Mastering the Art of Machining Titanium
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- Опубліковано 16 лют 2022
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#CNC #Machining #Machinist - Наука та технологія
Schilling robotics was a great place to work. I've installed and removed that part hundreds of times between Schilling and working offshore flying ROVs
Yes but they are usually Stainless I guess due to the cost, I can't see a need for Titanium premium pricing.
Customers came to us because we always delivered when a part was needed especially in an emergency. I once worked from 8 am to 3 am the following morning to get a part out. All manual on a 48" vertical borer. Got a Facebook hit recently, from a retired buyer from Fenner who were the biggest then, saying that we never let him down. Thats what it's about.
This channel, and others like it, have a great chance of fixing the broken relationship between blue and white collar workers in this country. Honestly brings tears to my eyes when I see the progression.
Fantastic comment.
*Before I saw the ROV I thought ahhhh that component looks just like it's off an ROV....hahaha......I work with them for 23yrs so far, am very familiar with SCHILLING Robotics, that T4 manipulator 7 function front stbd of the ROV is all Titanium and very well machined.*
Me too bud I work with the Schilling.. UHD Gen 3 are the best there is out there
Beautiful part, great story and priceless advice!
Titan, you are so important. I'm so happy that you have gone through what you've gone through so that you can bring your experience and wisdom to the industry. Keep on kicking ass, Sir!!
Did an internship at a manufacturing company and saw VMC and HMC it was amazing seeing them work.
Hey Titan, another great video. I love your philosophy. I don't do machining but i believe it can be translated into everything we do in life and other work places.
Hello Titan . Nice videos as always. I just have a question not about machining but more about buildings and floors. How do you keep your floors clean and did you use any sealer on top of the concrete . Maybe you can make a video about that . Thanks and boom...... Thomas from France
Hi Thomas,
The building is new and it has a sealer on top. Also, I always focus on having space between machines so it doesn’t look cluttered. Besides that, I make it known that the shop needs to be clean and we need to clean as we work etc… and hire like minded individuals that love having a clean shop.
@@TITANSofCNC Wish I had like minded co-workers that also liked a clean shop.. ha!
Hey Titan, fantastic video. I know you probably get this a lot, but what is your best recommendation for a super budget CNC mill? $2000 or less preferably?
It's got to go to 13,000 feet in the ocean (5791psi)...Titan googles 'how to machine titanium'...Seeing that beautiful surface finish. Thank you Titan, you are like the Billy Graham of machining.
Haha yuppp but he did it
Beautiful JOB!!!
Wonderful message/story. Take control of your life and excell. The rest will follow.
Awesome looking part. I have looked at many job ads and business web pages. Never seen information about how much actual machining experience company owners or people at high places have. Would be cool to know who considers themselves as the real deal right away. Not saying I deserve to work in such a place but nice to know where to turn to first if a need should arise.
Thanks for the continual inspirational videos … my journey to renter this trade is monumentally easier with all the knowledge you are sharing … i
Thanks … BOOM
Seriously pretty part on the Makino, where does it go and what does it do?
Titan, I love your video’s. I look only because I’m interested in the techniek. Can you do me a favor at tell something about the prices of tools and material during your video’s. I have my working career behind me but still I like to learn. Many tx in advance
Titan could you do a video on how you machined that part? With just a mill and lathe.
Did you say you bored that hole and then did the y shape features? If so does that hole have a pretty wide open tolerance?
What is the tolerances on that part to begin with? I wish I could see the drawing on that part , curious on the operations, pretty cool though
working for you would be so lit 🤟🏼 dreams into reality fr
Epic. I Think this is Barry job :D
I need to step up.
I made a similar part for a robot. Cool 😎
Can you make a Room from titanium, all one piece monoblock, let's say 9 x 9 x 9 metres including all details inside and outside ?
Machined a lot of titanium for the defense industry. International space station also.
That part looks like a serious piece of machining…..In general, pay scale wise do most machinist get paid more the more complex the work is? I only make $35k/year before taxes! But I’m entry level and work for a small company (under 100 employees)….we machine parts for industrial fryers, certainly nothing like aerospace or submersible. Was just curious.
That is a hard question to answer. There are a lot of moving pieces in play with who gets paid what. I started in the tool crib making $12.00 and hour. I've worked my way up from there to being the head swiss machine programmer at my current shop making well over $100K a year. My advice would be to not concern yourself with just going to top pay at any cost. There are some shops that pay big money, but they are shit holes to work in. I got lucky with my current shop as they pay very well and it is a really good environment to work in. Since you are new to the trade, just be a sponge. Learn as much as you can from anyone that will teach you. As your skills progress the money will come. There may come a time when you have reached the end of the line at a shop. Meaning that you have reached the max skillset that your current employer needs. At that point you've probably reached just about the max they can pay you as well. That was the situation my friend was in. He was at $27 an hour at a small shop doing programming, setting up, and running of small runs of parts on lathes. He was literally told that he had maxed out the pay rate for his position. My shop was looking for skilled guys, so we brought him on board. He got a raise to $37 an hour and now has opportunities in front of him that his last shop couldn't offer.
Sorry for the rambling. It's late I'm tired.
How do you get a shop tour? your email doesn’t work
I used to make parts for Shilling Robotics, now FMC. Everything was titanium or stainless.
Sir.. which lubricant did you use?
How much for that lion head!?!?
Boom
I want to work for you
I have titanium holding my spine together.
My job is with HD and UHD’s it’s called the bullet
the hand/finger movement at 0:01 is a bit ... suggestive
Could had said "Doesn't reinvent the wheel. Instead take our wheel at puts it on the car "
Meaning. Don't try and figure it out for your self when we already had and is telling you how
Posting videos at 5am
absolutely manhandled that piece of titanium
Привет из России )
I learned nothing about machining titanium in this video
Dat shits expensive
In my opinion this trade will die in first world countries, wages are very low, is a hard trade to learn, night shifts...
I thought so also but working in a shop now has changed my mind. ITAR and other domestic regulations will keep a lot of work in the US for the foreseeable future.
@@lopermachine but what about salaries? The average machinist makes less than q McDonalds employ
@@javidiaz1770 Easy, don't be average.
I've worked at shops where we have had to outsource parts to China. They were garbage. We had to rework large batches of them on a regular basis. We even had our customer reject a batch because they clearly were not made of the 316 Stainless that was specified on the print. Like Kevin said there are large portions of manufacturing that just can't be done anywhere else legally. With shipping costs and wages rising in China the cost savings of sending things over seas to be made is almost a wash now. Manufacturing jobs will never die out in this country.
@@javidiaz1770 where in the hell are McDonalds employees making the same as machinists?
every time I watch ROV videos , I Say I Can Do Better.
Ok…Ok…