Making file guide vise jaws for perfect cuts

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  • Опубліковано 29 тра 2024
  • In this video I'll make a set of file guides using HSS inserts. These will be different than other file guides as these are designed to rest on vise jaws and open with the vise jaws. File guides are commonly used for knife making but I'll mostly use mine for other things. Most of these parts were machined on my benchtop milling machine Precision Matthews PM30-MV
    Please consider supporting me on Patreon. www.patreon.com/user?u=58360840 You'll receive access to Patreon only posts as well as any 3d printing files that I designed.
    Intro 00:00
    Machining the main body 00:26
    Cutting dovetails 01:48
    Machining holes for pins and bolts 02:45
    Machining over hangs 03:30
    Relieving stress 05:24
    Machining holes for springs 06:35
    Grinding bevels onto HSS 07:05
    Making the clamps 07:45
    Electro Etching my channel logo 09:15
    Assembly and Testing 10:48
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 47

  • @Dglinski2
    @Dglinski2 Місяць тому +7

    I'm always amazed of how well you capture attention with no background music! so satisfying!

  • @14tauscher
    @14tauscher Місяць тому +11

    Fantastic, the finishing touches on all your projects always makes it look so good! The cleanup of all the little bits and pieces at the end are one of my favorite bits of your videos, and really show what a difference the small details can have on a finished project.

  • @TheGreenGamer33
    @TheGreenGamer33 Місяць тому +4

    Machinist currently in college here, just wanted to say: Nicely done. Also, that pop at 3:33 is just *chefs kiss*
    A possible way to avoid the bowing issue is to anneal the steel beforehand, and keep it cool while machining it (lower feed rate and coolant if possible).

  • @piconano
    @piconano Місяць тому +1

    Your work is treatment for my OCD.

  • @zaxxa3787
    @zaxxa3787 Місяць тому +1

    I always love watching these videos

  • @mikealinan3038
    @mikealinan3038 Місяць тому +4

    Great stuff as always man, i always get so interested in these videos you make :)

  • @Njazmo
    @Njazmo Місяць тому +1

    That was really cool and easy etching method.

  • @barthanes1
    @barthanes1 Місяць тому +2

    I would have done it exactly the same, including being surprised that it warped under it's own internal stresses.

  • @EvenTheDogAgrees
    @EvenTheDogAgrees Місяць тому

    You can blacken the etching by using AC current. Of course, you can't do that with a simple setup with batteries. But if you got a transformer-based AC/DC adapter of the right voltage, and are a bit handy with a soldering iron, it can be done. The transformer outputs AC voltage, which gets rectified by a bridge rectifier. You can tap off the unrectified AC current straight from the transformer, and the DC (which you need to etch into the material) from its standard output. Then you can just use a dual pole dual throw switch to connect either to your output probes.
    I used some cheap Hakko 936 knock-off as the basis for my etching station. Made a new front plate for it that houses a DPDT switch, and replaced the internal PCB with one that takes the output of the transformer, and exposes it as one set of outputs, while also passing it through a full bridge rectifier, whose outputs also get exposed. Then both of those outputs get fed to the "output" sides of the DPDT switch, whose "input" gets connected to the crocodile clamp and a wand that ends in a sponge.
    I've seen others do it using a cheap cellphone charger, but nowadays you have to doublecheck they actually have an AC output stage, since a lot of 'em (the so-called switching power supplies) use buck converters instead of transformers. The same goes for my soldering iron, btw; a lot of those are built around buck converters these days, as opposed to transformers.

  • @homemadetools
    @homemadetools Місяць тому

    Excellent work, and they came out beautiful. We shared this video on our homemade tools forum last week 😎

  • @coreyrobinson9010
    @coreyrobinson9010 Місяць тому +2

    As always, a great video Cousin ;)

  • @dennisobrien3618
    @dennisobrien3618 Місяць тому

    It's comforting watching you work. Your thought processes and the way you work mirror my own (although I probably cut corners more unless super high precision is necessary).

  • @systemG3000
    @systemG3000 Місяць тому

    At first I thought this was going to be for doing file work on knife spines or something. But it still could be if you ground regular grooves into the HSS bits (could even make a set of them). Well done.

