exactly my thoughts.. you will regret it latest at the point where they need to to remove small particles with a sharp metal "spoon" and a drill at 4am..that what happened to me and since then i am always wearing eye protection at work
@@Warjack1992 irony is on mine I’d been welding and grinding and wire-brushing all day long and was wearing my wicked awesome North (now 3M) model 7600 Darth Vader esque welding face mask/respirator and been working with gloved hands (the Mechanix high gauntlet which they don’t make anymore because they’re dumb) though evidently failed to properly scrub under my fingernails and managed to implant a few tiny shards. It was an expensive next day. So really I also should like to remind these dopes to not only wear eye protection but also proper hand cleaning is valuable.
@@charleshetrick3152 that is freaking unlucky.... hehe, sth similar happend to me once, i had some in my eye brown and i scratched my eyes at night. and i basically masaged metal shards in my eyes. Oh boy was that a horrible long night until the doctor opened :)
I'm working as an Analyst at a University now and used to work as a Data Scientist in Manufacturing and I get asked why I miss working in Manufacturing so much and this video is a great example as to why: big or small, high or low-tech; when you work in manufacturing you watch things get *made*. It's honestly beautiful seeing things come together from print to part and when things are particularly large like this you can't help but be amazed at what the engineers, technicians and machinists can do with what would otherwise be an 'impossible' request. Watching stuff like this: manual & CNC maching plus 3D printing for so long encouraged me to take the plunge into hobbyist machining myself. I just missed 'making' and being around 'makers' and it's been the second-best decision of my life second only to finding the greatest partner on the planet.
Kinda off-topic - that YT way of making text *bold* or _italic_ (or *_bold italic_* ) is pretty flawed - looks more like some Q&D afterthought rather than a properly implemented solution - namely, whenever a punctuation mark or a bracket is typed right next to these "markups" (underscore for italics, asterisk for bold) it throws out intended formatting out of the window. Here you typed "made" within asterisks, which should make it appear as *made* - but since you have typed a full stop right after it, it looks like *made*. Also, notice the "unneeded" space between "italic" and the closing bracket in the phrase "(or *_bold italic_* )" from my first sentence here - if not for this space the formatting wouldn't show up. It sucks, but this is YT for ya... ;-)
Hey!, let's get this kid on the right track. Eye safety is crucial, they are for life. When I was a 16 year old apprentice, in a large engineering works, I'd have gotten a slap for not wearing my goggles.
@@hydraulicfactory UNA VOLTA ERA COSÌ NELLE OFFICINE E OLTRE ALLO SCHIAFFO SPESSO E VOLENTIERI TI ARRIVAVA UNA BELLA PEDATA NEL CULO 😂🎉😂 CHISSÀ PERCHÉ MA IMPARAVI SUBITO IMMEDIATAMENTE 😱😳😱😳😱😳😱😳😱😳😱
Guy did a masterful job getting the piece in the chuck. No chip guard! No coolant! Kids! No eye protection! Gotta be careful running big, heavy rod on chuck and steady-rest. Don't want it working its way outta the chuck! Good job> Enjoyed it.
I retired last year 2023 after working for many years manual turning we had a lathe at work 16 ft bed 5ft faceplate it must of been 100 years old last thing I did on it was a set of traction engine gear blanks
@@paultyrer2171 the machine I run is 5500 mm long or 18 feet, but we only use about 1/2 of the length. its massive and has a 10:1 gear ratio in high gear and a 150 hp DC motor and ive pushed it up to 75% load on rare occasions, which is my favorite time to run it. max our tools will take is .787 or 20mm DOC at .004 ipr or .009 mmpr i can make a tandem dump truck full of chips in a shift.
Absolutely when I turned 18 I had no skills and was told go be a man… so important to learn this hard stuff when your brain is a sponge and your bones are rubber
@@rustamsaifullin8034 You can't calculate the weight without knowing the material density. And we don't know what kind of steel they use so your math makes no sense.
