Thank you Incogni for sponsoring this video! Take your personal data back with Incogni! Use code INHERITANCE at the link below and get 60% off an annual plan: incogni.com/INHERITANCE Also, I apologize in advance for how loud the phone ringing is in the video. Probably should have given this a listen with headphones before uploading 🤦♂ Please excuse my negligence!
That’s some smart advertising ngl. Those scam calls really put me off and right in the middle of my therapeutic machining video session of the week! Bold!
He was enthusiastic about the date. I'm guessing she asked him to taker her to a tooling store to shop for live centers and other tool centric paraphernalia.
PSA: I realize the fake spam calls were just joke segues, but a reminder for anyone watching that you DO NOT want to decline spam calls, you should let them finish ringing. Muting them is also fine. By ending the incoming call you are confirming that they reached a live person. Ending calls early can lead to being prioritized for more spam calls.
Damn, I hadn't thought of that. I keep getting them from Holland and Swiss and always, when I hang up, there's an immediate one right after which I also don't answer.
As did it's first replacement. I wonder if the earlier clean up work pulled the conductor off the contact, and that's why the first spring opened up. (It was designed to hold the contact in place, not carry the load.)
The fact that you can rebuild that motor simply and efficiently is the reason why old stuff is so cool. It's like the creators designed it this way. Anyone with some mechanical knowledge can repair it. Not like the trash created today
this comment exactly describes the bane of my existence, ESPECIALLY WITH CARS. Repairing anything on them is prohibitively expensive due to the parts being artificially overpriced, and needing the engine block to be taken out and stripped almost completely.
I was JUST about to say this! It's SO nice that it was obviously designed with self-repairability and longevity in mind. Not like shit today. It could be! That's not an issue! But it's not.
I watch this channel at normal speed on a big screen, never sped up and never on my little phone. Some content deserves that, and I deserve to treat myself to good content in that way.
"one restless sleep of lucid dreams later, I think I know what's going on" I feel like these are the words of inventors of the past, those great men whose inventions and discoveries changed the way we live
It is a real delight to see you care and refurbish all the amazing equipment, the tools, your Inheritance. With your knoledge and skill. Thank you. You honnor the Machining way of thinking.
I love the way you show your love for your wife. Too many of us complain about our wives constantly, taking for granted how truly blessed we are to have them. And especially that they will have us. Oh, and nice machining content, too!
my heart was in my throat for you during the whole malfunctioning grinder incident..i love my dumore ( ive got the lil brother to yours ) and while theyre built like tanks electricky has always mystified me ..i was like " oh no NOT THE SMOKE??!"
@@InheritanceMachining 😅 I know you would have because I can picture your voice from other videos saying "And while I'm here... may aswell give this other connection the same treatment" but I was giving the video the old side eye in those moments haha
I think the spring is the main electrical connection in most of these designs, it was in the drill I refurbished that is a universal motor like this one. I think it just needed a larger diameter spring to support the inrush current, but of course soldering it directly is even better!
Wanted to throw out a minor tip: though it probably doesn't matter too much given the size here, it's generally bad practice to blow on solder joints. It causes it to cool faster and therefore become more brittle and prone to failure in the future.
Thanks, i didnt know that! I usually do it when solding small things because im quite bad at soldering and dont want the rest of the board to overheat :P
Keep this in mind as you're working on this Hardinge HLV-xx clone. These lathes have a dove tail bed with the power feed on carriage. This means as the power feed runs the carriage across the dove tail bed the forces will be applied at an angle to the carriage moving on the dove tail bed causing the corners of the carriage to wear in a "crabbing" pattern. Other issues to be aware of, wear pads under the carriage/tail stock. The Hardinge HLV-xx lathes have become a "desirable" lathe in the same way as the Monarch EE, yet there are designed in problems with these lathes users/owners need to be aware of.
Was going to comment about you not cleaning up the commutator when the motor was stripped, but I see that you eventually did, before the final assembly. Cheers
I know the lathe spindle wasn't on when you put the towels there, but try aluminum foil instead. You can crumple it up with the waste in it when done, and if you DO turn the spindle on, things are a lot less dramatic if the spindle grabs the foil. It just tears rather than turning into spinning death. EDIT: you did turn the lathe spindle on with the towels there :P
I am having SO much fun living vicariously through you, imagining I have even a fraction of your tools. And watching you build stuff is cool too, I guess (that last part was sarcasm). The best part is watching you actually get the stuff you take apart back together working
I would recommend a side project. You should make a guard for the tool post grinder's belt. Not that lathes are safe in the first place but seems like a non obtrusive way to CYA
As a person who very much learns by *doing*, this is exactly the sort of machining video I like to watch! I can't afford even a small fraction of this kind of equipment but have been increasingly veering toward it in my hobbies, and being able to watch other machinists learning from scratch and sharing the mistakes and learning moments is invaluable to so many of us. Thanks for doing what you do - you're right at the top of the list of Patreons I will contribute to when I can afford to. P.S. your voice is so relaxing!
