Hey viewers thanks for watching todays video from our machining shop! It's been a while since we got out the 12mm button insert 😂 What did you think of the before and after on this job? 😎👍 Subscribe and hit the bell icon to turn on notifications so you don't miss our weekly uploads. 👇 🤳 Follow us online here: Instagram instagram.com/cutting_edge_engineering Facebook facebook.com/cuttingedgeengineeringaustralia/ Official CEE Merch shop: www.ceeshop.com.au
Another great repair!! makes sense to weld up instead of replacing the shaft section if machine is just going to be used for a few months, I'm sure it will last along time anyway. When is the Shaper going to be moved into the shop? Looking forward to that one. I've got a 26" Shaper which I bought of a Engineering shop in Rockhampton QLD that closed down around 3yrs back. It come with some heavy duty tooling for internal keyways etc which I will never use. I could send them down to you if you wanted them as I would never use them doing Motorcycle repair. I live up at Gympie which isn't to far away.
How many times have you done a temporary fix, and then gone back there 6 months later and alter the rest of parts whatever they happen to be to be the same as your temporary repair😅
not to mention the superb music selections ... Karen is a natural at creating an award winning video doc. This lady is as talented as Kurtis ... what an awesome couple.
It’s so good to see a young guy with his own shop ... doing REAL WORK .... with REAL VALUES! Even though it’s a No Warranty repair you still went above and beyond.
bang on ... you hit that nail on the head .... Kurtis AND Karen give me hope for the future of mankind ... please have children K&K, keep that DNA line going.
Your camera work and editing is exceptional Karen! I love the hand held shots where you slowly walk into the scene, that really gives the viewer a strong sense of actually being there. Sometimes I feel like I should be handing Kurtis a caliper or patting Homeless.
Until I watched this channel I always thought welding was for joining metal together, I had no idea you could add material to where it was lost! Now I watch your videos and try to guess what you're going to do to fix whatever was brought to you. Thank you for sharing your work!
Wow! That''s really nice to hear something like that! I truly envy you and the more than overwehlming moment you had when you figured it out! Thanks for sharing this man, really! You help me keep some faith in humans after all! Welding is great and so is machining! Enjoy yourself and every new discoveries you make!
First thanks for making the video and showing it to me. Fortunately this was only a short, not too thick shaft. I once did a similar repair on a very large thick axle. Same problem, bearing stuck. I also welded this axle. I only did that welding on a lathe. Reason: I didn't want to stop welding and attached the welding torch to the support. Gives a much more regular weld. The reason the bearing got stuck was because the fit of the outer ring was too tight. I made sure that the outer ring had a loose fit and put pressure on the outer ring with a cup spring. The machine has never given a problem again.
At the start your safety officer is clearly very concerned that this job is too far gone to be repairable. Then right at the end the look of wonder and respect on his face is a picture. His sigh of relief is perfect.
@@jonka1 that's what I was thinking a while after I posted my comment but I could have been wrong so I thought it would be better off waiting on the answer. Thank you :)
I look forward to these weekly videos more than any other channel on UA-cam. I also like that you guys aren’t flooding the channel with videos everyday and instead just producing quality content.
Thanks to all three of you, Homeless for looking viciously cute, Karen for her excellent camera work and, of course Kurtis, for his frustrating expertise, including all the swear words. Real work, real life, real good. Thanks
Impressed with the steady hand accomplishing the welding on the rotator, Kurtis. Karen, great videography, as we are all accustomed to👍 Who's a good boy Homeless🧸
Just to be clear, the _only_ reason I watch these is to see Homeless. What a wonderful dog. He has such a great smile. I love the way he walks, happiness in motion. Homey makes the best dog noises I have ever heard. Lovely snorts, grunts, and gurgles. (The truth is, watching genius in action, Kurtis doing his work, is the highest joy. Homeless is simply the icing on the cake.)
From my time in the bearing business that was the first thing I thought of! Just never understood how customers would run a machine to total failure instead of having it fixed sooner (and cheaper)...
I'm not from an engineering background, so these vid's are fascinating. Curtis is cool, Homeless is class and the camera operator/director/editor does a great, if not anonymous job. Bravo! 👏
Hi Kurtis. I love watching your videos, As I like engineering. I would like to say I think your one of the best engineer I have seen on youtube. Because you explain everything you are doing, or the process you are going to do with anything that comes through your door.Just brilliant.
Been welding since 1998 and I worked in a machine shop for 8 years. I've done so much build up like this. I've never seen it done in this position. We were always able to turn the shaft into the horizontal position. Pretty cool to watch.
Got my CEE Australia cap and coffee mug recently Guys!!, thanks for that 👌🇦🇺,………glad to support You in some small way, and You Guys should be proud of everything You have accomplished with CEE,……A Proud Australian business!! 👍👌💪🇦🇺🇦🇺……go well and take care ☺️👍
Master class work. I’ve been binge watching the channel ever since I discovered it. Your work with a lathe is just simply impressive. I’m a millwright in the states (precision industrial mechanic) and by god this is the best channel I’ve seen in a long time that truly puts great effort into a quality repair.
I absolutely love your content. Karen is the best videographer on UA-cam, she seems to get into the details for Kurtis' masterful work and shows so much ofteh behind the scenes detail and all of the steps. It is fascinating. Homeless is such a joyful pup, always brightens my day to see him healthy and happy you are great examples of how humans need to be. I hope that "Yeah Buddy" was a shout out to Ronnie Coleman!