That young man is a perfect apprentice he watches and asks questions and looks like he wants to learn. I will be honest i wish i had that opportunity to learn this kind of work when i was his age. I don't know if he will see this but Good luck young man i wish you the best
My first "Real" job after tool and die apprenticeship was in a shop that turned huge workpieces like that. 45 minutes for a single pass was the norm. All I remember of those two years was sitting on a stool watching parts go round and round. I knew the owners, so sometimes I would work 36 hrs straight thru. In a humongous Factory/Foundry/Machine shop. There would just be me and 1 guy in the foundry making sand casts for the next day shift on nights. All alone in the old days wed start work on friday evening. We never even checked on each other. I only knew if something was up if he wasnt clocking out with me on a sunday morning.. And Id wander over and check on him then...We had a list of food delivery places with hrs available, and company had accounts. wed just order lunch or whatever and KEEP THE MACHINES running! My bosses/friends words! I miss that dude! 36Hr shifts! Thats 8rs straight time 28hrs OT!!! In a two day stretch! yee haw it was!
I did an apprenticeship program back in 1975. I was assigned to work in a local shop, and if I was ever caught not wearing safety glasses anywhere in the shop, that would be a warning. 3 warnings, and you got a failing grade. Needless to say, I learned pretty fast how not to get an F, because my father would have choked me, also I still have both eyes today.
When I got caught not wearing them a hells angel co worker would flick pennys at me and try to blind me. Try that on. Gets rid of that stubborn part of the human brain to use common sense.
Admiro os trabalhos feitos no torno mecânico. Para mim os torneiros são profissionais admiráveis, principalmente, quando vejo jovens interessados pela profissão.
Thank you brother, it is not an easy profession, not everyone appreciates it like you, I think they do not see the value they deserve, but there is nothing to do. We do our best for those who want to learn.
What most impresses me is that the entire cylinder is being suspended with, basically, plastic (polyester or vinyl webbing). That strap weighs a tiny fraction of what it can hold and can be carried on one arm.
I search for the 3 ton WLL chart with a choked lift a 3 ton roundsling can carry 2.4 Ton but not sure of course that sling is 3 ton I seen 3 black stripes on that belt only so
I watched some of your videos using that lathe, but I just noticed in this video that your lathe has two stack of compound slide (or maybe two cross slides?). That is new to me. Really enjoyed your video, it's an ASMR to me 😁 Keep up the good work and keep safe 👍😍
Çok güzel video olmuş, elinize sağlık. Hem torna ustalığı hem sosyal medya içerik üretimi takdire şayan. Yalnız yorumlarda da insanların dikkatini iş güvenliği konusu çekmiş. Her ne kadar güvenliği aldığımızı düşünsek de başımıza bir iş gelmeden tam idrak edemiyoruz. Video ağzında sigarayla delik açan ustamız ile başlıyor 😅 Naçizane tavsiyem koruyucu gözlük takılsa, bir süre sonra alışılıyor. Sağlıklı işler dilerim, çıraklara selam 😊
@@hydraulicfactory так смешно читать людей которые пишут про защитные очки на крупной механике где чаще всего получают ожоги ( самое паршивое когда стружка попадает за шиворот под футболку и падает в штаны , вот тогда начинаются танцы)
bonjour je regarde souvent vos vidéos !!! un vrai savoir faire rempli de professionnalisme !!! je connais pas exactement la vitesse de rotation et celle de l'avance de l'outil, mais je me met à la place de l'outil. Pour savoir le nombre de kilomètres parcouru ? bravo
Thank you for being a close follower. I am trying to do my best. Thank you for your nice comment. I processed this piece again at 50 rpm with 2/5 feed.
I definitely do not have a mic that large in my toolbox.😂 Also, please wear safety glasses when blowing off metal chips, especially with pneumatic air.
Looks to be not totally centred,if you speed the video up to 2x you can see a considerable amount of deviation in and out🤔 Still amazing the power of that lathe to be able to spin such a heavy piece👍🏼
I was a manual turner for 51yrs and I always warned workers next to me that I was going to use the windy pipe and always had safety glasses on and always made sure my apprentice had them on if you want to be a hero carry on but keep the youngsters safe..😢😢
Emeğinize sağlık.... Gayet güzel bir video olmuş.... Gençlerimizi bu mesleklere özendirme gerekir.... Bir ülkede herkes üniversiteli olacak diye bir şart yok... Bir de hayatın gerçekleri e aykırı olduğunu düşünüyorum.
