Watchmaking, Use of a very Rare Tool, Ingold Fraise / Cutter

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  • Опубліковано 14 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 67

  • @mbunds
    @mbunds 9 років тому +4

    I hope this incredible art is never lost! I used to repair aircraft instruments before precision mechanical assemblies were replaced by electronics and servos, but I never knew how the tiny gears were cut. Thanks!

  • @QPaul86
    @QPaul86 10 років тому +7

    It's a true pleasure to watch a craftsman at work.

  • @zxtenn
    @zxtenn 8 років тому +24

    And people wonder why some mechanical watches are so expensive, these people are master machinists and craftsman-- I hope they are paid VERY wellThank you so much for uploading such almost classified information, its truly amazing

  • @bessiebraveheart
    @bessiebraveheart 11 років тому +5

    sir i am a 67 year old who attempts sometimes with success to restore antique pocket watches.i have a long way to go and i fear i will not have the time to develop my skills. to watch a master gives me inspiration. thank you.

  • @canadianmudkipz
    @canadianmudkipz 11 років тому +1

    People like you are what watchmaking is all about, not about quartz battery powered jobs. I own two automatic pieces and I love them to death.

  • @bobeileen1
    @bobeileen1 11 років тому +2

    The extreme precision nature of your work is most inspiring to watch. Your work ethic, replacing tools in boxes and neatness are an important aspect of your work.
    I'm a hobbyist living in Aurora, CO.

  • @EleanorPeterson
    @EleanorPeterson 8 років тому

    This is not only wonderful to see, but also wonderful to listen to. The sound of pure skill - k-tic, k-tac; k-tic, k-tac... A sublime soundtrack to a fascinating video. Thank you so much for posting, sir!

  • @proinnsiasoc
    @proinnsiasoc 11 років тому +1

    Hi Steffen. Another very. Clear detailed video. Thanks for sharing this rare tool with us and demonstration

  • @therealforeal
    @therealforeal 11 років тому

    Thank you for another fine demonstration. Your seemingly boundless knowledge is only surpassed by your patience. Please, keep the videos coming.

  • @jonnyphenomenon
    @jonnyphenomenon 8 років тому +7

    mesmerizing video. I've been watching other guys videos with the same annoying background music replaying over and over.... I can hardly beleive how soothing it was to watch you work with nothing but the ticking of clocks in the background. Thanks for this! I'll be watching more for sure.

  • @bananastickman2
    @bananastickman2 10 років тому +6

    A fine craftsman right there! I wish I new everything this man does!

  • @DeniseLaFranceCDNpainter
    @DeniseLaFranceCDNpainter 11 років тому

    Thank you for taking the time to demonstrate this wonderful tool and how it works.I marvelled at your steady hands and attention to detail. Such patience and intricate work. Fascinates and interests me.

  • @Neverokful
    @Neverokful 11 років тому

    I thoroughly enjoy your videos and tutorials and I have learnt a lot from just watching you.

  • @webworkhere
    @webworkhere 10 років тому

    Knowledge is Wisdom, Advice follow this guy if you want to be a watch maker!!!
    It has been a pleasure reviewing this Video, I would have never known what those tools were.

  • @tuva600
    @tuva600 11 років тому

    Really neat how you explain what's going on with the printed pictures! Your book looks really nice too. Thanks for the video.

  • @franzmuller6404
    @franzmuller6404 9 років тому +1

    Präzision und Handwerkskunst at its best. Großartig.

  • @maxbouch1128
    @maxbouch1128 11 років тому

    the old man that hold the knowledge. im smiling with a tear...

  • @87ww1807
    @87ww1807 8 років тому +5

    Hi Steffen, , Just to let yo know that I to this day get great enjoyment from your video's. not only are you a master of watchmaking but you could make a name for yourself in video techniques. It is truly wonderful to watch.

  • @jmflyer55
    @jmflyer55 11 років тому

    Thanks you for posting! I am always looking forward to a new video from you Steffen. Your work is excellent and inspires me to also seek perfection at watchmaking. Again, Thank you! John

  • @TheRobq7
    @TheRobq7 11 років тому

    It is good to see a new video from you. I learn a lot from your videos.