Curtis I don’t know where you learnt your Trade but to have those Turning and welding skills is pretty Unique. I am a Plater/Welder by trade in the UK, but have spent the last twenty years working for a commercial aircraft manufacturer because you go where the money is. I have not really welded at all in that time. Those days doing my apprenticeship were some of the most rewarding. Watching a project from start to finish and being involved with the installation. Building aircraft requires a different set of skills but you rarely folllow the product to the finally assembly line. I did mainly Mig and Stick back in the day for welding structural sections. I think I fancy doing more Tig welding and I think that’s where I going to concentrate my efforts, welding more stainless, Alu and exotic metals. More refined projects. Keep up the really good work mate. Always good to see proper skills in the real world.👍
It brings back great memories of cranking handles, watching chips roll off the cutting tool. Manual machines are so much more satisfying to operate than just pushing buttons and looking through a shield because you can feel the machine working with your hands.
I retired out of machine work after installing several CNC machines, doing the moving, electrical and electronic connections and just enough "watching time" to know they were properly installed. I had no desire to continue on without the manual machines.
I’ve never been this close to my lathe work and not have any hot ones down my shirt, in my ear or stuck to my nose. Enjoyed everything about this. Nice shop, tools, abilities, work ethic, videography, editing, sense of humor, but most of all the outtakes. Until I saw them, I thought this was the smoothest operation on the planet and now that I think of it-it is! Awesome work, both of you!
First question to mind on the start of the video was why not spray weld, answered in first minutes, second question that came to mind, where did the measurements/specification come from, answered a few minutes later. Thanks guys, Friday started off well.
Curtis, once again you have done what my dad always said. You made a silk purse out of a sow's ear. Bang up job! Right proper finish too. Always a joy to watch someone else work.......and wish I was still doing it. Cheers! Terry from South Carolina USA
Found this channel about a week ago, then thought to watch a video I have not seen before. And lo and behold this one pops up just as I finished, must be my lucky day. :-) Great channel, excellent skills, wonderful editing and the safety inspector is the cream on the cake.
@@vincenttrigg4521 You're right. The last time I found a channel I really enjoyed I binge watched every episode which took over a week, and now I have to wait for the next episode and it drives me crazy waiting. Have learned my lesson this time, to take it easy, and watch one or two when it takes my fancy. :-)
Always glad to see the STAR of the show "The Pup" is happy. You the Wife and the Pup are always a good show. Thank you for another great Video. Stay safe God bless.
Kurt you have save your customer a lot of money doing this repair shame on them for not doing the proper maintenance the repair is better than getting a new part and no warranty as it should be the damage was so severe. But you came to the rescue. Love the video, I can't wait for the video every Friday here in the states. Thanks take care.
I have 20 of these augers compactors that are in my service area. They are beasts on how hard they compact cardboard or trash. For a normal compactor used for cardboard a good load is 3 to 4 tons, put in a auger you'll get 8 or more in the same 40 yard box. These all have a automatic greasing system installed.
It can be a stress for a couple to work so closely together, but you two do a great job. As skilled as Kurtis's on camera machine work is, Karen's behind the scenes camera work, editing and scene composition is equally impressive, brava! I do worry about the dog being around so much chips! The metal ones, the other kind he can obviously handle...
Homeless always makes me smile. I lost both my little Terroirs in the last 6 months to Coyotes . I sure do miss both of them. Homeless is such a beautiful dog.
The shop i work for does alot of work like this on shafts for flaking and cracking rolls. In almost ten years I recall only one instance of a shaft breaking after welding. Great work!
What I really like about all your vids is that, not only doing such fine work, but that you have a bit of fun along the way. Throw in shots of Homeless's antics along with the outtakes, and voila, fascinating and entertaining all in one.
"Machine is going to be replaced in a few months... " , I am * almost * willing to bet dollars (US) to donuts that you'll get this exact same auger drive shaft back in a few years when the bearings fail again. :D
People that say this shit are 99% just trying to save face and not have to admit "we're broke AF and are barely staying afloat, I/we can't afford the extra $xxx for a proper repair" and are going to be using that machine for years to come. They'll probably even take it to a *different* machine shop next time, again, to save face and not be recognized lol Edit: I speak from experience. I've had to have stuff repaired and not been able to get a _proper_ job done, just " _good enough_ " to get me by a while, because I was soo damn poor lol
Your No Warranty is better than any shops I've encountered in the southern U.S. , I'm sure the owner was thrilled with your repair , like I always say , there are machinist / fabricators , and there's Kurtis at Cutting Edge , Your the Man !!!!!!!!!!!!
Have to say but, that was definitely one of those pure neglected type machines. I'll take you're "no warranty" work over many other's so called professional work. Just a pure pleasure to watch and see your quality of work. Awesome work as always, great video. Cheers :)
I was born and raised in a workshop watching my father working with a lathe, today he is retired, my dream is to buy a lathe for him! but my financial conditions do not allow it, because in my country it is still very expensive. even one used here costs around $2k. very high value for my country "Brazil". I see his videos with him whenever I can!
Customer states, I am going to switch the machine out soon, so don't do a full rebuild, 12 months later, following Kurtis's repair, why would I swap it out it's working fine.😂🤣😂
I've heard it before and it's more like 5 years later! These augers can really pack cardboard ! 2 to 1 over a standard compactor. They blow apart a normal rolloff box. That's what I work on,
You are like an actual machining God with your skills and tools, i have seen bad welders, really really bad welders and good welders but you are by a FAR FAR margin past them, your work is sublime it just leaves me in awe what you can do as so much that you do such as in this video building up material, that other welders say you can't do that for so many reasons but that just shows even more your amazing skills to prove them wrong. I also LOVE your work ethic and we seems to share the desire to not only make the job required perfect but its appearance as well, like in the video for the dual hydraulic pistons where you had to wait so long for materials and just the housing didn't appear strait so you lathed it down to also look perfect, I loved that, and love that you follow the rule of you would not be happy if you received back parts that looked bad even if they worked right so you would never let it leave your shop I just adore that ethic. You both are amazing and I am so glad to see someone making such amazing content by their actual job, and as awesome as your machining skills are your wifes ( i'm so sorry i forgot your name :( ) your camera work and editing is top notch as well love from canada
nice welds, i have done that sort of thing many years back, we didn't have mig in those days and nothing worse than finding a bit of slag or porosity where it hadn't been welded right
Very good job. I do some turning and I can see you managed an excellent finish. The packing machine running with the busted bearing grinding into the shaft must have been truly painful to witness.
