And so they ought to be, Mitutoyo calipers have to be the best money can buy. I’ve used cheap copies for years and having saved up enough for a real set, I am stunned at how good they are, truly worth every cent, thank you so much
@@firstmkb I always assumed if you are holding it up against the wall of a hole, it's to make sure you are at the very bottom of the hole if there is a small radius at the bottom of the hole, but that's just my assumption, I am a machinist but I never inquired into it.🍻
No exaggeration, this is the best "shop advice" video I have ever seen! You not only identify the great tools, but demonstrate what makes them so useful without wasting my time. Many thanks!
'"I know where it is so I am not constantly running around the shop looking for where I put the tool. Ok I don't always put it back on the rack so I do actually spend a lot of time looking around the shop". This is exactly what I do and this comment was priceless. Great videos.
i own a digital caliper for about 30 years and now in 2021 you tell me that step-trick,holy cow,you never get to old to learn something .Had to go to my workshop at 10pm to check that :)
I find a camera (phone one will do) is handy when disassembling things so that you can put things back together the right way by referring to your pictures if necessary. Also - a glass syringe. Glass syringes and a thick gauge needle (say 19 gauge or less - lower number = bigger needle) is really handy for flushing chips out of tapped holes where cutting oil tends to hold the chips in place. The rubber pistons in plastic syringes will swell up in solvent and make them unusable, plus glass ones clean out much easier. You can squirt solvent down blind tapped holes or any similar tight spot with quite a bit of pressure to flush gunk out.
This video brought back many memories. I served a 4 year apprenticeship to become a Machinist with the AEC (Atomic Energy Commission) and one of the first projects that I did on my own was to build a 2 piece set of 1-2-3 Blocks. Roughed them, drilled and tapped them, squared them up, heat treated them to 60 Rockwell and finish them on a surface grinder. They were within .0002 of size and square all over. I carried those blocks around with me for 20 years and lost them when my machinist tool box was stolen, along with ten thousand dollars worth of Machinist tools. I missed those blocks more than anything else. Sentimental, you know?
I did the very same thing at my Boeing 4 year apprenticeship (started 1952) lost one, block but still have the other, havent used my machinist tools for 50 years.
Thanks James, a few of these are now on my shopping list. I'll add a few I found I used daily when I was a full-time tool maker - a surface plate, a 3" smooth jaw precision ground machinist's vice (Palmgren), a big wall chart of Decimal - Fraction and Drill and Thread sizes (mine includes the weird British stuff like BA and BSP, I think it was from Dormer or maybe Sheffield) a $10 solar powered scientific calculator, 0.5mm mechanical pencil and a 8-1/2 x 11" pad of paper (not post-its; no adhesive), a carbide pocket scribe with a magnet on the end (a great "pick up tools dropped in the ways" tool, and "is it magnetic or ferrous?" detector), a small pocket flat blade screwdriver like the ones often given away as promotional items, and a quality set of micro-cut jeweler's and riffling files. Edit - and a 2" machinist's square....
Great video. For those paying attention, it's also a lesson of knowing where you can spend less on a good enough tool and where you shouldn't. You've got a Harbor Freight bandsaw and tool cabinets which are prefectly good for their purpose. You aren't the first one I've heard talk about the Noga indicator holders being far better than the imitators. The Knipex plier wrenches are seriously amazing. Well worth not busting your knuckles with a crescent wrench again. This is a case where you'll want the name brand ones. All the cheaper knock-offs of Knipex pliers I've seen are universally horrible.
Apparently we think alike, I agree with all you say. While I don't have anywhere near the experience that you have, I've stumbled onto the exact same tool five times, and the equivalent tool by a different manufacturer four times. Wiha instead of Allen, etc. I wear prescription glasses so n/a there. Your vids are consistently excellent.
Yes, I used all of the afore mentioned tools when I was working, but to add a few, A good 6" rule, a good scriber, a bevel edged solid square and layout dye. The shop could always use more tools and a few that I would customize or make, like vise parallels. jaw stops, copper chuck jaw pads. the list is endless, but I respect your top ten. We all take different approaches to the work.
If you have the extra money I would choose a JET bandsaw, I toiled with the $200 version for years and when I switched locations I popped the extra bucks and I'm glad I did, the extra wide blade, extra size along with extra rigidity is a blessing. I also opt for the calipers with carbide jaws, both inner and outer, these act as indestructible scribers. Good video, I see way too many people using a hand hacksaw when they could save a s-load of time buying a chaep cutoff saw.
I just ordered the deburring kit for my 3d printed molds. I’ve been trying to clean up the recessed holes and this will solve that problem, thank you for taking the time to make this video.
Excellent video & list. Thank you! I appreciate the vise rollerbearing mod. I'll be doing that! Ordering some bifocal safety glasses, deburrer, and t-handle hex drives now! Interesting to note how much more expensive things have gotten in 2 years! The H-F band saw is now 350 and they now do 10% discounts at the holidays, not 20-25%
I have a Belsaw stand mounted belt sander with 1" sanding belts. I couldn't live without it. Bought it in the 1970's and have not done anything to it except regular maintenance and belt changes. I even grind lathe tool bits on it from time to time.