  • @jojoturano1
    @jojoturano1 11 років тому +1

    You made a informative, interesting video of your passion for your watchmaking tool. It is a amazing art that you have learned. Thank you for passing this information on to us..thanks, joanne

  • @webworkhere
    @webworkhere 10 років тому

    I could not do a better job then him describing his passion to the publish, he did an excellent video thumbs up like and share..

  • @Tailgunner30
    @Tailgunner30 11 років тому

    Thank you for this. Your videos provide a fascinating insight into the watchmakers art.

  • @hakaboy6924
    @hakaboy6924 11 років тому

    Sir may your art never die

  • @VictorC1891
    @VictorC1891 10 років тому +2

    This is fascinating, my respect's to a great watchmaker/artisan !

  • @nilsbeniernorgren3731
    @nilsbeniernorgren3731 10 років тому +1

    Hi Steffen! Im watching you videos on a train in Sweden going back to my hometown. I have been to a watchmaking school here in sweden the last couple of days doing tests and I'm hoping to be able to attend the school next year! Your videos inspire me and i hope one day I will understand all that you are doing :) Best regards /Nils

  • @allenbrowning
    @allenbrowning 11 років тому

    That is a very neat and useful tool thank you for showing us how to use it and seeing it work

  • @GottliebGoltz
    @GottliebGoltz 8 років тому

    The designers and makers of that sort of tooling is amazing. As an Old Timer once told Me in the 50's "If You don't have time to make a pot of coffee, You don't have time for that lousy instant crap.

  • @Rover109able
    @Rover109able 10 років тому

    You are truly a craftsman Sir

  • @deathfrogg
    @deathfrogg 11 років тому

    I have one of these. My Great-Grandfather was a small instrument machinist. I had no idea that these fit together this way, and the parts are scattered around in several separate boxes and locations. For years I've been trying to figure out what that little brass fixture is.
    What I have is:
    Starret Watchmakers lathe
    The hand mill attachment
    The little trunnion jig
    The Collets for the lathe
    Several square toothed round discs that do not function as gears, purpose unknown.
    A few more parts.

  • @BennyHeflinger
    @BennyHeflinger 10 років тому +1

    Excellent video!

  • @phuocnguyen-pq3qh
    @phuocnguyen-pq3qh 7 років тому

    wonderful.i like your job

  • @carmelpule1
    @carmelpule1 11 років тому +10

    There is so much eduction to be learnt in silence. It is such a pity that such material is never indicated to our children in a class. When I see such level of accuracy and such dedication, I sometimes wonder that what do we learn at school is so superficial and not so detailed as one finds when working in silent functions. There is more hidden art, than what is normally seen!

  • @douglasskinner
    @douglasskinner 9 років тому

    Beautiful tool! Thanks!

  •  9 років тому +2

    You can tell, the watch-maker and surgeon are cut from the same cloth. Studious, serious with a resting heart rate somewhere south of 50 bpm's. The sniper too, they rest with a controlled mind. The Universe's most puzzling conundrum: How to wrest control of time. It isn't easy, because it's not meant to be, it's immensely complex...because it has to be, such are the terms of the study. It's a dark art allied to mechanical alchemy. It's engineering prowess befitting the titan's of old.

  • @Bowtie41
    @Bowtie41 8 років тому +1

    As a "normal" machinist,I have always been amazed at watchmaking,and been a subscriber of you and Clickspring for a long while.But,at around 2:18,it seems the topping tool has a LOT of runout.Does that not make for an out-of-round gear,and would cause the mechanism to bind?Thank You SO much for sharing your knowledge!

  • @RollaArtis
    @RollaArtis 11 років тому

    Thanks for uploading such an interesting video. I have never seen this tool being used, presumably it gives a perfectly cycloidal form to the tooth as well as 'rounding it up'. But how do you know the correct shape of the pinion leaves to match these teeth? Maybe Ingold also had a special cutter for the pinion? I think he wrote a description of this tool somewhere - maybe it's in the Revue Chronometrique.

  • @especialistafiltrosepecas5058
    @especialistafiltrosepecas5058 9 років тому

    very nice!

  • @markrichardson239
    @markrichardson239 9 років тому

    I am amazed.
    Thank you.

  • @andrewwilson8317
    @andrewwilson8317 8 років тому

    Could a gear cutter with the correct profile of the addendum/dedendum not be used instead?

