutorial from the master. Thanks from Australia

  • @ghl3488
    @ghl3488 17 днів тому +1

    B E A utiful work Joe. Thanks for the video. Regards from Wales

  • @patrickmazzone9066
    @patrickmazzone9066 17 днів тому +1

    Good thinking nice fix excellent

  • @djhscorp
    @djhscorp 17 днів тому +1

    Great channel

  • @mperry9025
    @mperry9025 17 днів тому +1

    Thanks Joe

  • @bobtorrence3461
    @bobtorrence3461 16 днів тому

    Love your attention to detail and the extra mile you take to improve look and functionality of these models. I hope the guys from PM Research are paying attention and giving some form of compensation in return for the improvement ideas! Great work!

    • @joepie221
      @joepie221  16 днів тому

      Thanks, I hope so too!

  • @mikemarriam
    @mikemarriam 17 днів тому

    As always a great lesson in fixturing and shop pra😊ctice. Thanks much Joe.

  • @mog5858
    @mog5858 16 днів тому

    keep up the good work.

  • @jobkneppers
    @jobkneppers 17 днів тому +1

    Joe, I'm drinking a beer watching your video as always with pleasure. I see that you made a nice plug on your cnc, just as I would too and made a nice brass/bronze insert. I took a sip and then the bushing was gone. Is this the beer or back to the future I'm experiencing? A moment later; the bushing is back? What happened? Ghost in the shop? Thank you Joe. 25% Polak, so a beer comes with the upbringing 🙂 And why does the spindle protrude out? I think it's historical. A lot of the older machines dropped down below the deck so the concrete slab underneath was made to it. All the best Joe! How to learn machining? Check out Joe Pie's channel!

  • @soundmaster1966
    @soundmaster1966 17 днів тому +1

    Hello Joe! 12:26 A lefthand thread? I missed the reason for this. As always great work and a superior solution for the kits imperfections. Cheers Ulf

  • @howder1951
    @howder1951 17 днів тому +1

    Thanks for the vid Joe , my big take-away is that phenolic support for the follow rest, brilliant, as most jobs are tiny like yours and simplicity is golden! Cheers!

    • @joepie221
      @joepie221  17 днів тому

      Thank you. That follow rest makes it an easy task.

  • @davidkarath6549
    @davidkarath6549 17 днів тому

    Luv that phenolic follow rest...have to make one...5*s

  • @christurley391
    @christurley391 17 днів тому +1

    Thanks again

  • @skwyrz1
    @skwyrz1 17 днів тому

    Nice work and a great video.

  • @James-fs4rn
    @James-fs4rn 17 днів тому

    👍 great idea making the new lug. I probably would have made it a press fit and had another mess.🙂

  • @user-sr2gk2op1u
    @user-sr2gk2op1u 14 днів тому

    Awesome!

  • @Stefan_Boerjesson
    @Stefan_Boerjesson 17 днів тому

    Great rescue. I didn't guess doing it like that. A similar part is needed for tensioning the chain in the chainsaw. It bottoms out too early.

  • @JustinAlexanderBell
    @JustinAlexanderBell 17 днів тому

    That's what I figured you'd do, looks fantastic.

  • @ellieprice363
    @ellieprice363 17 днів тому

    I love it. That Micarta follow rest is perfect for preventing deflection.

  • @zipi551
    @zipi551 17 днів тому

    As always you are the best.
    Greetings from Algeria

    • @joepie221
      @joepie221  17 днів тому

      Thank you. Greetings from Austin Texas USA.

    • @zipi551
      @zipi551 17 днів тому

      @@joepie221 I hope I will be lucky one day and have the honor of learning from you.
      Best wishes to you, dear sir, and thank you for the informations you share.

  • @petemclinc
    @petemclinc 17 днів тому

    I can't wait to see how you go about scraping and flaking the dovetails...

  • @paulsotheron710
    @paulsotheron710 17 днів тому +1

    Great recovery. 👍 25:53

    • @joepie221
      @joepie221  17 днів тому

      Thanks. Every failure is an opportunity to grow.

  • @steveallarton98
    @steveallarton98 17 днів тому

    Thanks Joe,
    I’ve got to single-point a 2.0mm ( 079” ) thread on a stainless part, BUT I’ll be making your adjustable steady fixture, first !
    Kind regards,
    Steve A.

  • @devmeistersuperprecision4155
    @devmeistersuperprecision4155 17 днів тому +2

    Interesting fix. I have seen a number of old full sized machines and this feature is generally not cast in the body but separate. I have also seen a hole in the base to accept the lead screw for clearance. Kudos on a great fix but also a fix making the model more realistic. Nice Job Loe.

  • @MrEh5
    @MrEh5 17 днів тому +1

    Lots of bubbles in that casting.

  • @Gauge1LiveSteam
    @Gauge1LiveSteam 15 днів тому

    Nice fix. That feature will draw attention.

    • @joepie221
      @joepie221  14 днів тому

      Thanks. I have something special in mind for the spindle too.

  • @dzarren
    @dzarren 17 днів тому

    Hi Joe, can you please go over the advantages and disadvantages of using a center drill vs a spot drill when starting a hole, either in the mill or lathe (or drill press)?

  • @warrenjones744
    @warrenjones744 16 днів тому

    Did you happen to have a5-40 LH tap? or did you buy it for this job? I have know about fixtures and used them all my life. However....since I started watching you build these models I look at fixtures in a whole different light. You sir are the Fixture Guru! That follow rest is pure genius. Bravo Zulu!

  • @stevenaegele5228
    @stevenaegele5228 16 днів тому +1

    Just drill a hole in the baseboard to receive the screw, that way you get full table travel. That's my guess on the length.