Regardless of what you are fixing, it is always great to watch a master at his craft. I love the videos and the engineering talent you have is second to none. Thanks for sharing. Very entertaining.
Good day. I have always found that most folks that can weld well are not comfortable in the machine shop and vice/versa. Those that can do both well like you and I are rare beasts for sure. It's great to sit here through the process and the outtakes at the end always break me up. Thanks a bunch and have beauty days to come eh.
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering When I retired I lost access to he equipment but not the memories of the one-off repairs I would get. I tried a factory type job and by the end of the first week I was out of there like I was shot out the barrel of a 12 ga, LOL. In my work at the logging shop I never knew from day to day was coming at me. I never really knew what a great place it was. Oh well I have you to help fill that void for me. Great videos mate ! ! !
Nice job, well done 👍. I used to do the same sort of thing on stub shafts etc many years ago, however I didn’t have the advantage of a mig in those days. It was mostly stick welded, that made a long drawn out process of it, fortunately things have progressed since then.
Hello Curtis, I'm Chileans. sorry not speak English, but in Spanish I said. Eres un Profesional de tomo y lomo, he aprendido mucho de cómo haces tu trabajo explicas muy bien, y he tratado de seguirte en la traducción instantánea, al final entiendo de lo que se trata, me encanta tu perro y su complicidad en el video, saludos.
and i would bet Dollars to Pesos that the part that was repaired will outlast the machine that it’s installed on, due to the high quality of the machine work that was done
Despite it not being a recommended way to repair it, I can see it lasting long enough regardless. I'm guessing that your concern was that the heat from all of the welding may cause early stress cracks in the remaining material?
I'm sure he preheated the part, so cracking from the heat wouldn't be the issue pretty sure. (maybe i just don't understand the issue you're talking about :) ) But the original shaft material is likely stronger than his weld due to being forged or pressed or whatever.
As always, Great video!! Feel free to add the background clock when you think of it, especially for the time lapse. It looks amazing showing how long it took.
I had to come back and see this again , this will encourage for a project coming up . Great shots and narration . Your skill level is much appreciated by all , especially the ones you have saved there machines and put them back to work .
Just gotta say I love the outtakes...typical soft spoken machinist! I've watched every video to date and yall got a fan for life for sure! Love the quality of your work! Could watch this for days on end!
I think this is the first video I've ever seen you indicate when you mounted the part. I thought you might have some special Aussie magic or a calibrated eye. :D love the vids!
All kidding aside about OZ, it is clear you have some pretty good skills. When I got out of school there was no assistance programs or guidance to get into any apprenticeship programs so we were just left hanging. Unless you lived it a city /town where there was an industrial base you were left to your own devices to find a path. There was no internet in the 60's so I looked around and became a natural gas technician / fitter, then pilot fighting forest fires and working for an airline. But when mum developed cancer I left all that to look after her and took a temporary job as a cop which lasted 37 years. I have a small machine shop in my back yard and make parts for Piper Super Cubs. and others. I'm a little envious of your knowledge and skills set . You make it all look very fluid and easy. I soak up a fair amount of Machining / production UA-cam channels among others. You do good work and have the equipment to do so. I'm just now transitioning from HSS tooling to indexable carbide inserts. getting old isn't any fun.
Different applications different repairs , my master in school always told me we are not professionals , we are professional idiots bond to the applications we know ...and to me he's right so does it work propperly ? Yes ? Well done !!! For me you took the best way to fix the problem !!! Good job !
For a 'cheap' repair that was impressive and cleaned up pretty well! Great camera work on this one too. Hope Homie is OK - he did not seem his usual ebullient self.
This is bread and butter to me, been doing it all my working life, the only difference is i'd have welded it still set up in the lathe, to keep a machine running through the night i've turned a bush split it and welded it on then turned to size that was 10 years ago and to my knowledge it's still running.
I believe with the repair you did he could keep on using the machine and not have to replace it really nice job I really enjoy your videos very educational
Super impressed that there were no bad spots in all of that weld. Congrats on another successful project. Skip the welding screen and show more of your dog during those long welds. Cheers
I do like the way you do these videos, taking the time to show your mistakes as well. They could help others to follow you and may save them selves from making mistakes themselves.
Sounds about right. One of my tasks today at work was repairing a cylinder base eye, without doing a reseal of the cylinder. Weld up with the spear extended to avoid melting the piston seal. Then into the mill for a bore. Just another day at the office.
Another great video! Thank you! Side note: I'm not a machinist (yet) and I don't even own a lathe (yet :D), but I've previously seen people express the idea that using abrasives on the lathe (24:45) isn't so great for the ways and thought I would echo it in the unlikely case you hadn't considered it. Also I think you should definitely make petting part of your business model. "Hello Mr client, we've now petted the part so it's ready for you to come pick it up".
Hey mate thanks for watching and sharing your comment! Yeah abrasives can get under the carriage and damage the bed ways. Using antispatter sprays, regular cleaning and maintenance helps to avoid that. Cheers
Another memorable transformation from fugly to respectable looking useable.( Wish I could lay down that much wire without so much as a bit of porosity} Good explanation on "no warranty" acceptance from customer, it shows the mutual respect you share with them. Aton of work, you even wore out the staffy ! Enjoyed, cheers mate!