Regarding earlier comments: The British DSG company (Dean Smith & Grace) optionally fitted cast aluminium extensions on their saddle to protect the Z-slideways. I think this may have been an American idea? Some protection from the heaviest dross was given by this measure but a dilligent operator would remove these covers once a week for cleaning and never ovetighten the fixing screws when refixing. The "2 point steadies" on very large lathes would be better described as weight supports where they are forced up to the workpiece by adjustable hydraulic pressure to releive weight load from the live centre. They would have a central pivot point to distribute load between roller pairs. D.B.
That lifting strap is doing some mighty work... I'd look into retiring that beat up and shredded thing! Wow. Reminds me of the old Monarch Missile Masters back in the industrial days of America after WW2.
Not one of you have safety Glass s on! Obviously not one of you have had hot steel in the eye! 2ndly standing around while a possible Ton an a Half is Being Balanced over the top of a Lathe. Have you never seen Straps Break! Take some time an Teach the younger guys about safety an looking out for them selves when dealing with Large weights. other than that always interesting watching Big Metal being turned into small metal
Some of the most talented workers smoke; perfect hand eye coordination, an eye for detail and complete job ownership. The anti smoking anti vape crew should stay in the office close to the coffee machine and with a massage parlour on speed dial.
Glovea and lathes don't go well together. First thing to learn is to NOT wear gloves or loose clothing, which can and do get ripped off (if you are lucky) taking your fingers off or even your life. Learn from other people's mistakes or you are doomed to repeat them.
Time has definitely changed... but safety remains the same getting injured then, and getting injured now, bring the same agony. Just considered that you HAVE been very very lucky. I am very sure that your comment here, will not be the same if you would hv had an arm or a leg, chopped off due to you own arrogance.
So when would one like to have saftey glasses? Using air nozzle blowing chips away , Using pedestal grinder, milling maching, a smaller higher rpm lathe. (Roughing. This lathe this running low speed bout...60-90 rpm. 0.04" feed per rev. Bout a 1/4"-1/2" depth of cut. Nothing that would launch a chip at you with prejudice)
I’ve had metal in my eye before, it’s not fun having it removed. Please please get y’all some eye pro.
👍👍
exactly my thoughts.. you will regret it latest at the point where they need to to remove small particles with a sharp metal "spoon" and a drill at 4am..that what happened to me and since then i am always wearing eye protection at work
@@Warjack1992 irony is on mine I’d been welding and grinding and wire-brushing all day long and was wearing my wicked awesome North (now 3M) model 7600 Darth Vader esque welding face mask/respirator and been working with gloved hands (the Mechanix high gauntlet which they don’t make anymore because they’re dumb) though evidently failed to properly scrub under my fingernails and managed to implant a few tiny shards. It was an expensive next day. So really I also should like to remind these dopes to not only wear eye protection but also proper hand cleaning is valuable.
@@charleshetrick3152 that is freaking unlucky....
hehe, sth similar happend to me once, i had some in my eye brown and i scratched my eyes at night. and i basically masaged metal shards in my eyes. Oh boy was that a horrible long night until the doctor opened :)
Ustanın sırtındaki yazı: Önce iş güvenliği 👍🏽
Roger that, great to see the apprentice along side the master. Safety glasses pls.
Thanks bro
Nice to see young lads willing to learn.
Thanks bro 👍
But he's not teaching safety
We also teach occupational safety as much as we can.
amazing machines
@@techtrend2030 👍👍
I'm working as an Analyst at a University now and used to work as a Data Scientist in Manufacturing and I get asked why I miss working in Manufacturing so much and this video is a great example as to why: big or small, high or low-tech; when you work in manufacturing you watch things get *made*. It's honestly beautiful seeing things come together from print to part and when things are particularly large like this you can't help but be amazed at what the engineers, technicians and machinists can do with what would otherwise be an 'impossible' request.
Watching stuff like this: manual & CNC maching plus 3D printing for so long encouraged me to take the plunge into hobbyist machining myself. I just missed 'making' and being around 'makers' and it's been the second-best decision of my life second only to finding the greatest partner on the planet.
You are very right, brother. A person who is involved in production cannot leave.