Hi James, in one of your episodes you introduced a deburring tool/micromotor. I've been looking through your videos for 2022 and have not been able to locate that video. Could you kindly let me know the make and model as I am very interested in purchasing such a tool. Keep up the good work, I look forward to very Saturday/Sunday for the next entertaining and informative episode. Thanks
As a german, I can confirm Knipex is good. They really are the pinnacle of pliermaking. They also offer small electronic sidecutters with magnetized jaws. They catch all the pieces of legs, and are really nice.
@@LambertZero Good stuff uses copper, but cheap resistors off eBay (good enough for my hobbyist projects), some pin headers and IC legs (ofc not all, but the ones I use) uses something magnetic. Maybe nickel? And electronics components are the most international things I can think of, so that would be universal to cheap components.
1-2-3 blocks are great tools. I made mine in high school, a copy of the Moore tools version, and use then almost every day. Made from CRS and still accurate after 32 years.
I had too smile straight away... as I just bought the same bandsaw but it’s branded SABER here in Australia. I made a the top plate for vertical use, that you can still use horizontal. Definitely a worthy upgrade if your switching back and forth all day. 🇦🇺🤜🏼🤛🏼🍀🍀🍀😎🤓
I have to say, one of my favourite tools I use everyday is my 6" pocket rule. I actually have 2 of them, one with and one without the end hook. Extremely handy
Yep, I have one I acquired with a used set of old tools at a garage sale that is about an inch wide - because besides one side having engraved (not printed) fractional inch and mm scales, the other side has tenths and hundredths of an inch scales. It also has a micro-printed decimal-fraction-mm conversion chart on one side and a letter and number drill table on the other. It was made by Craftsman, and sadly I've never seen another like it.
For # 11 I had a 1 1/2" X 3" cutoff of unhardened Vega tool steel about 7/8 " thick ground flat on the bottom drilled with the tap drill and nominal hole diameters to provide a guide for hand held drilling and tapping for 56 years. Still have it but in hind sight I should have made a hardened bench block with the same features.
Oh yes, you know the good stuff. 5:35 Those Knipex pliers are best adjustable wrench alternative. Also handy for doing small bending etc. As an industrial mechanic I quite often carry small ones with me as they can extend to fairly beefy bolt sizes and cover mm and inch stuff mixes like for instance pneumatic connectors etc. The best pliers to own in addition to more damaging Knipex pipe pliers.
Thank you for your top10 tools. My most used tool is a 22 x 66" movable work table I made from a miscut 1-1/8" plate. Four 800lb capacity casters 2 moveable 2 fixed [lockable] , rolls reasonably easy. 5" vice attached and 4 holes @ 4-1/2" diameter near each corner. I thought they would not be used very often but they are very usefull, especially with my mag-drill. work table has a shelf about 12" above the floor where I keep usable scraps of material. Now I have to think of tool #2 thru 10. Thanks again for a very pleasant video.
Regarding the Hard Freight bandsaw. I purchased mine three years ago this saw has seen flat bar, lots of round or rectangle tubing, angel iron and I'm talking a lot of cuts on the same Harbor Freight saw blade with out touching the spare.
Wow, that was one of the best tool videos I've ever seen. I'm a 40 year woodworker and in retirement am playing with metal much more, I have a good south bend 8" lathe, a Chinese mill. and I have the same band saw now. Looks like I have to order a couple more things now. thanks for doing this.
Great vid! I watched it during a coffee break from the workshop. I did not know about the caliper step measuring trick. Just went back out there and sure enough mine do that too (I guess they all do). So that was a great tip, thanks!
I am a hobbyist and motorcycle restorer: I, too, use all ten of those items as well a quality 4" square. Great video and am a new subscriber! Rick from Canada😎
my top ten tools [1] starrett 150 mm thin ruller [2] starrett scriber [3] Alpen brand drills [4] Rhome vice [5] tap set with tap size drills [6] deep hole marker [7] 1 2 3 blocks [8] knippex and japanese enigeer brand pliers [9] scotchbrite sanding discs [10] Bahco allen keys
used to carry 6" Knipex, 6" LED flashlight, and standard Allen wrench set on the job when doing Tool & Die or running Metal treatment / Ecoat paint systems, able to fix most issues without getting the big roll around drawer chest
Great channel. I need to get the Noga tooling but most important the bi-focal safety glasses. My most useful tool in the shop is paper and pencil. Sorry, not sexy but I used it for calculations, simulate part fitments etc. Yes, I need to move to CAD but my workflow is still significantly paper and pencil
Whoa!! Can confirm on those Starret Saw Blades. I had bought one after watching your video as a spare since my existing blade was still working. Well, the existing blade broke today (they were a bosch replacement of the original already), and I replaced them with the Starret. WOW! That blade cut thru 6061 1" square stock 3 times faster than my old blade! Definitely worth the extra money for them!!