  • @Sheila6325
    @Sheila6325 10 років тому +1

    Amazing, thank you so much.

  • @marinatyagulskaya5691
    @marinatyagulskaya5691 11 років тому

    great video. i have a question. what is the name of the book shown at the end of the video? thnx

  • @jerematthewjohnson223
    @jerematthewjohnson223 11 років тому

    thank you for posting

  • @GottliebGoltz
    @GottliebGoltz 9 років тому

    Thank You again.

  • @justynsweeting
    @justynsweeting 9 років тому

    Wow. Do you make watches(inclusive of case, jewels, crystal, etc..) also or just gear manufacturing?

  • @ivanivanov-cl2he
    @ivanivanov-cl2he 9 років тому

    Genial.

  • @KinWong828
    @KinWong828 7 років тому

    What's the title of that book?

  • @johannesbraun8415
    @johannesbraun8415 11 років тому

    Ich bin ja kein Uhrmacher, ich verstehe also richtig, dass die Ingold-Fräse mit dem Hieb auf den Fräserflanken, die Genauigkeit des Zahnrades erhöht, bzw. die Leichtgängigkeit?

  • @astrazenica7783
    @astrazenica7783 9 років тому

    ingenious!

  • @aigcess22
    @aigcess22 9 років тому

    Hallo herr Pahlow, wohin kann ich dieses buch kaufen in Swisserland? danke für ihre helfe

    • @spahlow
      @spahlow  9 років тому

      aigcess22 oder bei mir kaufen!

    • @aigcess22
      @aigcess22 9 років тому

      auf welche adresse?

  • @stmbaah
    @stmbaah 11 років тому

    thank you

  • @tylerfink4359
    @tylerfink4359 10 років тому

    But how do they make the tool accurate? It's an infinite regress.

    • @joshua43214
      @joshua43214 9 років тому +5

      Tyler Fink Quite the opposite actually. Precision is increased during each iteration of tool making provided all known sources of inaccuracy are compensated for as best as possible. Were this not the case, we never could have progressed from stone tools to nano-tools. Indexing for example improves by orders of magnitude by driving one indexer with another. You could make two indexers with a hack saw and a file, use them to mark index locations for a two more, use those to make another pair. By the end of the decade you have an indexer more accurate than the cutting machine you use for the wheels.Tool grinding is similar, use a grinder to make tooling for a better grinder, use that grinder to make a better one and so on.Folks were making extremely accurate tools and tooling back in the 17th and 18th century, the limiting factor was material science. Modern chemistry did not emerge until after 1900, before then no one really had any idea how to make better materials other than educated guessing and trial and error.You are correct about infinite regression in manufacturing though. It takes a highly precise and accurate machine to manufacture a merely accurate and precise machine.

  • @paulosergioalessiaristides1646
    @paulosergioalessiaristides1646 10 років тому

    Assisti a todos videos seus, são muito bons., gostaria de poder comprar um lathe igual ao seu.

  • @gunbuy
    @gunbuy 11 років тому

    yes! I am 34 now and I dont remember when...I understood that micro mechanics have to be taught to our children. Who invented this tools? And the history of engineering thought

  • @aigcess22
    @aigcess22 10 років тому

    wir konnen Auch dieses buch als fransosich haben? oder nicht?

    • @spahlow
      @spahlow  10 років тому

      Nur in Deutsch und Englisch

  • @spahlow
    @spahlow  11 років тому

    Richtig, so ist es, mehr nicht!
    Grüsse Steffen Pahlow

  • @zeko9444
    @zeko9444 9 років тому

    Ausgezeichnet!!
    Wo ist die fehlende Fräse?
    Sie haben nur 83 Fräsen.
    Sie sollten 84 Fräsen im Schachtel haben.
    Wo ist Fräse Nummer 84?
    Verloren?
    Nur neugierig.....

  • @spahlow
    @spahlow  11 років тому

    The book-name is Tourbillon about my passion. You find more details on my website, please google upon my name Steffen Pahlow

  • @pignatari48
    @pignatari48 11 років тому +2

    Precision mechanic watches are getting old, skilled watchmakers too, even the time
    is now old. All we get is cheap quartz watches very poor in craftsmanship.

  • @CusterFlux
    @CusterFlux 10 років тому

    Introverts need only apply.