I really enjoy watching your videos. You have so much pride in your work and it comes across every time. I am believing that your wife does the camera work. Big shout out to her for doing a great job. Thanks for sharing your videos with us all.
sittin' back watching "Rocky Mountain Race Week" vids, CEE pops up, Pause, Switch, Luvin it, CEE, showin' us all how, the true Aussie Way, Always something different in the shop, Kurtis (Head Machinist), Giggler (Karen, all rounder), Homeless (Safety Officer)
At least the day shifters are asleep by then. At least I can watch videos in peace. Till, I see daylight again and think, Oh crap I stayed up waaayy to late again...
Je reste admiratif devant le travail que vous faite , je regarde vos vidéos avec grand plaisir, j'était moi-même tourneur et fraiseur (a la retraite)et vous voir travaillé pour pouvoir redonner une seconde vie j'admire . travailler a l'ancienne au lieu de racheter du neuf bravo, vous voir faire cela et un régal continuer .
I feel that this repair will be very adequate. It is just as service ready as the day it was born. I spent my whole life worrying about hurry up and do something repairs so I say good job. Production bosses in the manufacturing environment just want the machine producing product to ship. Thanks for sharing with us. 👌👌👌
Hey viewers thanks for watching todays video from our machining shop! It's been a while since we got out the 12mm button insert 😂 What did you think of the before and after on this job? 😎👍
Subscribe and hit the bell icon to turn on notifications so you don't miss our weekly uploads. 👇 🤳
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Official CEE Merch shop: www.ceeshop.com.au
Another great repair!! makes sense to weld up instead of replacing the shaft section if machine is just going to be used for a few months, I'm sure it will last along time anyway. When is the Shaper going to be moved into the shop? Looking forward to that one. I've got a 26" Shaper which I bought of a Engineering shop in Rockhampton QLD that closed down around 3yrs back. It come with some heavy duty tooling for internal keyways etc which I will never use. I could send them down to you if you wanted them as I would never use them doing Motorcycle repair. I live up at Gympie which isn't to far away.
Friday wouldn't be the same without you guy's, thanks for week
Já sigo vocês,achei boa a intenção de vcs não aceitarem contribuições para o canal.penso que trabalhão com o coração!
A work of Art !!!
The stuff that you do is grate
your "no Warranty repair" is better than most "Warrantied" repairs I have ever scene
🤣 thanks mate!
Well it's Kurtis, of course it's gonna be amazing work haha
Glad someone seen the scene
Facts.
Spot on. 👍
"Nothing is more Permanent then a Temporary solution that Works"
I'm betting this shaft will be in use for a long time. Fantastic job
I wonder if it's still there...
The machine was pulled out in July this year and was still running with no issues after the repair had been done.
@@bigeggsr2336cool, thanks mate!
How many times have you done a temporary fix, and then gone back there 6 months later and alter the rest of parts whatever they happen to be to be the same as your temporary repair😅
Oh by the way Karen you do great camera work I'm glad you talked him into filming these
Thank you!
Fantastic work with the camera and editing!! I suppose you do the editing as well?
I love the way she follows the machinery like the wire feeding through the rollers, takes me back to childhood learning exactly how it all functions.
@@whatyoudo9773 👍
not to mention the superb music selections ... Karen is a natural at creating an award winning video doc. This lady is as talented as Kurtis ... what an awesome couple.
It’s so good to see a young guy with his own shop ... doing REAL WORK .... with REAL VALUES! Even though it’s a No Warranty repair you still went above and beyond.
bang on ... you hit that nail on the head .... Kurtis AND Karen give me hope for the future of mankind ... please have children K&K, keep that DNA line going.
@@spangy8405 Whereas anonymous cowards like you should never be allowed into the gene pool.
Not even at the shallow end.
Your camera work and editing is exceptional Karen! I love the hand held shots where you slowly walk into the scene, that really gives the viewer a strong sense of actually being there.
Sometimes I feel like I should be handing Kurtis a caliper or patting Homeless.
Thanks very much! Really great to know it's being enjoyed 😄
We both know that shaft bearing has never been changed. What you did was a very nice job and if taken care of that repair will last.
When a "no warranty" job comes out good as new, you are so humble Kurtis!
Until I watched this channel I always thought welding was for joining metal together, I had no idea you could add material to where it was lost! Now I watch your videos and try to guess what you're going to do to fix whatever was brought to you. Thank you for sharing your work!
Hey Glenn thanks for taking time to watch mate glad you're gaining some insight from the vids. Cheers
@Glenn Tillema
I do the same thing! I feel like those aquarium fish in Finding Nemo while they watch the dentist 🤣
Wow! That''s really nice to hear something like that! I truly envy you and the more than overwehlming moment you had when you figured it out! Thanks for sharing this man, really! You help me keep some faith in humans after all! Welding is great and so is machining! Enjoy yourself and every new discoveries you make!
@@obviousness8113 Yup! ua-cam.com/video/eJvhoYFS0Bs/v-deo.html
When I see a new CEE video come, I stop and make a cup of coffee and watch from beginning to end, in full screen! No skipping ahead!
Thank you mate! That's a heck of a compliment in the world of UA-cam
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering I also watch non stop. It is 3:20 AM here and way past my bed time but don't dare stop watching until the end.
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering same here watch all new episodes right to the end.
Skipping ahead on a CEE video? Do people really do such things? Is that even allowed?
What a strange concept!
These videos are the one time I know it will end well.
First thanks for making the video and showing it to me.
Fortunately this was only a short, not too thick shaft.
I once did a similar repair on a very large thick axle.
Same problem, bearing stuck.
I also welded this axle.
I only did that welding on a lathe.
Reason: I didn't want to stop welding and attached the welding torch to the support.
Gives a much more regular weld.
The reason the bearing got stuck was because the fit of the outer ring was too tight.
I made sure that the outer ring had a loose fit and put pressure on the outer ring with a cup spring.
The machine has never given a problem again.
At the start your safety officer is clearly very concerned that this job is too far gone to be repairable. Then right at the end the look of wonder and respect on his face is a picture. His sigh of relief is perfect.