WOW! I stumbled across this video and thought... "What the hell?" and watched it. That I liked and subscribed should tell you I not only enjoyed it, but learned something from it. (The head end depth measuring capability with a dial caliper). 1-2-3 blocks... can't get through the day without them! I had to laugh at your 21st edition of Machinery's Handbook... I've got an 11th edition, copyright dated 1941. Still works though. Finally, my 76 year old "Fixed focal length" eyes can't see the fine print any more either. I'm getting several pair of the bi-focal safety glasses so I can keep them strategically located around the shop. I use safety glasses all the time(!!!), and the bi-focal feature looks Priceless!! Let's see what other treasures are lurking on the channel.... Thanks again!
I have the exact same 6 1/2" Wilton vise and used your tip by adding a roller thrust bearing and washers. Much improved, smoother to operate and takes less energy to get a good clamp. Thank you Sir...
A Treasure trove of Great Info. Thanks so much. I considered my Mitutoyo calipers a Huge step up from the inexpensive piece that I suffered with for sometime. The only caveat I have is that repeatability of a measurement becomes better with the higher priced item. I originally purchased at the low end and repeat measurements were a real nose-bleed with considerable variance depending on the point between the jaws where the measurement was made. As always with tools....you get what you pay for, right?😂
Found a couple items to put on the wish list. Thanks! I picked up some cheap calipers several years ago on an impulse purchase having never used them before. They quickly became my #1 measuring tool to reach for.
Awesome, you made me discover THE thing that I didn't know I would need but now I know it's imperative for everything I'll craft and build: the *_bifocal_* protective glasses! Thank you sir, subscibed
James, that was a great video. I used your link to McMaster Carr to get to thrust bearings for my Wilton vise. My Wilton is a 1950's model that I purchased on an I-beam stand for $15.00 Different thrust bearing, but you clarified the need for a spacer, ( it's nice to have no surprises) after adding 5/64" of bearing. I made a spacer (or washer) out of 1/8" aluminum and it works like a dream. Man, it works great! Thanks big time!! I'd add a pic but I don't know how...
This video was among my suggestions today so I figured might as well take a look. I subscribe to Inheritance Machinist and abom79, look forward to watching your channel. I am not a machinist, myself, just enjoy this type of content.
GREAT Vid!! give us a part two, maybe with a beginner hand book choice.. Having a dremel with the boys that suit you is also quite handy i think.. pen size torch quite handy, pen size hobby blade quite handy. that’s me!
As someone mentioned below, Mitutoyo offers solar powered calipers. Yes they cost a bit more but even with Mitutoyo's normal very good battery life I'm more than happy I bought mine. Buying or even shop making a designed for the job foot to add to the right hand end of a set of calipers while using the depth function is well worth it. Besides my 123 blocks, I also bought a set of 246 blocks for all the same reasons the 123's are so handy. Between the two sets I have a fairly accurate method of checking between 1"- 18" and pretty much anything in between using a gauge block set in addition to them. Thanks for showing that Nogaflex James, that's one model I hadn't known about. I bought the large print edition of Machinery's Handbook and also the CD they offer. Plan for the future because at a certain point for all of us there going to be non optional. My most used shop tool? A large button and display calculator.
Concerning 1,2,3 blocks, many of mine have enlarged holes done to get the job done. I just carbide the hole at the time I need what I need, they still work as intended also.
An exceptionally well presented video. Not just the selection of tools, but ready examples showing how specific features are used and why it's important. Thank you!
My number one tool in the shop is the Bausch &Lomb loupe that clips on to my eyeglasses and swing out of my line of sight.They feature 20mm glass lenses.They come in single and dual lenses.Mine comes with a 5X and 3X.Combined 8X.They are so light,I sometimes forget I am wearing them until I notice people giving me weird looks.That’s when I stare at them and say,”resistance is futile,you will be assimilated.”
Very well thought out. I hope I find this video when I finally are ready to invest. Not to say these are overly expensive but my small hut of building things is very chaotic and way too many cheap tools that are also needed and the good instruments would lay in the rubble of all of the other toys.
Many people do not know about the step feature on the calipers because that feature is not on all calipers. It was advertised on the Mitutoyo Diamond Verniers that I bought in 1970. I had the only set in the shop with that feature. This set of vernier calipers is STILL my “go to” set. Not as easy to read as the digital ones I have, nor as easy to read as the dial set either. However, this set has NEVER skipped a cog as have the dial set, and they have never had a dead battery either. After 50+ years I trust them. Oh, lest I forget, this set has a .050 vernier rather than the .025 that plagues many verniers.
1-2-3 blocks are indispensable in woodworking as well. A pair of them, plus a set of aluminum/brass gauges (1/16 through 1") and feeler gauges, make for great setup devices with table saw and router cuts. Much easier than trying to get a ruler or tape measure to register properly and more accurate. I even have a pair of 2-3-4 blocks when I need something even larger to setup off of. Gets me everything from .001" to 8+" of cut setup capacity.
I would love to see more from you regarding electronics. That electronics troubleshooting video you made with one of the most helpful I’ve seen on UA-cam. Would love to see about your electronics tools, equipment, and troubleshooting stuff.