    • @joepie221
      @joepie221  16 днів тому +2

      The unthreaded section of the shaft, the length of the present thread, the overall length of the shaft and the relative position of the spur gear to the shaft end, all need to be coordinated to get the maximum table travel. Simply drilling hole in the baseboard won't deliver the same result.

  • @nathanwrobel5534
    @nathanwrobel5534 14 днів тому

    Great way to repair! I can not tell how the knee screw thrust is retained but it looks like when lifting the knee the thrust load is applied to the gears causing it to “tap” at every tooth.

  • @jacqueso8424
    @jacqueso8424 17 днів тому

    Would be one heck of a job if that mill had to be 1:87 scale. Judging by what you were creating the size would be in the 1:40 to 1: 50 region on scale more or less. Great videos on these models. For me its a must watch😅 at all times jus in case i need some tool or setup gem. Thank you an keep them coming. Be blessed and safe🙂

  • @TomokosEnterprize
    @TomokosEnterprize 17 днів тому

    Hello Joe. What would we do without fixtures and jigs in our trade. Retired now and still every once in a while I still use them on a friends lathe and mill. I really like this one for threading I am going to make one for his Bday. Well my friend, You've done it again. Nicely I might add. See you next post eh.

  • @helmutzollner5496
    @helmutzollner5496 17 днів тому

    Great Job!
    So, how will you get the lead screw for the knee to fit into the space alotted?
    Didn't quite catch why it could be shortened?

  • @stuartkorte1642
    @stuartkorte1642 17 днів тому

    Put on 6” casters (scale) 😊

  • @voodoochild1954
    @voodoochild1954 17 днів тому +1

    Joe you really make that look easy, which I know it isn’t. Another beautiful job! Quick question, when you tapped that left hand thread in the brass bushing I noticed you didn’t use any tap fluid, oil, anchor lube, etc. Was that because it was so small or because it was brass?

    • @joepie221
      @joepie221  17 днів тому +1

      I brushed the tap with WD-40 off camera.

  • @Preso58
    @Preso58 17 днів тому

    Much more betterer now. Do the people at PM Research act on any issues you find with the drawings or the castings?
    Regards, Preso

  • @jamesdavis8021
    @jamesdavis8021 17 днів тому

    I suppose the original machines allowed the lead screw to protrude through the base because,most machine shops had wood floors.No big deal to drill a hole through the floor 😂

  • @glennmoreland6457
    @glennmoreland6457 16 днів тому

    Good
    ☹️🇬🇧

  • @markfoggy9933
    @markfoggy9933 17 днів тому

    Great work as always, but how did you create the accurate radii on the plug.? It feels like a very long setup in a rotary table just to allow ease of with the pocket..

    • @robinhumphries5743
      @robinhumphries5743 17 днів тому

      The plug he made on his CNC mill? It probably took longer to model it in his CAD software than to actually machine it on the mill.

    • @joepie221
      @joepie221  17 днів тому

      It was a CNC part.

  • @GrahamY1970
    @GrahamY1970 17 днів тому

    Fantastic work. You mention that you use a blast cabinet, but what grit size do you use to blend the small parts?

    • @joepie221
      @joepie221  17 днів тому

      #6 glass bead. Fine white media.

  • @Laz_Arus
    @Laz_Arus 17 днів тому

    It's not often that a screw-up turns out successful. It did in this case. 👍

  • @JohnBare747
    @JohnBare747 17 днів тому

    I hate seeing that porosity in the casting as it looks like it had a bad case of Acne in it's youth, but the machining to this point is gorgeous, going to be a stunning little trophy in the end.

  • @joell439
    @joell439 17 днів тому

    👍👍😎👍👍 Smooth

  • @LifetimeinWelding
    @LifetimeinWelding 16 днів тому

    Did you get any feedback from the raw casting manufacturers to how the lower bracket was so far out of alignment? Nifty little fix Just as well you went to all the trouble of milling the tiny cupboard in the pedestal.

  • @howardosborne8647
    @howardosborne8647 17 днів тому +1

    It does seem that someone in the drawing office didn't do their homework on component relationships before signing the drawings off.

  • @jackpledger8118
    @jackpledger8118 17 днів тому +1

    Joe, Always enjoy your videos, but is your shop located on a drag strip? Interesting audio.

    • @JustinAlexanderBell
      @JustinAlexanderBell 17 днів тому

      I swear everyone is getting a louder more obnoxious muffler these days, can't find peace and quiet anywhere near a city.

    • @petemclinc
      @petemclinc 17 днів тому

      And what is that other annoying noise that sounds like a bird or something clanking up in
      the rafters?

  • @dennyskerb4992
    @dennyskerb4992 16 днів тому

    👍👍

  • @jamesagrinalds3111
    @jamesagrinalds3111 17 днів тому +1

    The ~1890's B&S No. 6 Horizontal Mill in my garage has an excessively long screw as well, so your prints are likely period correct. Not sure why the designers intended for the screw to be so long though.

    • @cpcoark
      @cpcoark 17 днів тому +2

      If I had to guess, they had a hole in the floor for the screw to drop through. The bottom wheel on large diameter bandsaws had the floor cut out for wheel clearance and maintain proper table height.

    • @andystopps
      @andystopps 17 днів тому +1

      I had a big horizontal mill of (unknown) German manufacture, flat belt drive so certainly pre 2nd, if not 1st World War, and this had the same feature. There was no way the design would have allowed for a shorter leadscrew. I had to chisel out a hole in the floor for it. Maybe this was a commonplace design feature in those days.

    • @jeremylastname873
      @jeremylastname873 17 днів тому

      You could maybe put it on a riser, but it would take a tall hand to run it.

  • @viictoralvarez4065
    @viictoralvarez4065 17 днів тому +1

    Maestro 😊