😂 he's very committed to his job!
I am either missing a joke or I'm living in another universe cause I'm not seeing a safety officer lol
@@vincenttrigg4521 It's the dog. He's been known as the safety officer for some time now.
@@vincenttrigg4521 Newby? Must be.
@@jonka1 that's what I was thinking a while after I posted my comment but I could have been wrong so I thought it would be better off waiting on the answer. Thank you :)
I look forward to these weekly videos more than any other channel on UA-cam. I also like that you guys aren’t flooding the channel with videos everyday and instead just producing quality content.
Thanks to all three of you, Homeless for looking viciously cute, Karen for her excellent camera work and, of course Kurtis, for his frustrating expertise, including all the swear words. Real work, real life, real good. Thanks
Great comment mate you captured exactly what we wanted the channel to be about. Cheers! 😎👍
Homeless? Is that the dog's name?
Just I know Karen is Kurtis's partner. Sometimes I just don't pick up on things unfortunately lol
@@vincenttrigg4521 Yes, Homeless is the name of the Safety Compliance Arfacer...
I would give that kind of skill and workmanship a lifetime warranty. Excellent.
Impressed with the steady hand accomplishing the welding on the rotator, Kurtis. Karen, great videography, as we are all accustomed to👍
Who's a good boy Homeless🧸
Should be in horizontal and not vertical position while welding.
Just to be clear, the _only_ reason I watch these is to see Homeless. What a wonderful dog. He has such a great smile. I love the way he walks, happiness in motion. Homey makes the best dog noises I have ever heard. Lovely snorts, grunts, and gurgles. (The truth is, watching genius in action, Kurtis doing his work, is the highest joy. Homeless is simply the icing on the cake.)
Jesus that bearing must have been howling when you see how much it gouged out.
I bet the operator had to wear earplugs to run that machine before they decided to fix it?
@@hdezn26 Prolly all the time anyway!
From my time in the bearing business that was the first thing I thought of! Just never understood how customers would run a machine to total failure instead of having it fixed sooner (and cheaper)...
"I came in today and it was howling. It must have been nightshift."
I think this was way past the howling phase...
I'm not from an engineering background, so these vid's are fascinating. Curtis is cool, Homeless is class and the camera operator/director/editor does a great, if not anonymous job. Bravo! 👏
Hi Kurtis. I love watching your videos, As I like engineering. I would like to say I think your one of the best engineer I have seen on youtube. Because you explain everything you are doing, or the process you are going to do with anything that comes through your door.Just brilliant.
Hey mate thanks for watching and this comment is awesome we appreciate it!
Been welding since 1998 and I worked in a machine shop for 8 years. I've done so much build up like this. I've never seen it done in this position. We were always able to turn the shaft into the horizontal position. Pretty cool to watch.
Got my CEE Australia cap and coffee mug recently Guys!!, thanks for that 👌🇦🇺,………glad to support You in some small way, and You Guys should be proud of everything You have accomplished with CEE,……A Proud Australian business!! 👍👌💪🇦🇺🇦🇺……go well and take care ☺️👍
Hey mate thanks for the support we seriously appreciate it and glad the merch arrived for you. Enjoy the vid Cheers 😎👍🇦🇺
Master class work. I’ve been binge watching the channel ever since I discovered it. Your work with a lathe is just simply impressive. I’m a millwright in the states (precision industrial mechanic) and by god this is the best channel I’ve seen in a long time that truly puts great effort into a quality repair.
Kurtis your wife has the sweetest voice and laugh so sweet.
Quite a “looker” too! 😉
cringe
Maybe keep stuff like that to yourself….l dunno, that’s just me.
@@deplorablelibertarian 👍
You two are actually adorable. I'm pretty sure most couples would not be able to work together the way you do. Power to you both.
I absolutely love your content. Karen is the best videographer on UA-cam, she seems to get into the details for Kurtis' masterful work and shows so much ofteh behind the scenes detail and all of the steps. It is fascinating. Homeless is such a joyful pup, always brightens my day to see him healthy and happy you are great examples of how humans need to be. I hope that "Yeah Buddy" was a shout out to Ronnie Coleman!
It just doesn’t get any better than this does it boys? A Cutting Edge Engineering video to end the week! 👍
There is, however, one BIG problem with CEE videos. We only get one per week!!
@@Watchyn_Yarwood Agreed!
Curtis I don’t know where you learnt your Trade but to have those Turning and welding skills is pretty Unique. I am a Plater/Welder by trade in the UK, but have spent the last twenty years working for a commercial aircraft manufacturer because you go where the money is. I have not really welded at all in that time. Those days doing my apprenticeship were some of the most rewarding. Watching a project from start to finish and being involved with the installation. Building aircraft requires a different set of skills but you rarely folllow the product to the finally assembly line. I did mainly Mig and Stick back in the day for welding structural sections. I think I fancy doing more Tig welding and I think that’s where I going to concentrate my efforts, welding more stainless, Alu and exotic metals. More refined projects.
Keep up the really good work mate. Always good to see proper skills in the real world.👍
It brings back great memories of cranking handles, watching chips roll off the cutting tool. Manual machines are so much more satisfying to operate than just pushing buttons and looking through a shield because you can feel the machine working with your hands.
Manual repair machining rules for repair machining since it's faster to make the cuts then code to make the same, generally few, cuts with a CNC.
I retired out of machine work after installing several CNC machines, doing the moving, electrical and electronic connections and just enough "watching time" to know they were properly installed. I had no desire to continue on without the manual machines.
I’ve never been this close to my lathe work and not have any hot ones down my shirt, in my ear or stuck to my nose. Enjoyed everything about this. Nice shop, tools, abilities, work ethic, videography, editing, sense of humor, but most of all the outtakes. Until I saw them, I thought this was the smoothest operation on the planet and now that I think of it-it is! Awesome work, both of you!