I was getting tired of same ole stuff on utube. So i found your video. Much impressed as i am turning my drill press into a somewhat of a milling machine for my leathertools. Great stuff from new subscriber.👌
In all 10 items that you mentioned, the 2x3 blocks, big yeah 👍. When I finally move forward, the bandsaw will be the choice. Very inexpensive, the ability to part something. And that was my problematic situation, without a huge investment, thanks for your video!!
One of my tips is to take a piece of 2x2x.250 aluminum angle, and cut to pieces to be the same length as your vise jaws. Then clamp both into the vise jaws so they are in the jaws one one side, and laying over the top of the jaws on the other side. I use a large dead-blow hammer to "persuade" the corners of the angle down over the jaws, then my letter punch set to mark them "Front" and "Rear" so I know which jaws they are registered to. They're invaluable for clamping anything you don't want marred, they're inexpensive, and the faces are easily freshened in the mill or just replace if they get too worn.
As a hobby machinist, diamond files & grinding bits. They make qwuik work of sharpening cutters from HSS to Tungsten-carbide. At work, it's usually more profitable to use inserts & replace them when the coating is worn.
I have about half of the tools from your top 10 list and in the coming weeks I will be completing the top 10. One tool though that is really useful for me is a variable speed Dremel. I never knew how indispensable it would become for me until I bought one, now I can't get along without it.
6 inch Scale/ 1 inch mic / 6 inch caliper/ Allen wrenches/ files/ toolmakers vice / square/ oil stone /rubber mallet/ tenths indicator/..safety glasses / parallels set 12 total.....thanks .good video....
Nice vid!! I ALWAYS save my old prescription glasses and always order new glasses in polycarbonate. New glasses for everyday . . . old glasses for shop. Just slap on sideshields and gtg.
Thanks ! I have ordered the Noga magnetic base and deburring tools and will pick up the bifocal safety glasses from Bunnings on the weekend. Great tips. I just know how good the bifocal safety glasses will be, after years of changing glasses and losing them constantly.
Great list, I totally concur! Not sure about a thrust bearing on the Wilton. If you ever have to crank it hard, something has to give in those tiny needle bearings. They will either be crushed or embed themselves in the washer. Me, I would make sure my factory thrust washer is thick, precision, and well hardened and replace if necessary. The extra force needed will be negligible.
We're happy to see your Mitutoyo caliper made your top ten list. Great tips on usage as well!
And so they ought to be, Mitutoyo calipers have to be the best money can buy. I’ve used cheap copies for years and having saved up enough for a real set, I am stunned at how good they are, truly worth every cent, thank you so much
They're all I ever buy! In fact I just dropped mine recently and need to order some new ones! It happens.....
Can you tell me why the depth rod has a notch out of it?
Great products, thanks!
@@firstmkb I always assumed if you are holding it up against the wall of a hole, it's to make sure you are at the very bottom of the hole if there is a small radius at the bottom of the hole, but that's just my assumption, I am a machinist but I never inquired into it.🍻
@@skylark4901 great answer. Totally obvious to me after you explained it!
No exaggeration, this is the best "shop advice" video I have ever seen! You not only identify the great tools, but demonstrate what makes them so useful without wasting my time. Many thanks!
You said what I was thinking but better. Cheers.
'"I know where it is so I am not constantly running around the shop looking for where I put the tool. Ok I don't always put it back on the rack so I do actually spend a lot of time looking around the shop". This is exactly what I do and this comment was priceless. Great videos.
i own a digital caliper for about 30 years and now in 2021 you tell me that step-trick,holy cow,you never get to old to learn something .Had to go to my workshop at 10pm to check that :)
I thought I was alone in learning this!
Old dog with a new trick, had to go try it out!
Now subscribed to learn more wee tricks and hints
There's actually a surprising number of folks that don't know that. And almost, but not quite, as useful as the depth pin...
If it makes you feel better, I have only known that trick for about 12 months and I am 55 now.
@@harveysmith100 so you learned it at 54,so did i :)
@@chevyfahrer What did we do before You Tube?
I find a camera (phone one will do) is handy when disassembling things so that you can put things back together the right way by referring to your pictures if necessary.
Also - a glass syringe. Glass syringes and a thick gauge needle (say 19 gauge or less - lower number = bigger needle) is really handy for flushing chips out of tapped holes where cutting oil tends to hold the chips in place. The rubber pistons in plastic syringes will swell up in solvent and make them unusable, plus glass ones clean out much easier. You can squirt solvent down blind tapped holes or any similar tight spot with quite a bit of pressure to flush gunk out.
Your videos are always helpful, but this really hits home!
Thank you for making us more productive.
Wow! This presenter is SO CLEAR and helpful. Both camera and communication skills are superb! Thank you!
Your slight amount of sarcasm and humbleness keep me coming back.
Good job man 👊
This video brought back many memories. I served a 4 year apprenticeship to become a Machinist with the AEC (Atomic Energy Commission) and one of the first projects that I did on my own was to build a 2 piece set of 1-2-3 Blocks. Roughed them, drilled and tapped them, squared them up, heat treated them to 60 Rockwell and finish them on a surface grinder. They were within .0002 of size and square all over. I carried those blocks around with me for 20 years and lost them when my machinist tool box was stolen, along with ten thousand dollars worth of Machinist tools. I missed those blocks more than anything else. Sentimental, you know?