Kinda off-topic - that YT way of making text *bold* or _italic_ (or *_bold italic_* ) is pretty flawed - looks more like some Q&D afterthought rather than a properly implemented solution - namely, whenever a punctuation mark or a bracket is typed right next to these "markups" (underscore for italics, asterisk for bold) it throws out intended formatting out of the window. Here you typed "made" within asterisks, which should make it appear as *made* - but since you have typed a full stop right after it, it looks like *made*.
Also, notice the "unneeded" space between "italic" and the closing bracket in the phrase "(or *_bold italic_* )" from my first sentence here - if not for this space the formatting wouldn't show up. It sucks, but this is YT for ya... ;-)
@@MrKotBonifacy Oh, shut up 😂😅😊
@@melvinahenakew9369 ..but I haven't say anything...?
(for nine days, that is ;-)
Hey!, let's get this kid on the right track. Eye safety is crucial, they are for life. When I was a 16 year old apprentice, in a large engineering works, I'd have gotten a slap for not wearing my goggles.
Isn't the slap a bit harsh? It's better to warn him.
😄 Dont forget to take the chuck key out before you start the lathe.👍🇬🇧
👍👍👍
@@hydraulicfactory UNA VOLTA ERA COSÌ NELLE OFFICINE E OLTRE ALLO SCHIAFFO SPESSO E VOLENTIERI TI ARRIVAVA UNA BELLA PEDATA NEL CULO 😂🎉😂 CHISSÀ PERCHÉ MA IMPARAVI SUBITO IMMEDIATAMENTE 😱😳😱😳😱😳😱😳😱😳😱
I got a slap for not wearing eye protection, thank goodness for it because I still have good eyesight after 40 jears in the game.
I have a hard time believing that lathe will hold all that! Thats the biggest lathe I've ever seen too!
You can attach a larger job than this to the lathe and it can do it easily. Of course, there are larger lathes than this.
Самый большой станок 300 тонн вес . Вес обрабатываемой заготовки 90 тонн .
The work piece weighs about eight tonnes.
Guy did a masterful job getting the piece in the chuck. No chip guard! No coolant! Kids! No eye protection! Gotta be careful running big, heavy rod on chuck and steady-rest. Don't want it working its way outta the chuck! Good job> Enjoyed it.
Thank you brother, I use everything you said when necessary. We care about job security. Greetings from Türkiye.
@@hydraulicfactoryjust saying it isn’t enough. In this case you weren’t safe enough.
I turn large diameter parts and we use PI tapes to measure our diameters, we work from 450mm up to 1000mm. nice work!
Thank you my colleague, good luck in your work
I retired last year 2023 after working for many years manual turning we had a lathe at work 16 ft bed 5ft faceplate it must of been 100 years old last thing I did on it was a set of traction engine gear blanks
@@paultyrer2171 the machine I run is 5500 mm long or 18 feet, but we only use about 1/2 of the length. its massive and has a 10:1 gear ratio in high gear and a 150 hp DC motor and ive pushed it up to 75% load on rare occasions, which is my favorite time to run it. max our tools will take is .787 or 20mm DOC at .004 ipr or .009 mmpr i can make a tandem dump truck full of chips in a shift.
Seeing such a young apprentice says a lot about a company's desire to succeed.
Thanks bro 👍
เยียม
Absolutely when I turned 18 I had no skills and was told go be a man… so important to learn this hard stuff when your brain is a sponge and your bones are rubber
We used to start after leaving school at 15.👍🇬🇧
As I did.
@@EdHamelton yes brother
Love that mic and thanks for sharing
Thanks bro 👍
I'm about to start a job at my work that is 317.5mm x 7,620mm. It weighs 5,370kgs when we start and will finish at 4,500kgs when done.
Good job my colleague, good luck
@@hydraulicfactory thanks
У вас вес с размером заготовки не сходится.
0.317m x 7.620m = 2.406m³
Weight=18828 kg
@@rustamsaifullin8034 You can't calculate the weight without knowing the material density. And we don't know what kind of steel they use so your math makes no sense.
@@raintech3253 у него плотность около 2 , это меньше алюминия
That young man is a perfect apprentice he watches and asks questions and looks like he wants to learn. I will be honest i wish i had that opportunity to learn this kind of work when i was his age. I don't know if he will see this but Good luck young man i wish you the best
Thank you brother, yes I am a friend who is willing to learn.