First question to mind on the start of the video was why not spray weld, answered in first minutes, second question that came to mind, where did the measurements/specification come from, answered a few minutes later. Thanks guys, Friday started off well.
Curtis, once again you have done what my dad always said.
You made a silk purse out of a sow's ear.
Bang up job! Right proper finish too. Always a joy to watch someone else work.......and wish I was still doing it.
Cheers!
Terry from South Carolina USA
Found this channel about a week ago, then thought to watch a video I have not seen before. And lo and behold this one pops up just as I finished, must be my lucky day. :-) Great channel, excellent skills, wonderful editing and the safety inspector is the cream on the cake.
Welcome to the channel mate thanks for watching!
I highly recommend watching more of the videos! If you liked this one then you'll love the others as well!!
You're in for a treat mate.
@@vincenttrigg4521 You're right. The last time I found a channel I really enjoyed I binge watched every episode which took over a week, and now I have to wait for the next episode and it drives me crazy waiting. Have learned my lesson this time, to take it easy, and watch one or two when it takes my fancy. :-)
@@andrewsmith6406 More than a treat mate, I get a lot of value from this channel. :-)
Your work is really meticulous and very good
Always glad to see the STAR of the show "The Pup" is happy. You the Wife and the Pup are always a good show. Thank you for another great Video. Stay safe God bless.
Hey mate thanks for taking time to watch and comment
Kurt you have save your customer a lot of money doing this repair shame on them for not doing the proper maintenance the repair is better than getting a new part and no warranty as it should be the damage was so severe. But you came to the rescue. Love the video, I can't wait for the video every Friday here in the states. Thanks take care.
Hey mate thanks for watching and supporting the channel we really appreciate it. Cheers!
Best part of Friday morning is Cutting Edge and a fresh ground cup of coffee
Awesome mate enjoy and have a good day 😎👍
I have 20 of these augers compactors that are in my service area. They are beasts on how hard they compact cardboard or trash. For a normal compactor used for cardboard a good load is 3 to 4 tons, put in a auger you'll get 8 or more in the same 40 yard box. These all have a automatic greasing system installed.
Looks like you saved the day, that was bad, I've built up a few bearing surfaces but that was a save for sure. Great job.
Hey mate respect and thanks for watching 😎👊💥
It can be a stress for a couple to work so closely together, but you two do a great job. As skilled as Kurtis's on camera machine work is, Karen's behind the scenes camera work, editing and scene composition is equally impressive, brava! I do worry about the dog being around so much chips! The metal ones, the other kind he can obviously handle...
Homeless always makes me smile. I lost both my little Terroirs in the last 6 months to Coyotes . I sure do miss both of them. Homeless is such a beautiful dog.
I'm sorry for your loss and wish you well
shit mate sorry to hear that! Glad our big boof head can bring a smile
The shop i work for does alot of work like this on shafts for flaking and cracking rolls. In almost ten years I recall only one instance of a shaft breaking after welding. Great work!
привет из России! смотрю вас и радуюсь, муж и жена вместе делают одну работу. Мир вашему Дому!
What I really like about all your vids is that, not only doing such fine work, but that you have a bit of fun along the way. Throw in shots of Homeless's antics along with the outtakes, and voila, fascinating and entertaining all in one.
Amazing that you don’t have any “air” bubbles in that weld 👍
"Machine is going to be replaced in a few months... " , I am * almost * willing to bet dollars (US) to donuts that you'll get this exact same auger drive shaft back in a few years when the bearings fail again. :D
😂 seems to be what most viewers are thinking. Thanks for watching
Have you priced donuts lately?
That or it'll be sold off as refurbished
People that say this shit are 99% just trying to save face and not have to admit "we're broke AF and are barely staying afloat, I/we can't afford the extra $xxx for a proper repair" and are going to be using that machine for years to come. They'll probably even take it to a *different* machine shop next time, again, to save face and not be recognized lol
Edit: I speak from experience. I've had to have stuff repaired and not been able to get a _proper_ job done, just " _good enough_ " to get me by a while, because I was soo damn poor lol
I like donuts!!
Your No Warranty is better than any shops I've encountered in the southern U.S. , I'm sure the owner was thrilled with your repair , like I always say , there are machinist / fabricators , and there's Kurtis at Cutting Edge , Your the Man !!!!!!!!!!!!
Hey Barry thank you mate appreciate it
Hey Kurtis, I've been waiting once again for your video. I look forward to them every week.
Hey mate! Thanks for waiting we've got some bonus vids in the works to make the weeks go faster coming up 😎👊💥
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering More late nights for me here on Vancouver island, Canada as I can't wait till morning but always worth it.
Have to say but, that was definitely one of those pure neglected type machines.
I'll take you're "no warranty" work over many other's so called professional work. Just a pure pleasure to watch and see your quality of work. Awesome work as always, great video. Cheers :)
Thanks for watching mate
Morning from sunny Glasgow Scotland and strangely it is sunny.
Have a great Friday over there mate
I was born and raised in a workshop watching my father working with a lathe, today he is retired, my dream is to buy a lathe for him! but my financial conditions do not allow it, because in my country it is still very expensive. even one used here costs around $2k. very high value for my country "Brazil". I see his videos with him whenever I can!
Customer states, I am going to switch the machine out soon, so don't do a full rebuild, 12 months later, following Kurtis's repair, why would I swap it out it's working fine.😂🤣😂
With a nice rebuild like that , they probally would keep the machine many more years.
I've heard it before and it's more like 5 years later! These augers can really pack cardboard ! 2 to 1 over a standard compactor. They blow apart a normal rolloff box. That's what I work on,
Yea and 5 years later he wants a new one because your repair failed.
@@billy19461 And he'll want CEE to pay for it.