Hey Joe, I'm just starting out, I have a bench top mill. Can you recommend what brand of 123 blocks i should buy?
I did the very same thing at my Boeing 4 year apprenticeship (started 1952) lost one, block but still have the other, havent used my machinist tools for 50 years.
Thanks James, a few of these are now on my shopping list. I'll add a few I found I used daily when I was a full-time tool maker - a surface plate, a 3" smooth jaw precision ground machinist's vice (Palmgren), a big wall chart of Decimal - Fraction and Drill and Thread sizes (mine includes the weird British stuff like BA and BSP, I think it was from Dormer or maybe Sheffield) a $10 solar powered scientific calculator, 0.5mm mechanical pencil and a 8-1/2 x 11" pad of paper (not post-its; no adhesive), a carbide pocket scribe with a magnet on the end (a great "pick up tools dropped in the ways" tool, and "is it magnetic or ferrous?" detector), a small pocket flat blade screwdriver like the ones often given away as promotional items, and a quality set of micro-cut jeweler's and riffling files. Edit - and a 2" machinist's square....
Thanks! Love this kind of content--I was actually just starting a search for a good vice... 😂
Great video. For those paying attention, it's also a lesson of knowing where you can spend less on a good enough tool and where you shouldn't. You've got a Harbor Freight bandsaw and tool cabinets which are prefectly good for their purpose. You aren't the first one I've heard talk about the Noga indicator holders being far better than the imitators. The Knipex plier wrenches are seriously amazing. Well worth not busting your knuckles with a crescent wrench again. This is a case where you'll want the name brand ones. All the cheaper knock-offs of Knipex pliers I've seen are universally horrible.
Apparently we think alike, I agree with all you say. While I don't have anywhere near the experience that you have, I've stumbled onto the exact same tool five times, and the equivalent tool by a different manufacturer four times. Wiha instead of Allen, etc. I wear prescription glasses so n/a there.
Your vids are consistently excellent.
Yes, I used all of the afore mentioned tools when I was working, but to add a few, A good 6" rule, a good scriber, a bevel edged solid square and layout dye. The shop could always use more tools and a few that I would customize or make, like vise parallels. jaw stops, copper chuck jaw pads. the list is endless, but I respect your top ten. We all take different approaches to the work.
Really like your selection. "Money spent on quality tools is NEVER wasted."
Band saw, totally agree, very simple very useful
Need to get some of those grips
Calpiers, use it on everything
If you have the extra money I would choose a JET bandsaw, I toiled with the $200 version for years and when I switched locations I popped the extra bucks and I'm glad
I did, the extra wide blade, extra size along with extra rigidity is a blessing. I also opt for the calipers with carbide jaws, both inner and outer, these act as indestructible
scribers. Good video, I see way too many people using a hand hacksaw when they could save a s-load of time buying a chaep cutoff saw.
I just ordered the deburring kit for my 3d printed molds. I’ve been trying to clean up the recessed holes and this will solve that problem, thank you for taking the time to make this video.
safety glass bifocals have changed my life in the shop. they are very convenient and work well for me.
Excellent video & list. Thank you!
I appreciate the vise rollerbearing mod. I'll be doing that!
Ordering some bifocal safety glasses, deburrer, and t-handle hex drives now!
Interesting to note how much more expensive things have gotten in 2 years! The H-F band saw is now 350 and they now do 10% discounts at the holidays, not 20-25%
I have a Belsaw stand mounted belt sander with 1" sanding belts. I couldn't live without it. Bought it in the 1970's and have not done anything to it except regular maintenance and belt changes. I even grind lathe tool bits on it from time to time.
Hi James, in one of your episodes you introduced a deburring tool/micromotor. I've been looking through your videos for 2022 and have not been able to locate that video. Could you kindly let me know the make and model as I am very interested in purchasing such a tool. Keep up the good work, I look forward to very Saturday/Sunday for the next entertaining and informative episode. Thanks
As a german, I can confirm Knipex is good. They really are the pinnacle of pliermaking. They also offer small electronic sidecutters with magnetized jaws. They catch all the pieces of legs, and are really nice.
Do they make leads on electronics components out of steel in Germany? Here they are made of copper.
@@LambertZero Good stuff uses copper, but cheap resistors off eBay (good enough for my hobbyist projects), some pin headers and IC legs (ofc not all, but the ones I use) uses something magnetic. Maybe nickel?
And electronics components are the most international things I can think of, so that would be universal to cheap components.
@@vincentguttmann2231 Yeah, nickel, that's cheap. :-)
I love those pliers. If they ever run an 80% off sale, I'm getting some.
@@Bob_Adkins You could be waiting a while! Next lifetime maybe.
I'm new to machining and this video was very helpful, thank you!
Of all the videos on YT for 'helpful' hints, this one tops them all for shop recommendations. Vid well done!