@@hydraulicfactory you will go far my friend. Good luck for the future
Thanks bro 👍
My first "Real" job after tool and die apprenticeship was in a shop that turned huge workpieces like that. 45 minutes for a single pass was the norm. All I remember of those two years was sitting on a stool watching parts go round and round. I knew the owners, so sometimes I would work 36 hrs straight thru. In a humongous Factory/Foundry/Machine shop. There would just be me and 1 guy in the foundry making sand casts for the next day shift on nights. All alone in the old days wed start work on friday evening. We never even checked on each other. I only knew if something was up if he wasnt clocking out with me on a sunday morning.. And Id wander over and check on him then...We had a list of food delivery places with hrs available, and company had accounts. wed just order lunch or whatever and KEEP THE MACHINES running! My bosses/friends words! I miss that dude! 36Hr shifts! Thats 8rs straight time 28hrs OT!!! In a two day stretch! yee haw it was!
It's a very busy working system nowadays. Nobody works these working hours. I hope you got the reward of your labor. Greetings and love.
Классный микрометр! Теперь я видел всё! )))
👍👍
Thanks for blowing the chips in my eyes!😢
Thank you for watching my video brother
Safety squint?
@@Clubster360 Engaged 😅😉
They must have those new ANSI rated contacts.
Good job. I think a headstock center to support the weight and make end to end flips easier would be a valuable investment.
Since there was no deviation in size, I did not feel the need, brother.
I did an apprenticeship program back in 1975. I was assigned to work in a local shop, and if I was ever caught not wearing safety glasses anywhere in the shop, that would be a warning. 3 warnings, and you got a failing grade. Needless to say, I learned pretty fast how not to get an F, because my father would have choked me, also I still have both eyes today.
Work safety and equipment are very important in our profession, you are very right sir, this was given importance even 49 years ago.
When I got caught not wearing them a hells angel co worker would flick pennys at me and try to blind me. Try that on. Gets rid of that stubborn part of the human brain to use common sense.
What a big lathe workpiece!😃👍👍
Thank you sharing your videos!
I thank you sir
I@@hydraulicfactory
Impressive👍
Thanks bro 👍
Big job 🤩🤩🤩👍👍👍💪💪💪💪👏👏👏
Yes my brother👍👍🤲🤲💯💯😎😎
9:25 get some safety glasses dude
We wear it when necessary, brother.
He use safety squints😆
@@hydraulicfactory Bruder du hast nur 2 Augen !!!! Es ist in dem Beruf immer Nötig ich bin auch Dreher Mit 2 Glasaugen siehst du nicht mehr viel🙏🤓🤓🤓
Exactly brother, you are right.
2:06 i worse towards the younger person.
I'm surprised with how well forged that piece was. You didn't have to remove much material at all. Congrats to a job well done.
Thanks bro 👍
i like your machine
Thanks bro 👍
Now that is a good apprentice, very observant and wanting to learn. I wish you all the best❤
Yes brother, a friend who is determined to work, thank you very much
Admiro os trabalhos feitos no torno mecânico. Para mim os torneiros são profissionais admiráveis, principalmente, quando vejo jovens interessados pela profissão.
Thank you brother, it is not an easy profession, not everyone appreciates it like you, I think they do not see the value they deserve, but there is nothing to do. We do our best for those who want to learn.
What most impresses me is that the entire cylinder is being suspended with, basically, plastic (polyester or vinyl webbing). That strap weighs a tiny fraction of what it can hold and can be carried on one arm.
You are right, brother.
I search for the 3 ton WLL chart with a choked lift a 3 ton roundsling can carry 2.4 Ton but not sure of course that sling is 3 ton I seen 3 black stripes on that belt only so
and that's a choke so it is rated very high to be able to lift that round bar.
Sou profissional da área da educação física. Acho magnífico o trabalho de um torneiro mecânico, sempre estou olhando alguns vídeos, meus parabéns!!!
Thank you brother, welcome to my channel. Yes, we have a very fun job. I wish you success in your career.
