Helical Machining: Rifling with the Norris Chuck (TIS094)
Вставка
- Опубліковано 22 чер 2017
- The Idahoan demonstrates his so-called "Norris Chuck," a device that facilitates machining helical surfaces on cylindrical work pieces, by making a rifling button and driving it through a piece of DOM tubing to make a barrel blank.
- Наука та технологія
Great video. It is so refreshing to find a presenter that doesn't repeat himself endlessly - making a six minute video go 30 minutes long. Thanks!!
Oh my goodness... If someone like Mr Idahoan is able to build such a complex metalworking device he knows who Mr Morse with his tapers and also factory was and you can be sure he is just playing with words.
Well done Mr. Idahoan show.. I never saw a better homemade rifling device with such a widespread possibility of use.
Great job. Working myself in the machine tool business for over 30 years and always appreciate to see great solutions!
the world needs more people like you, I love your videos, keep them coming
Sound is much better, and the rifling is beautiful
Sound is much better now, thanks! And thank you for all the work you put into these videos!
Thanks for your effort, the sound is much better indeed. Thanks for sharing your "experiments"
Beautiful job! Great improvement in sound quality! so stoked to see this in action
that right there is why i love youtube. it is incredible to see what people can come up with. very well done
Amazing quality and great work.
Great content and the 'I can do it' approach is a breath of fresh air.
Turned out wonderfully. I was surprised that it pounded through so uniformly helical. Love your machining equipment - great 'Norris Chuck' . Appreciated that editing you did too - made it quick while saving the coolness of the machining process in fast motion. And yes sound was much better. Thanks.
Sound is fine :) Awesome videos! Greetings from Sweden.
What a character, what a nice guy, what a machinist, we need more of this guy in the world.
now this rifling looks damn good. so much talent.
I hear that Norris chuck is so strong, it actually holds the world, and spins it around the workpiece.
Love the audio improvement.
some mighty clean rifling! also the "Norris Chuck" is pretty novel, well done.
Wow your mistake with the rifling spacing looks really nice, like a signature. Beautiful.
Thank you!
Richard Smith girar la pantall
Don't use it in crime.... The forensics will pin it on you in a jiffy with thumb print rifling like this!
😂😂😂😂
@@Igotknobblies lol that's what I was thinking. They wouldn't even need one of those comparator machines they use, you could just look down the bore, look at the bullet, and go "yup this is the one".
Great job, great sound, great video!!
Man I absolutely love your setup that you have on the mill with that indexer thats cool as hell ill have to get me a set up like that for my mill iv been thinking about doing something like that for awhile now. Good work keep it up look forward to see more of your work be safe
Thank you for sharing this. Really helped me out.
This is a very interesting video! Well done!
Very good idea and machining of fish. Congratulations. Angel
unreal Skills you have Sir!
Very creative use of the equipment. Thanks again for linking me to this.
You're welcome!
Damn that rifling is beautiful
Any bullet would be proud to spin it's way down that barrel.
Great work that looked like some cool rifling who know what we come up with during our experiments it’s always interesting.
that rifling looks absolutely beautiful. you are an artist man. also ive been looking for a setup like that for a long time for machining my own helical end mills without any CNC. thanks for making this video.
You make it look so easy. Nice.
This type of video is why I'm a subscriber. The sound quality never bothered me before, but now it is more professional. Keep up the good work.
To say I'm jealous of this set up is an understatement, there is very few things you can't make with this.
Excellent craftsmanship Sir.
Thank you!
wow, driving the rifling button with a hammer was a crazy idea for me, but it worked pretty well! thanks for sharing!
Sounds great and the barrel is killing!
Very interesting. I've always wondered how you rifle a barrel. I really like the Norris Chuck set up.
Outstanding!!
Pretty damn ingenious!!! Good job!
Thanks!
First video, already a subscriber; keep up the good work!
Great work sir! God Bless.
This I love! Thank you for a great video. I've always wanted to do something like that but sadly have very little creative ability.
Audio is a great improvement, I am in the process of building a small recording studio myself and it definitely steps up the total quality. Great video as well.
Wow, thanks for Listening about the echo, I really like your videos and because of a slight hearing problem I couldnt hear anything with the echo, Love the Dubbed format. Please keep up the awesome videos.
Nice work!
A unique and fascinating rifling pattern. I would suggest replacing the friction belt with a gear belt. If the friction belt slips, you mess up your spiral. And swapping out gear pulleys makes it possible to quick change twist rates.
Yes, toothed pulleys and a timing belt to give positive drive would be better.
Your shop is amazing. You are a very lucky man my friend.
Edit: interesting the high # of views....must the the Chuck Norris connection.
Groovy... Literally!
That was the coolest GUN ANYTHING I’ve ever seen!!!
Great video thank you for sharing, yes the audio was much better my ears thank you as well.
Impressive work, stay at it!
Nice job, l have very poor hearing so it is very good to hear a clear voice and excellent English. Thanks
you're the exact type of person,
who made america,
the wonderful place,
it is.
Thank you! I am flattered!
molly clock ..... good one i like your attitude i would be flattered also.
good point
:)
So an immigrant, slave or native american?
That rifling like that look like it may be very accurate. Thumbs up.
Most people would go to the hardware store for a pulley. This guy makes one in less time than going to store. Kudos mate!
Such an elegant (almost ironic) juxtaposition of sophisticated precision machining and that thumpy bumpy sledge hammer on an old stump. I love it. One uniquely interesting human being.
Great sound, great button.
awesome video!
Nice video and work!