  • @contra81
    @contra81 Місяць тому

    As a novice/not-so-good metal planemaker, I can tell you in earnest that you have a market for this tool if you were to make it! Wish i had one of these, nice work!

  • @brenovsky
    @brenovsky Місяць тому +1

    Alright!! Very nice work!!! Keep it up!!

  • @mftmachining
    @mftmachining Місяць тому

    Excellent job. Too beautiful to use.....piece of art. Top.

  • @aserta
    @aserta Місяць тому +2

    You get away with not messing the files if you chamfer the outer edges and round them up.

  • @user-rn5ks8sf5x
    @user-rn5ks8sf5x Місяць тому

    Nicely done

  • @johnwick7175
    @johnwick7175 Місяць тому +1

    1:30 oh shit I felt my hand getting cut off. There's something ominous about vertical band saws. They scare me to death. Don't know if it's the sound, or whatever it is, but it's the most scary tool in a workshop for me. 🤣

  • @eveleynce
    @eveleynce Місяць тому +9

    any statement that begins with "I used my wife's" makes me nervous

  • @rachelg552353
    @rachelg552353 Місяць тому

    Excellent 🎉

  • @fridgeways2300
    @fridgeways2300 Місяць тому +1

    Which software was supplying the render at the beginning of vid please?

  • @Brandon-dg9lu
    @Brandon-dg9lu Місяць тому

    I would really love to see someone make the chromium nickel cobalt alloy for tools like an axe, etc that was created a few years ago.

  • @ThePracticalPeasant
    @ThePracticalPeasant Місяць тому

    Last time I made pins out of a piece of steel that looked like that, it turned out to be a scrap of W2, where a hardened tool had been made and cut from one end. The 20 pins I needed to make got progressively harder to cut as I got closer to the end that had been heat-treated...

  • @dan4653
    @dan4653 Місяць тому

    Buy cold rolled, annealed. Should help.

  • @ironhead65
    @ironhead65 Місяць тому

    Great video! What luck about those large hss pieces!
    That blue suction, is that just exhausting gases?

  • @LeonardoAppItalia
    @LeonardoAppItalia 19 днів тому

    Hi friend, congratulations for your videos, they are kind of netflix for me. Can I ask you what kind of mask and filters you use?

  • @iblong9505
    @iblong9505 Місяць тому +4

    Every one of my wives said 6 inches was "the perfect size"

    • @MrThisIsMeToo
      @MrThisIsMeToo Місяць тому +1

      Yet you wonder why so many wives.

    • @darksu6947
      @darksu6947 Місяць тому

      Your wives told me over and over again that 8 inches is the best size for rearranging their internal mechanisms 😂

  • @lucusloc
    @lucusloc Місяць тому +1

    Something happen with the original version? I just watched that earlier today, then this one popped up.

    • @robinson-foundry
      @robinson-foundry  Місяць тому +1

      Yes, I had to remove and re-upload this video to fix some issues with the audio. Thanks for watching it!

    • @lucusloc
      @lucusloc Місяць тому

      @@robinson-foundry lol, I did not even notice. I will give this another watch though to see if I can spot the difference and give the algorithm a little bump.

  • @Boosted98gsx
    @Boosted98gsx Місяць тому +2

    You should put some thought into manufacturing these... On the warping from stress relief, next time (if there is) start with annealed material and then heat treat yourself post machining. You'll want to leave some stock so that you can grind the important features to final size and tolerance however. You're going to have warping no matter which direction you tackle it from, working with hardened/hardening parts. The key is control.

  • @chadwickhjones
    @chadwickhjones 13 днів тому

    I love this channel but I don’t understand what this item is. A vice for your vice?

  • @miserirken
    @miserirken Місяць тому

    Well, time to watch this one again, i guess ,':^)

  • @dariocarraro4436
    @dariocarraro4436 Місяць тому +1

    A suggestion...why don't use rollers instead of plates. That will not spoil the file

  • @justinbarnett4816
    @justinbarnett4816 Місяць тому

    First

  • @petepeterson4540
    @petepeterson4540 Місяць тому

    besides hardening it no you've done enough.

  • @Sharpbevel
    @Sharpbevel Місяць тому

    Dude is the professor on Gilligan’s Island.

  • @sdeane09
    @sdeane09 Місяць тому +1

    Or maybe its just average ha ha