Very nice job
Thanks bro 👍
I watched some of your videos using that lathe, but I just noticed in this video that your lathe has two stack of compound slide (or maybe two cross slides?). That is new to me. Really enjoyed your video, it's an ASMR to me 😁 Keep up the good work and keep safe 👍😍
Thanks bro, I'm glad that my videos are liked.👍👍
Nice job, thanks for making the video for us.
Thank you for following me, brother.
As a UA-cam certified machining expert, it hurts me to see the runout on that unfaced end. I pray I'm not disappointed. ;)
The rod is processed without any secretion
Çok güzel video olmuş, elinize sağlık. Hem torna ustalığı hem sosyal medya içerik üretimi takdire şayan. Yalnız yorumlarda da insanların dikkatini iş güvenliği konusu çekmiş. Her ne kadar güvenliği aldığımızı düşünsek de başımıza bir iş gelmeden tam idrak edemiyoruz. Video ağzında sigarayla delik açan ustamız ile başlıyor 😅
Naçizane tavsiyem koruyucu gözlük takılsa, bir süre sonra alışılıyor. Sağlıklı işler dilerim, çıraklara selam 😊
Teşekkürler kardeşim güzel yorumun için
I'm going to miss machining, I like doing it but it doesn't pay where I'm at.
If a person adopts this job, he misses it, brother
I sometimes miss it , people now can't sharpen a drill
Where is this? Get the lad and the operator some safety glasses! And the cameraman too!
👍👍
@@hydraulicfactory так смешно читать людей которые пишут про защитные очки на крупной механике где чаще всего получают ожоги ( самое паршивое когда стружка попадает за шиворот под футболку и падает в штаны , вот тогда начинаются танцы)
😃😃😃
SAFETY GLASSES and Crush checklist !!!!!!!!!!!!!
👍👍
That looks like it was hammered into a rod before yall got it. Interesting
forged steel brother material
That's exactly what cold hammer forging is.
@@spdcrzy 👍👍👍
When i saw the young lad ut reminded myself when i was 13 or 14 working on lathe in school ..😍
Time flies fast, brother.
Nice work.
Thanks bro 😎
Kanalınızı severek takip ediyorum çok güzel işler çıkartıyorsunuz başarılar diliyorum 💪🏻💪🏻👍🏻👍🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Teşekkürler kardeşim 👍👍👍
That’s off to the young man that’s learning that great trade
Thanks bro 👍
Awesome 👌
Thanks 👍
Tornayı malzemeye taksaydınız
O kadar tecrübeye sahip değilim henüz kardeşim 👍
hello amazing video, I have a question if you put the steady rest there have you clocking the part again or just run ? Regards
Thanks bro, I measure it like this and then put a mattress underneath it.
Приятно смотреть, когда работает мастер высокого класса!
Thanks bro 👍
凄い。
やり慣れている。
この丸棒は何に使うのでしょう?
thanks brother Hydraulic cylinder
That steady rest is freaking me out, wheres the top roller? 25 years, ran some pretty big parts and never had a steady with 2 rollers.
I did not fully understand you, my colleague.
Wow!
Good Good! Job!
Thanks bro 👍
Nice work. No safety glasses?
Thanks bro I have
Safety glasses please guys....No such thing as an eye transplant. Look after your sight lads. No second chances with eyes.👍
👍👍👍
our largest OD is 36" both tubing and round bars. we cut as per costumers order. PPE is a must all the time.
bonjour je regarde souvent vos vidéos !!! un vrai savoir faire rempli de professionnalisme !!! je connais pas exactement la vitesse de rotation et celle de l'avance de l'outil, mais je me met à la place de l'outil. Pour savoir le nombre de kilomètres parcouru ? bravo
Thank you for being a close follower. I am trying to do my best. Thank you for your nice comment. I processed this piece again at 50 rpm with 2/5 feed.
@@hydraulicfactory ok merci !!! mais il me faudrait le diamètre et la longueur de la pièce pour faire le calcul
It was 870 in diameter and 2210 in length.
@@hydraulicfactory ok merci je vais m'amuser à faire le calcul !!!!! et encore bravo !!!!
Thanks bro 😎
I definitely do not have a mic that large in my toolbox.😂
Also, please wear safety glasses when blowing off metal chips, especially with pneumatic air.
