Like every aspect of this grinder, the big diameter drum, the RVS blades, the table, great work, thanks for showing and suc6 with the cider production.
It was great for me to visit just a little more than a year from when they moved in. Its incredible how much they got done in their first year on the site...
Matthias Wandel has a design for a grinder similar to this, but IIRC he doesn't have that big of a table on it. He also has videos of his grinder in use and man it puts out the juice during grinding. Great video, really enjoyed it.
The big table seems like a very important innovation for being able to cache so much material to process and be able to do a last round of picking out bad apples and bits.
Wow! First of all, beautiful. Absolutely beautiful. Reminds me of some of the treasures out of Eric Sloane's 'A Museum of Early American Tools.' The white oak and simple lines on it are really a joy to look at. But, function first. And when I saw the apples get vaporized through it in less than a second I literally gasped. Wow. What a wonderful design. Incredibly functional and beautiful form. Mark, would you mind publishing the designs for this? I would love to build one for myself.
he's 'hello@markangelini.com' if you wanted to reach out... He might be open to it. Its a stunning design, and a great example of folks taking a solid seed of an idea and nurturing it into a real beauty of a thing.
It was made by my good friend Mark so its up to him if he wants to share some plans... If he makes a video or puts up a page with details I'll be sure to pin a comment to the top of this thread for folks to follow...
I know this video is dating quite a while back but I'm looking for some information. Mainly, I was curious about the gears and the motor used for the grinder... I know it's a long shot but either I'm very poor at this or I just can't find anything that I can compared to! hehe Thanks!
sedaliasloyd.com/ This is the website of my friend Mark who made this beautiful tool. You can connect with him there, better yet, order an incredibly well crafted wooden spoon and follow up with some questions, I'm sure he'd be happy to be helpful :)
BareFoot BackYard you would need a lot of gearing to get similar RPMs. I haven't done the math but at first glance it looks like that drum is spinning between 1k and 2k RPMs. The other challenge would be gearing it to have enough torque. I bet it could be done given some time, math, and iteration.
How was the polyurethane held up? I want to do something similar but am nervous because of the acidity in the cider. Could you also send a link for the poly you used?
Great job! Very simple, yet effective. Do you think it will work for harder items, like carrots? How are the blades sharpened, it looks like just slightly bended sheet metal
I believe they are making vinegar with some of it. We've made a fair amount of vinegar from cider, it's actually quite easy and in some ways maybe even more useful! I know my wife prefers the vinegar for cooking over the hard cider, but we both enjoy different phases of the process!
Wow! Wow! Wow! That is a piece of art! Beautiful! I wish him much success in his new endeavor.
Like every aspect of this grinder, the big diameter drum, the RVS blades, the table, great work, thanks for showing and suc6 with the cider production.
YES! Nice work Mark and Allison!
this is one of the two best grinders i found so far on youtube :)...thank you for sharing. helps a lot
I thought it was a beautiful design to be sure
Functional yet still beautiful design!! Thanks for sharing!!
Beautiful design.👍👍💚
Best one I've seen yet. Where did you source that screw on hub? I CAN'T FIND ONE LIKE IT ANYWHERE.
Search for 'Mark Angelini' and 'Mountain Run Permaculture' and you can connect directly to the mastermind behind this project :)
Man, the place looks a lot different than it did during your wedding, Mark & Allison! Nice work
It was great for me to visit just a little more than a year from when they moved in. Its incredible how much they got done in their first year on the site...
You weren't at their wedding, by chance - were you?
Great vid! I'm working on my own scratter atm. What is the faceplate you use to attach the drum to the metal shaft?
Matthias Wandel has a design for a grinder similar to this, but IIRC he doesn't have that big of a table on it. He also has videos of his grinder in use and man it puts out the juice during grinding. Great video, really enjoyed it.
The big table seems like a very important innovation for being able to cache so much material to process and be able to do a last round of picking out bad apples and bits.
Agreed. Really like your design.
Wow! First of all, beautiful. Absolutely beautiful. Reminds me of some of the treasures out of Eric Sloane's 'A Museum of Early American Tools.' The white oak and simple lines on it are really a joy to look at.
But, function first. And when I saw the apples get vaporized through it in less than a second I literally gasped. Wow. What a wonderful design. Incredibly functional and beautiful form.
Mark, would you mind publishing the designs for this? I would love to build one for myself.
he's 'hello@markangelini.com' if you wanted to reach out... He might be open to it. Its a stunning design, and a great example of folks taking a solid seed of an idea and nurturing it into a real beauty of a thing.
Nice! I just messaged him.
Hi Luke, did you ever get the plans how to make this machine? I’d love to make one myself if you can let me know how?
Thx Pete
Did you get the plans? Or know how to make one similar, if so can you share with me please 🤞🏻😃thx
@@petermoneypenny649 Never did unfortunately! You could try emailing him again.
Any chance that you would share the plans for this beautiful thing?
It was made by my good friend Mark so its up to him if he wants to share some plans... If he makes a video or puts up a page with details I'll be sure to pin a comment to the top of this thread for folks to follow...
very good machine. thanks for the video.
I would like to know if there are any plans for it
I'm afraid I have no plans for it, but you could reach out to my friend through the link in the description and ask him...
I know this video is dating quite a while back but I'm looking for some information.
Mainly, I was curious about the gears and the motor used for the grinder...
I know it's a long shot but either I'm very poor at this or I just can't find anything that I can compared to! hehe
Thanks!
sedaliasloyd.com/ This is the website of my friend Mark who made this beautiful tool. You can connect with him there, better yet, order an incredibly well crafted wooden spoon and follow up with some questions, I'm sure he'd be happy to be helpful :)
Sooo beautiful. I wonder if it would work with a had crank or be able to attach a bike to it!?!
BareFoot BackYard you would need a lot of gearing to get similar RPMs. I haven't done the math but at first glance it looks like that drum is spinning between 1k and 2k RPMs. The other challenge would be gearing it to have enough torque. I bet it could be done given some time, math, and iteration.
Splendid machine!
How was the polyurethane held up? I want to do something similar but am nervous because of the acidity in the cider. Could you also send a link for the poly you used?
I'm not sure I understand what poly you are referring to in this video?
super grinder !!!!
Respect from Russia!
классный!
What is the motor's horsepower? It's extremely efficient,
I can't say that I know unfortunately.
Great job! Very simple, yet effective. Do you think it will work for harder items, like carrots? How are the blades sharpened, it looks like just slightly bended sheet metal
I bet this design would work well for carrots, but it isn't my design so I can't say for sure.
Do you have a video on how to make vinegar? If not, maybe in the future?
Thanks!
Good suggestion... Could be a topic in the future for sure.
where you get that?
Our good friend Mark made it.
Great design! Québec is my part of the world ;-)
I want one!
What specifically are the blades on the grinding wheel made of?
My friend Mark built this so I'm not quite sure...
Very interesting and informative. Thank you!
Haha. Wow. Nicely done.
That's so cool! :)
Did you happen to ask them about apple cider vinegar?
I believe they are making vinegar with some of it. We've made a fair amount of vinegar from cider, it's actually quite easy and in some ways maybe even more useful! I know my wife prefers the vinegar for cooking over the hard cider, but we both enjoy different phases of the process!
Aronia cider?!!!!