Top video great knowledge and skills thank you :-)
great stuff dude
Can you do a more in dept video on how you figured the pulley size to time the turn. I truly love how you made this and i want to learn more. Thank you
Perfectly! Wonderful machine! Several gadgets - and you can cut small trunks with better quality right on it!
wow perfect! Thank you Sir
Great vid 👍
Another awesome video. I want to make an internal throttle assembly for a motorcycle build I’m doing. It needs a long helical cut on a a piece of tubing. This was the answer.😄 I’m going to start drawing up plans for my mill.
How did it go mate? I have 1968 CZ with that style of throttle. How did you do an internal cut in a tube with a mill????
You are so Amazing, Scary Smart. And God Bless you Sir!!!
Thank you!
El mejor video que he visto para hacer estrias manualmente. Exelente video.
Man I knew Chuck Norris was tough, but this is next level!!!
The rifling came out so clean...
Shooot-it!
Good job, Sir.
Can't hear an echo, so much improved.
I dont know how you don't have 1,000,000+ subscribers.
Wow that is so impressive.
Greetings from Austria
Thank you!
Very very cool! Im super jealous and your super badass! Haha thanks for sharing !!
A good way to drive a button with a short stroke press is to get some hardened steel dowel pins about 2" long and one size smaller diameter than the bore. Run one in all the way, then stack another on top of it, and so on till you are all the way through. I've seen buttons shatter trying to drive them with a hammer.
Good to see a good old Idaho boy making things with his hands
Happy to oblige!
Fantastic!
Looks great
I have often wondered how a barrel is rifled. Cool video.
Genius, Sir.
Excellent work! I'm impressed with how well the rifling came out, but you might consider revising the design of your spiral drive from using pulleys to using gears. Reason being that in the even that you get oil or grease on either the pulleys or the belt they will slip and the helical path will become irregular and unpredictable.
Good suggestion, I was thinking about belt slip also. When I built my CNC router, (video on my channel) I wanted to have the option to change ratios on the leadscrew drives, with no slip. I used cheap nylon timing belt pulleys from SDP/SI in Hyde Park, New York. Nothing in the main setup would have to change, just order the pulleys with the right size hubs in the desired ratio combinations, and pop on the timing belt.
I had a great idea that makes the expense of timing pulleys and belts unnecessary, and greatly simplifies the setup. If twist is one in 9, for example, make a pulley with circumference of 9 (pi x diameter = circumference). This pulley is attached directly to the workpiece chuck. 1/16 in steel cable is anchored to the pulley and wrapped around it the number of times needed for the length of the workpiece. The cable then goes through a idler pulley mounted to the table angled such that the cable now goes in the same direction of table travel. The end of the cable is anchored to a stationary surface. Now, as table moves forward, the cable is unspooled from the pulley that is attached to the workpiece.
This works in only one direction, of course, but a little ingenuity will lead to a cable coming off both sides of the pulley, anchored in the opposite direction as the first one.
For perfect accuracy, subtract the diameter of the cable from the diameter of the pulley.
I'm currently building a similar thing to this, although I'm controlling mine using an arduino and stepper motor. It takes an input from the DRO scale and for every certain number of pulses (13 for roughly 1:16" with 5um scales and 1/32 Microsteping) it will send a pulse to the Microstep driver and stepper motor. I'll make sure to record it and upload a video of it to UA-cam.
i'm very curious of the results, have you chambered and tested this barrel for accuracy?
Good job 👏👏👏
awesome video! wish you kept the buttons together to make a progressive cut similar to how a step bit works. Also curious if you have tried something similar to a jack hammer to drive buttons? would it be cleaner that way or potentially vibrate the tool steel to death?
I wonder how button rifling was done in John Browning's time?
Thanks Mr. Idahoan, your genius in taking out complexity!
Very complicated machines powered by belts off a steam engine, see this UA-cam video: ua-cam.com/video/iK82_gqi9dw/v-deo.html
If you have a patreon I would be glad to support your channel that has so much to offer
Thank you! I am indeed on Patreon.
www.patreon.com/TheIdahoanShow
How do you determine the twist rate? Just by changing some pulleys I guess? Great video and process, I wish I had the means to do the same.
Very Good Video. Now the question. HOW do you get your equipment cleaned up after you use it? Maybe you ought to make a video about that?
Chuck Norris would be proud
WOW!!! Did A Awesome Job>.
Could you please explain how to do the math for this??? Ive thought about using this setup , for all sorts of maching , but not sure how to do the ratios.
позволю себе дать вам совет, сделанные таким способом нарезы проживут не долго, дно нареза должно быть как минимум в два раза шире ведущей части, а вместо молотка нужно использовать перфоратор в режиме отбойника
High tech then an old hammer outside. Crazy juxtaposed weird man! Works every time.
Beautiful
guess you should be using timing belts with tooths instead of v belts for syncing purposes. non toothed belts are intended for power transmission and have a slip so you might lose sync between the input shaft and the output shaft.
holy, I am watching this 6 years later and came back to say the same thing just to see that I already said it, lol
Nice job!
Thank you!
I am not sure if the lack of any reverb or the slow frame rate of the rendered video is more disturbing, but I have found in live audio recording some reverb and noise is fitting with the surrounding visual ambiance to make it sound more realistic.Also, I was thinking the reverb was a contributory stylistic effect. It is a little excessive and may be overly distracting. You could control it with some inexpensive evaporative cooler pads, burlap... spread around your recording area to break up hard flat acoustically reflective surfaces. You could be surprised with how little is needed to reduce it to an acceptable level.
Add a roll pin to your bar stock to index on your chuck jaw for an accurate position for a second button. Leave them connected to cut 6 equal spaced grooves.
"naming a chuck 'norris' just seemed appropriate somehow"
absolute legend
You had me totally convinced there was such a thing as a Morris taper.
My following questions. Is did you twisted the bottom rifle while you where getting hot or you just template's to getting harder