Let's enlarge the toolbox, brother, I will take your advice into consideration, thank you
The work looks nice but those chips are super hot i have experienced that when it's touch any part of the body 😮
Thanks bro, yes it is very hot, it burns a lot, I am careful and do not stand in places where sawdust flies.
45:25 Took me some time to realize what I see is just an enormous micrometer.
yes brother 800X900 MICROMETER👍
@@hydraulicfactoryhow does it stay accurate? Is the micrometer itself stiff enough that thermal expansion of the micrometer isn't an issue?
absolutely inflexible
My father was a machinist from the 60s-90s I never really appreciated his talent at the time....
You are right brother, unfortunately it is not very well known now.
Looks to be not totally centred,if you speed the video up to 2x you can see a considerable amount of deviation in and out🤔
Still amazing the power of that lathe to be able to spin such a heavy piece👍🏼
👍👍
Возможно что деталь ещё могло повести ( деформировать ) после термообработки , это нормально , это бывает , на это и оставляют припуски .
Nice chips
👍👍
Çok güzel işler yapıyorsunuz bende bir tornacı olarak sizi takdir ediyorum 😊 UA-cam mekesan hayırlı işler
Teşekkürler meslektaşım elimden geleni yapmaya çalışıyorum sizin UA-cam kanalınızmı mekesan
Видел на Ютубе заготовки и станки ещë больших размеров. Хотя и эта бандура не такая уж и маленькая.
It's true brother
It reminds me of my lathe, if you were 6 inches tall.
I couldn't quite understand.🙂
Big piece of material. Are those young people apprentices or set up people?
yes big piece of work brother yes apprentices
no safety glasses kinda cringe dude
be a better example for the younger generation
I think it's a bit harsh to say it's embarrassing, but I still respect it, thanks for your comment.
they used the safety squint ....😅
I'd be much more worried about that 12000kg workpiece walking out of the chuck...
The chips are too big to 'get in your eyes' With all due respect, you have to be in the shop to know.
Amazing
Thanks bro 👍
Where are your safety glasses?😮
We wear it when necessary, brother.
9:30 Why are you leaning on the bed. His leg was so close to the lower drive screw! OTher than that this was super cool!
I think you're talking about the apprentice leaning on the counter
In another five years, that lad will make a wonderfull tea maker.
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How much HP does it take to turn this chunk of metal?
I don't understand exactly what you mean but I used 50 rpm for this ROD
Lathes receive engine power by transferring it to the gears, most importantly the gears in the transmission.
İyi çalışmalar emeginize sağlık 👏👏👍
Teşekkürler 👍🤲
Great job men.
Thanks bro 👍
I was a manual turner for 51yrs and I always warned workers next to me that I was going to use the windy pipe and always had safety glasses on and always made sure my apprentice had them on if you want to be a hero carry on but keep the youngsters safe..😢😢
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I can’t fathom how heavy that is - is it mild steel??
4140 material weighing over 9 tons after processing
I imagine chucking this in my hobby lathe.
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Emeğinize sağlık.... Gayet güzel bir video olmuş.... Gençlerimizi bu mesleklere özendirme gerekir.... Bir ülkede herkes üniversiteli olacak diye bir şart yok... Bir de hayatın gerçekleri e aykırı olduğunu düşünüyorum.
Teşekkürler kardeşim sağolasın haklısın güzel yorumunuz için teşekkür ederim
Regarding earlier comments:
The British DSG company (Dean Smith & Grace) optionally fitted cast aluminium extensions on their saddle to protect the Z-slideways. I think this may have been an American idea? Some protection from the heaviest dross was given by this measure but a dilligent operator would remove these covers once a week for cleaning and never ovetighten the fixing screws when refixing.
The "2 point steadies" on very large lathes would be better described as weight supports where they are forced up to the workpiece by adjustable hydraulic pressure to releive weight load from the live centre. They would have a central pivot point to distribute load between roller pairs.
D.B.
Thanks for your comment, brother.👍
I have been watching that video for 90 min and i would to know what that part is for.
What is it ?
What is it do in a hydraulic cylinder?
This HYDRAULIC CYLINDER that will produce 1500 tons of power will have its rod ground and chrome plated and ready.