I bet that is exactly what is going to happen.
You are like an actual machining God with your skills and tools, i have seen bad welders, really really bad welders and good welders but you are by a FAR FAR margin past them, your work is sublime it just leaves me in awe what you can do as so much that you do such as in this video building up material, that other welders say you can't do that for so many reasons but that just shows even more your amazing skills to prove them wrong.
I also LOVE your work ethic and we seems to share the desire to not only make the job required perfect but its appearance as well, like in the video for the dual hydraulic pistons where you had to wait so long for materials and just the housing didn't appear strait so you lathed it down to also look perfect, I loved that, and love that you follow the rule of you would not be happy if you received back parts that looked bad even if they worked right so you would never let it leave your shop I just adore that ethic.
You both are amazing and I am so glad to see someone making such amazing content by their actual job, and as awesome as your machining skills are your wifes ( i'm so sorry i forgot your name :( ) your camera work and editing is top notch as well love from canada
nice welds, i have done that sort of thing many years back, we didn't have mig in those days and nothing worse than finding a bit of slag or porosity where it hadn't been welded right
Very good job. I do some turning and I can see you managed an excellent finish.
The packing machine running with the busted bearing grinding into the shaft must have been truly painful to witness.
Regardless of what you are fixing, it is always great to watch a master at his craft. I love the videos and the engineering talent you have is second to none. Thanks for sharing. Very entertaining.
Hey mate thanks for watching and commenting. Cheers!
Good day. I have always found that most folks that can weld well are not comfortable in the machine shop and vice/versa. Those that can do both well like you and I are rare beasts for sure. It's great to sit here through the process and the outtakes at the end always break me up. Thanks a bunch and have beauty days to come eh.
Hey Dean hope you're having a good week mate. Thanks for always watching and commenting! Cheers, Kurtis
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering When I retired I lost access to he equipment but not the memories of the one-off repairs I would get. I tried a factory type job and by the end of the first week I was out of there like I was shot out the barrel of a 12 ga, LOL. In my work at the logging shop I never knew from day to day was coming at me. I never really knew what a great place it was. Oh well I have you to help fill that void for me. Great videos mate ! ! !
Nice job, well done 👍. I used to do the same sort of thing on stub shafts etc many years ago, however I didn’t have the advantage of a mig in those days. It was mostly stick welded, that made a long drawn out process of it, fortunately things have progressed since then.
Good one mate! Yeah mig has come a long way the past decade. Thanks for watching 😎👍
Hello Curtis, I'm Chileans. sorry not speak English, but in Spanish I said. Eres un Profesional de tomo y lomo, he aprendido mucho de cómo haces tu trabajo explicas muy bien, y he tratado de seguirte en la traducción instantánea, al final entiendo de lo que se trata, me encanta tu perro y su complicidad en el video, saludos.
Fantabulous video as usual. Tough work being a safety inspector oh and love the little dig about the cling wrap at the end. Well played Karen...
🤣 cling wrap is the devil! Thanks for watching mate glad you enjoyed it
Pride in your work and a settled attitude, you're a bloody good operator mate,a pleasure to watch,thanks
perfect repair cant even tell it was repaired as we have come to expect with your work so much care and attention to detail !!!
and i would bet Dollars to Pesos that the part that was repaired will outlast the machine that it’s installed on, due to the high quality of the machine work that was done
So once again what did your customer think about this repair.
You sir are an artist.
I would hire you in a heart beat!!!
Perfect job, no faults with the part. Machine got retired in July.
Despite it not being a recommended way to repair it, I can see it lasting long enough regardless.
I'm guessing that your concern was that the heat from all of the welding may cause early stress cracks in the remaining material?
I'm sure he preheated the part, so cracking from the heat wouldn't be the issue pretty sure. (maybe i just don't understand the issue you're talking about :) )
But the original shaft material is likely stronger than his weld due to being forged or pressed or whatever.
Excellent camera work, I cannot think how it could get any better. Getting right in there, I get closer to the screen to watch.
As always, Great video!! Feel free to add the background clock when you think of it, especially for the time lapse. It looks amazing showing how long it took.
Thanks for the feedback!
Retired the machine I heard so many times.the way this
Shaft is rebuilt with precision
I don't think this machine will
Retire soon.Amazing job
Hello Kurtis, this was really a lot of welding. Well done. Like others I think that you will see it again in your shop after a couple of years.
You can't beat that kind of craftsmanship what a pleasure it is to watch what a beautiful country what a great people.
I love watching your videos! As an artist, I appreciate the detailed work and the time expended. 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
I had to come back and see this again , this will encourage for a project coming up . Great shots and narration . Your skill level is much appreciated by all , especially the ones you have saved there machines and put them back to work .
Spot on! I really hope you guys expand your business world'wide, this way, maybe I'll get to work for you guys on similar large-scale projects 👌
Just gotta say I love the outtakes...typical soft spoken machinist! I've watched every video to date and yall got a fan for life for sure! Love the quality of your work! Could watch this for days on end!
Hey Leon thanks for watching mate glad you're enjoying the vids
I think this is the first video I've ever seen you indicate when you mounted the part. I thought you might have some special Aussie magic or a calibrated eye. :D love the vids!
Hey mate hahaa we've shown a few snippets in older videos just prefer not too, boring AF and plenty of other channels make up for it 🤣👍
All kidding aside about OZ, it is clear you have some pretty good skills. When I got out of school there was no assistance programs or guidance to get into any apprenticeship programs so we were just left hanging. Unless you lived it a city /town where there was an industrial base you were left to your own devices to find a path. There was no internet in the 60's so I looked around and became a natural gas technician / fitter, then pilot fighting forest fires and working for an airline. But when mum developed cancer I left all that to look after her and took a temporary job as a cop which lasted 37 years.
I have a small machine shop in my back yard and make parts for Piper Super Cubs. and others.