1-2-3 blocks are great tools. I made mine in high school, a copy of the Moore tools version, and use then almost every day. Made from CRS and still accurate after 32 years.
I had too smile straight away... as I just bought the same bandsaw but it’s branded SABER here in Australia.
I made a the top plate for vertical use, that you can still use horizontal.
Definitely a worthy upgrade if your switching back and forth all day.
🇦🇺🤜🏼🤛🏼🍀🍀🍀😎🤓
It's on my list of things to make.
I have to say, one of my favourite tools I use everyday is my 6" pocket rule. I actually have 2 of them, one with and one without the end hook. Extremely handy
Yep, I have one I acquired with a used set of old tools at a garage sale that is about an inch wide - because besides one side having engraved (not printed) fractional inch and mm scales, the other side has tenths and hundredths of an inch scales. It also has a micro-printed decimal-fraction-mm conversion chart on one side and a letter and number drill table on the other. It was made by Craftsman, and sadly I've never seen another like it.
For # 11 I had a 1 1/2" X 3" cutoff of unhardened Vega tool steel about 7/8 " thick ground flat on the bottom drilled with the tap drill and nominal hole diameters to provide a guide for hand held drilling and tapping for 56 years. Still have it but in hind sight I should have made a hardened bench block with the same features.
Oh yes, you know the good stuff. 5:35 Those Knipex pliers are best adjustable wrench alternative. Also handy for doing small bending etc. As an industrial mechanic I quite often carry small ones with me as they can extend to fairly beefy bolt sizes and cover mm and inch stuff mixes like for instance pneumatic connectors etc. The best pliers to own in addition to more damaging Knipex pipe pliers.
So what do you use for cutting 4140 and tool steel?
Congratulations this video got me to subscribe. You are now on the list of favorite youtube machinists with HAAS, Titans of CNC and NYC CNC
I never knew about the step measuring trick. I'm gonna use that from now on. Thank you.
those Knipex pliers are invaluable, By far one of my happiest buys. I hope more channels do videos like these!
Thank you for your top10 tools. My most used tool is a 22 x 66" movable work table I made from a miscut 1-1/8" plate.
Four 800lb capacity casters 2 moveable 2 fixed [lockable] , rolls reasonably easy. 5" vice attached and 4 holes @ 4-1/2" diameter near each corner. I thought they would not be used very often but they are very usefull, especially with my mag-drill. work table has a shelf about 12" above the floor where I keep usable scraps of material. Now I have to think of tool #2 thru 10.
Thanks again for a very pleasant video.
The digital caliper trick on 22:00 is new to me and will be very usefull, thank you,, great video!
You forgot to mention your broom/shopvac. Your shop always looks so clean!
It's becoming clear I need to do a sequel. Lots of great comments about tools I missed.
Regarding the Hard Freight bandsaw. I purchased mine three years ago this saw has seen flat bar, lots of round or rectangle tubing, angel iron and I'm talking a lot of cuts on the same Harbor Freight saw blade with out touching the spare.
Wow, that was one of the best tool videos I've ever seen. I'm a 40 year woodworker and in retirement am playing with metal much more, I have a good south bend 8" lathe, a Chinese mill. and I have the same band saw now. Looks like I have to order a couple more things now. thanks for doing this.
Great vid! I watched it during a coffee break from the workshop. I did not know about the caliper step measuring trick. Just went back out there and sure enough mine do that too (I guess they all do). So that was a great tip, thanks!
You use them all everyday , amazing how new they all look
Noga base totally upped my game...expensive but worth it hands down.
James,
In every video you make, your shop is always clean, neat, and VERY well organised 👌
Regards
Robert
Keep in mind I choose where I position and point the cameras.
You are a trip. Paraphrase: “If I don’t have to be precise - if I’m only working within a few thousandths of an inch, I can just use the calipers.”
I am a hobbyist and motorcycle restorer: I, too, use all ten of those items as well a quality 4" square. Great video and am a new subscriber!
Rick from Canada😎
Great vid. For everyone's knowledge, Mitutoyo is pronounced "meets toyo" I am learning from a life-long machinist at my job.
my top ten tools
[1] starrett 150 mm thin ruller
[2] starrett scriber
[3] Alpen brand drills
[4] Rhome vice
[5] tap set with tap size drills
[6] deep hole marker
[7] 1 2 3 blocks
[8] knippex and japanese enigeer brand pliers
[9] scotchbrite sanding discs
[10] Bahco allen keys
used to carry 6" Knipex, 6" LED flashlight, and standard Allen wrench set on the job when doing Tool & Die or running Metal treatment / Ecoat paint systems, able to fix most issues without getting the big roll around drawer chest
Great channel. I need to get the Noga tooling but most important the bi-focal safety glasses. My most useful tool in the shop is paper and pencil. Sorry, not sexy but I used it for calculations, simulate part fitments etc. Yes, I need to move to CAD but my workflow is still significantly paper and pencil
Your videos have helped me so very much, thank you for taking the time to share your knowledge.