Induction hardening that thing would be a sight to behold
In US you maeby must have hardhat and clowes and safety glasses when you are making donuts.😂😂😂
We wear it when necessary, brother.
That's the gods honest truth. And you'd have to have long sleeve fire proof nomex shirts when its 115°f.
The US in complete decline and wont be around for much longer.
If that falls on you what good is a hard hat, steel toe cap boots, Goggles and hi vis vest? Only saying
Safety helmet is mandatory when a crane is required.
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That lifting strap is doing some mighty work... I'd look into retiring that beat up and shredded thing! Wow. Reminds me of the old Monarch Missile Masters back in the industrial days of America after WW2.
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I don't work metal, but balancing this piece on one single belt seems suicidal.
It's not as dangerous as you think, brother.
Give the man a larger chuck key.
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Not one of you have safety Glass s on! Obviously not one of you have had hot steel in the eye! 2ndly standing around while a possible Ton an a Half is Being Balanced over the top of a Lathe. Have you never seen Straps Break! Take some time an Teach the younger guys about safety an looking out for them selves when dealing with Large weights. other than that always interesting watching Big Metal being turned into small metal
Brother, of course we use work glasses when necessary. I am someone who always prioritizes our work safety. We try to do our job in the safest way.
Cutting oil use please
Since the diameter is large, there is a lot of fluid loss outside the lathe, so I do not use it.
@@hydraulicfactorybravo băieți .sunt de meseria voastră.strunjeam roți de vagoane ,nu stă nimeni cu ochelari de protecție pe nas cind nu e nevoie
Get a life dude. These are grown men with free will.
Smoking while you drill, I’ll give it a big thumbs up!
Addicted👍👍
What is the cutting depth?
You can give 15 mm according to the pass on it
Büyük emek var 👏🏻 işiniz çok meşakkatli Allah kolaylık versin inşallah 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👍🏻👍🏻🧿
Teşekürler evet büyük emek olan büyük işler ❤️💯👍👍
Freedom is getting to smoke at work.
I don't use it myself but I agree with you.😃
Was about to comment about that, a great start for the video.
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Some of the most talented workers smoke; perfect hand eye coordination, an eye for detail and complete job ownership. The anti smoking anti vape crew should stay in the office close to the coffee machine and with a massage parlour on speed dial.
Man, that strap better not break...
Don't worry it won't break
Equipamentos de proteção individual?
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That tailstock and live center are putting in some work.
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Hello! How did you find the center of the workpiece before centering itHello! How did you find the center of the workpiece before centering it?
I center the outer diameter with a caliper or any measuring tool and draw it from 3 different places and hit the middle with a note.
Glasses 😢
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Also comments about weight. It looks like a pretty mild steel. Rough enough to be sold by weight.
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I wonder if professionals are immune to shrapnel
I'm not immune yet🙂
Why are they not wearing safety glasses lol
We wear it when necessary
That’s like a 5/8” cut!
I didn't understand what you meant by 5/8 cut.
Batman and Robin machining a secret weapon.
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wow safety is top priority in this company. no need for safety glass and the other guy no safety glass and gloves.
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At least they have gloves on... Good to see the young buck.
I use all equipment when necessary
Glovea and lathes don't go well together. First thing to learn is to NOT wear gloves or loose clothing, which can and do get ripped off (if you are lucky) taking your fingers off or even your life. Learn from other people's mistakes or you are doomed to repeat them.
Lol , times sure have changed. When I was younger jokes were made for wearing safety protection. Now every other commenter belongs to OSHA.
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Time has definitely changed... but safety remains the same getting injured then, and getting injured now, bring the same agony.
Just considered that you HAVE been very very lucky. I am very sure that your comment here, will not be the same if you would hv had an arm or a leg, chopped off due to you own arrogance.
00/01🕛👍
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So when would one like to have saftey glasses? Using air nozzle blowing chips away , Using pedestal grinder, milling maching, a smaller higher rpm lathe. (Roughing. This lathe this running low speed bout...60-90 rpm. 0.04" feed per rev. Bout a 1/4"-1/2" depth of cut. Nothing that would launch a chip at you with prejudice)
My friend, all your calculations are correct, I use work glasses when necessary.