I'm a little envious of your knowledge and skills set . You make it all look very fluid and easy. I soak up a fair amount of Machining / production UA-cam channels among others.
You do good work and have the equipment to do so. I'm just now transitioning from HSS tooling to indexable carbide inserts. getting old isn't any fun.
“Coming soon, Kurtis is getting a quick change tool post” I hope that’s not a joke, I’d be pretty excited to see which one you’d pick
It's not a joke 😏
Not gonna happen .
@@CuttingEdgeEngineeringWTF????? Say what now?????
Karen is Kurtis feeling all right?
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering you might get one but the big question is well you use the quick change post ,, or will it become a costly paper weight ,,,
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering But the real question is what kind: dovetail? Multifix?
Awesome work building up that shaft with the MIG - no inclusions just pure new metal. Love it!
If you had used the micrometer as aa G clamp , you would have been spot-on 😆😆😆😆😆😆
Yep, precision G clamps.
Different applications different repairs , my master in school always told me we are not professionals , we are
professional idiots bond to the applications we know ...and to me he's right so does it work propperly ? Yes ? Well done !!! For me you took the best way to fix the problem !!! Good job !
For a 'cheap' repair that was impressive and cleaned up pretty well! Great camera work on this one too. Hope Homie is OK - he did not seem his usual ebullient self.
Hey mate thanks for the great comment! Yeah he was alright just being a sooky it's winter and a bit colder than normal 🤣
This is bread and butter to me, been doing it all my working life, the only difference is i'd have welded it still set up in the lathe, to keep a machine running through the night i've turned a bush split it and welded it on then turned to size that was 10 years ago and to my knowledge it's still running.
Great end to my week every week is getting home from work and watching these. Great video as always mate.
Nice one glad you enjoyed it and have a good weekend mate
I believe with the repair you did he could keep on using the machine and not have to replace it really nice job I really enjoy your videos very educational
Super impressed that there were no bad spots in all of that weld. Congrats on another successful project. Skip the welding screen and show more of your dog during those long welds. Cheers
Thanks for watching mate
I do like the way you do these videos, taking the time to show your mistakes as well. They could help others to follow you and may save them selves from making mistakes themselves.
Sad to see how little they were watching the equipment to have it do that much damage. You did a very nice job on that shaft.
it's a pleasure watching you doing your things...thanks for all your videos mate...
'' I don't want to spend any money on it'' says every Owner ever.
🤣☝️ accurate
Sounds about right. One of my tasks today at work was repairing a cylinder base eye, without doing a reseal of the cylinder.
Weld up with the spear extended to avoid melting the piston seal. Then into the mill for a bore. Just another day at the office.
Your film and edit work is a pleasure to watch, and being taught good careful practices and problem solving is frosting on the cake. Please continue.
The Master at work. Just love watching the level of competence and dedication.
Another great video! Thank you!
Side note: I'm not a machinist (yet) and I don't even own a lathe (yet :D), but I've previously seen people express the idea that using abrasives on the lathe (24:45) isn't so great for the ways and thought I would echo it in the unlikely case you hadn't considered it.
Also I think you should definitely make petting part of your business model. "Hello Mr client, we've now petted the part so it's ready for you to come pick it up".
When you said making "petting" part of their business model, I thought you were going to say that people could pay to pet their dog XD
Hey mate thanks for watching and sharing your comment! Yeah abrasives can get under the carriage and damage the bed ways. Using antispatter sprays, regular cleaning and maintenance helps to avoid that. Cheers
Another memorable transformation from fugly to respectable looking useable.( Wish I could lay down that much wire without so much as a bit of porosity} Good explanation on "no warranty" acceptance from customer, it shows the mutual respect you share with them. Aton of work, you even wore out the staffy ! Enjoyed, cheers mate!
Dang, they tore that up real good...
I really enjoy watching your videos. You have so much pride in your work and it comes across every time. I am believing that your wife does the camera work. Big shout out to her for doing a great job. Thanks for sharing your videos with us all.
sittin' back watching "Rocky Mountain Race Week" vids, CEE pops up, Pause, Switch, Luvin it, CEE, showin' us all how, the true Aussie Way,
Always something different in the shop, Kurtis (Head Machinist), Giggler (Karen, all rounder), Homeless (Safety Officer)
Hey mate! Thanks for taking the time to watch the video seriously appreciate that support. 😎👍
Brilliant job on the cling wrap! The repair was pretty cool too.. Enjoy that beer Carl, you earned it!
Your vids always get posted at midnight my time.. Luckily, it's the one day a week I work graveyard. Always makes my Fridays go by so much faster!
We do it for you 😉😂
At least the day shifters are asleep by then. At least I can watch videos in peace. Till, I see daylight again and think, Oh crap I stayed up waaayy to late again...
They show up about the perfect time for me in West Aus, finish work, couple of pints at the pub with work then home to watch Campbell work his magic.
Je reste admiratif devant le travail que vous faite , je regarde vos vidéos avec grand plaisir, j'était moi-même tourneur et fraiseur (a la retraite)et vous voir travaillé pour pouvoir redonner
une seconde vie j'admire . travailler a l'ancienne au lieu de racheter du neuf bravo, vous voir faire cela et un régal continuer .
Great welding /machining. Pro grade filming/editing. Loved it. Regards to Homeless.
Thanks Ian glad the videos and work are being enjoyed 😎👍
I feel that this repair will be very adequate. It is just as service ready as the day it was born. I spent my whole life worrying about hurry up and do something repairs so I say good job. Production bosses in the manufacturing environment just want the machine producing product to ship. Thanks for sharing with us. 👌👌👌
That looks a bit buggerd....did Homeless use it as a chew toy again ??? Good thing you fixed it straight away...before the customer found out
yeah he was sad no fan mail arrived that day so gave this a chew instead 🤣