Whoa!! Can confirm on those Starret Saw Blades. I had bought one after watching your video as a spare since my existing blade was still working. Well, the existing blade broke today (they were a bosch replacement of the original already), and I replaced them with the Starret. WOW! That blade cut thru 6061 1" square stock 3 times faster than my old blade! Definitely worth the extra money for them!!
WOW! I stumbled across this video and thought... "What the hell?" and watched it. That I liked and subscribed should tell you I not only enjoyed it, but learned something from it. (The head end depth measuring capability with a dial caliper). 1-2-3 blocks... can't get through the day without them! I had to laugh at your 21st edition of Machinery's Handbook... I've got an 11th edition, copyright dated 1941. Still works though. Finally, my 76 year old "Fixed focal length" eyes can't see the fine print any more either. I'm getting several pair of the bi-focal safety glasses so I can keep them strategically located around the shop. I use safety glasses all the time(!!!), and the bi-focal feature looks Priceless!! Let's see what other treasures are lurking on the channel.... Thanks again!
I have the exact same 6 1/2" Wilton vise and used your tip by adding a roller thrust bearing and washers. Much improved, smoother to operate and takes less energy to get a good clamp. Thank you Sir...
The same principle of replacing screw friction with clamping force by using a thrust bearing also applies to collet chucks with a bearing nose.
A Treasure trove of Great Info. Thanks so much. I considered my Mitutoyo calipers a Huge step up from the inexpensive piece that I suffered with for sometime. The only caveat I have is that repeatability of a measurement becomes better with the higher priced item. I originally purchased at the low end and repeat measurements were a real nose-bleed with considerable variance depending on the point between the jaws where the measurement was made. As always with tools....you get what you pay for, right?😂
Thanks for taking the time.
Found a couple items to put on the wish list. Thanks!
I picked up some cheap calipers several years ago on an impulse purchase having never used them before. They quickly became my #1 measuring tool to reach for.
The Knipex pliers set and the Allen wrenches have bee on my Amazon wishlist for sometime. Guess I’m going to have breakdown purchase them for myself.
Awesome, you made me discover THE thing that I didn't know I would need but now I know it's imperative for everything I'll craft and build: the *_bifocal_* protective glasses! Thank you sir, subscibed
James, that was a great video. I used your link to McMaster Carr to get to thrust bearings for my Wilton vise. My Wilton is a 1950's model that I purchased on an I-beam stand for $15.00 Different thrust bearing, but you clarified the need for a spacer, ( it's nice to have no surprises) after adding 5/64" of bearing. I made a spacer (or washer) out of 1/8" aluminum and it works like a dream. Man, it works great! Thanks big time!! I'd add a pic but I don't know how...
Thanks for your shop tour. Lots of cool tools.
This video was among my suggestions today so I figured might as well take a look. I subscribe to Inheritance Machinist and abom79, look forward to watching your channel. I am not a machinist, myself, just enjoy this type of content.
Thanks for the knipex hint, didn't know about those they look good. I'm ordering them now.
Love Noga products.
The tool grinder I use a lot. But know and the advantages of repeating constants with cutting edges.
GREAT Vid!!
give us a part two, maybe with a beginner hand book choice..
Having a dremel with the boys that suit you is also quite handy i think..
pen size torch quite handy,
pen size hobby blade quite handy.
that’s me!
First video I've stumbled upon from your channel, UA-cam recommended. You just got a new subscriber! 🎉
As someone mentioned below, Mitutoyo offers solar powered calipers. Yes they cost a bit more but even with Mitutoyo's normal very good battery life I'm more than happy I bought mine. Buying or even shop making a designed for the job foot to add to the right hand end of a set of calipers while using the depth function is well worth it. Besides my 123 blocks, I also bought a set of 246 blocks for all the same reasons the 123's are so handy. Between the two sets I have a fairly accurate method of checking between 1"- 18" and pretty much anything in between using a gauge block set in addition to them. Thanks for showing that Nogaflex James, that's one model I hadn't known about. I bought the large print edition of Machinery's Handbook and also the CD they offer. Plan for the future because at a certain point for all of us there going to be non optional. My most used shop tool? A large button and display calculator.
Nice. I also have a comically large calculator and 2-4-6 blocks. Both are great.
Concerning 1,2,3 blocks, many of mine have enlarged holes done to get the job done. I just carbide the hole at the time I need what I need, they still work as intended also.
An exceptionally well presented video. Not just the selection of tools, but ready examples showing how specific features are used and why it's important. Thank you!
There is quite a few things I didn’t know about. Thanks
My number one tool in the shop is the Bausch &Lomb loupe that clips on to my eyeglasses and swing out of my line of sight.They feature 20mm glass lenses.They come in single and dual lenses.Mine comes with a 5X and 3X.Combined 8X.They are so light,I sometimes forget I am wearing them until I notice people giving me weird looks.That’s when I stare at them and say,”resistance is futile,you will be assimilated.”
Very well thought out. I hope I find this video when I finally are ready to invest. Not to say these are overly expensive but my small hut of building things is very chaotic and way too many cheap tools that are also needed and the good instruments would lay in the rubble of all of the other toys.
Many people do not know about the step feature on the calipers because that feature is not on all calipers. It was advertised on the Mitutoyo Diamond Verniers that I bought in 1970. I had the only set in the shop with that feature. This set of vernier calipers is STILL my “go to” set. Not as easy to read as the digital ones I have, nor as easy to read as the dial set either. However, this set has NEVER skipped a cog as have the dial set, and they have never had a dead battery either. After 50+ years I trust them. Oh, lest I forget, this set has a .050 vernier rather than the .025 that plagues many verniers.
1-2-3 blocks are indispensable in woodworking as well. A pair of them, plus a set of aluminum/brass gauges (1/16 through 1") and feeler gauges, make for great setup devices with table saw and router cuts. Much easier than trying to get a ruler or tape measure to register properly and more accurate. I even have a pair of 2-3-4 blocks when I need something even larger to setup off of. Gets me everything from .001" to 8+" of cut setup capacity.
I would love to see more from you regarding electronics. That electronics troubleshooting video you made with one of the most helpful I’ve seen on UA-cam. Would love to see about your electronics tools, equipment, and troubleshooting stuff.
Cool. I've got something coming up real soon.
I like to make a set of mild steel flat jaws for my vises. They are soft enough to hold things firmly and don't leave apprentice marks on parts.
Good idea. We usually think of copper or aluminum, but depending on what you're gripping, mild steel could be a good option.
I was getting tired of same ole stuff on utube. So i found your video. Much impressed as i am turning my drill press into a somewhat of a milling machine for my leathertools.
Great stuff from new subscriber.👌
The trick with using the 123 block as a surface gauge is super cool, definitely going to use that one!
It's weird how I can use things everyday that people don't know but people show me new things everyday. 😀. I hope this made sense.ta.
In all 10 items that you mentioned, the 2x3 blocks, big yeah 👍. When I finally move forward, the bandsaw will be the choice. Very inexpensive, the ability to part something. And that was my problematic situation, without a huge investment, thanks for your video!!
One of my tips is to take a piece of 2x2x.250 aluminum angle, and cut to pieces to be the same length as your vise jaws.
Then clamp both into the vise jaws so they are in the jaws one one side, and laying over the top of the jaws on the other side.
I use a large dead-blow hammer to "persuade" the corners of the angle down over the jaws, then my letter punch set to mark them "Front" and "Rear" so I know which jaws they are registered to.
They're invaluable for clamping anything you don't want marred, they're inexpensive, and the faces are easily freshened in the mill or just replace if they get too worn.
As a hobby machinist, diamond files & grinding bits. They make qwuik work of sharpening cutters from HSS to Tungsten-carbide.
At work, it's usually more profitable to use inserts & replace them when the coating is worn.
I know some people regrind carbide inserts, too. Personally, I usually break them before they wear.
As others have said, the vernier depth technique is a great tip. I didn’t know that one.
Do you have a video on how to clean your shop? I see that you've mastered the art.
No.0 ... Apron !
Good, crispy presentation!
Awesome top ten, I really enjoyed learning about the bifocal safety glasses.
i was interested in the lathe collet chuck
I have about half of the tools from your top 10 list and in the coming weeks I will be completing the top 10.
One tool though that is really useful for me is a variable speed Dremel.
I never knew how indispensable it would become for me until I bought one, now I can't get along without it.
6 inch Scale/ 1 inch mic / 6 inch caliper/ Allen wrenches/ files/ toolmakers vice / square/ oil stone /rubber mallet/ tenths indicator/..safety glasses / parallels set 12 total.....thanks .good video....
Had to give a like for the caliper trick alone, never knew that. Thanks 👍🏻
needle files are so handy
Look into the evolution cold cut off saw. It is really nice.
Glad I happened onto your site... page?... video? Anyway, I subscribed mostly because of the bearing in my Wilton and the Noga deburring tool. Thanks.
I have no idea what I would do with the NogaFlex Indicator Holder, but I WANT ONE!!!
and I LOVE my 123 Blocks.
Nice vid!! I ALWAYS save my old prescription glasses and always order new glasses in polycarbonate. New glasses for everyday . . . old glasses for shop. Just slap on sideshields and gtg.
Thanks ! I have ordered the Noga magnetic base and deburring tools and will pick up the bifocal safety glasses from Bunnings on the weekend. Great tips. I just know how good the bifocal safety glasses will be, after years of changing glasses and losing them constantly.
Nice, interesting, informative, well done video.
Great list, I totally concur! Not sure about a thrust bearing on the Wilton. If you ever have to crank it hard, something has to give in those tiny needle bearings. They will either be crushed or embed themselves in the washer. Me, I would make sure my factory thrust washer is thick, precision, and well hardened and replace if necessary. The extra force needed will be negligible.
The force difference is significant, which is why I did it. The bearing assembly is rated for 12,000lbs static thrust, so it should be fine.
Can you post a link to the 3d printed spacer? Thanks and great video!
I see an inspiring, beautiful and disciplined working order and I am fascinated
All 1/6ths wrench..... that’s a total keeper..!!🤣😎