Not only an Inheritance Machining video, but one about grinding? As a manufacturer of high precision CNC bore (among other applications) grinding machines, I loved watching this. Not what our bore grinders do, but still the same as what my bore grinders do, if you get what I mean. There's just something special about doing it "by hand". And if you like the surface finish, I wish I could show you around the metrology lab over here. 😁
@@_Jester_ Gain twice as much information in those 21 minutes. It may not seem like much, but if you watch a 21 minute video every day for a year, that's 64 hours of time saved to do more important things.
Seeing you lean over the grinder with the belt running gave me goosebumps. I would recommend fabricating a belt cover for that thing if you don't want your shirt getting sucked into it.
Wow those springs in the motor were holding on by a THREAD! Also wow convenient you had that replacement just hanging around lol Also yes the spring has partly to do with easy construction, but it also was meant to be able to withstand more high speed vibration over a length of years of duty than just solder alone.
Great job on this. As a cylindrical grinder myself, I'd have used a flow of coolant into the bore while grinding. This creates mess galore though so I suppoe we pick our inconveniences.
The motor runs on white smoke)) There is not enough white smoke, fill the motor with white smoke and everything will be fine)) Thanks for the interesting videos!
Another great video. I have been machining for 15 years professionally and 3 months ago I started CNC cylindrical grinding. Let me tell you, there is a reason they call it an art. It's been a lot of fun to learn so far and in my limited expertise, you did a great job. I look forward to your videos every Friday. Keep up the good work!
Those springs appear to be for vibration-proofing for the electrical contacts, that tend to come loose inside the motor. I've never encountered anything like this before. It's likely an unpopular or obsolete method for electrical connections, given its lack of robustness, as we observed today. I'd prefer to use Y-shaped spade connectors secured with a screw and some Loctite.
They were very common back in the day. Easy to connect and no need for soldering when replacing bearings or such in the field. Mostly I remember them being bronze coloured springs, perhaps for better conductivity.
I just wanted to thank you for taking the time to make these videos ! I have a small machine shop and just started machining 4 years ago. Ive learned a lot from your videos ,..thank you.
Project idea: custom guards for some of your tools. You mention having guards for those belts in another video. How about something that also prevents an external grinding wheel from exploding into your face? You've got a unique challenge to keep things camera friendly, too. I'm curious what you'd come up with
Love your gentle humor, voice and clear explanation of mistakes and fixes. I don't have machining machines, but the thought process is worth the watch and education. Thanks!
It's so clear that you put as much time and effort into your videos as you do into machining. I'm fairly new to this channel, and the more I watch, the more I can see how much precision goes into every element of these videos. You've got a subscriber in me xox
Nice job!!! Keep posting I had same problem with my lathes tailstock, since i dont have toolpost grinder used a Mt2 finishing reamer which gives good results, not has shinny ,but work better than before
My dad told me that when one headlight goes, make sure you replace both, because it wa salmost guaranteed that the second would go pretty quickly after the first, and most likely in a rainstorm or snowstorm. For that reason, I would have replaced both springs on the grinder… I love your channel!
that was one of the best native ads i’ve seen on youtube. product not for me but i sat through it. nicely done. did they give you a script or are you hopelessly creative?
I am 2 weeks away from getting into the fabrication department at my place of employment. We have a Bridgeport and two engine lathes. I only have a certificate from a community college but I will get plenty of time to teach myself. Thanks for the videos I look forward to catching up.
That filter element looks very much like what's used in some vacuum cleaners. I bought a sheet of it from somewhere years ago. A HVAC supplier might have some sheet stock of filter material.
Don't blame a bit for cutting this short to go out with the missus. Love to see some love for the toolroom lathe and I'm looking forward to more, Oh, and nice to see the motor on that grinder's still kicking.
If either spring breaks again, I wonder if it would be better to just strip enough copper to wrap all the way around that bushing. You'd have to make sure it's wrapped tight when you solder it, though, so there's no chance of it slipping off due to heat expansion. I also wonder if you could braze the copper wire on the bushing.
nothing realllly needs to be hardened. Aluminum is sooooo nice and easy to work with. yesss, wouldn't it be so easy? no more thinking about what your next project is, just repairing your old ones yesss,
I wish you had this issue with the motor before I bought a new band saw to replace one that had the same issue, and the same subsequent issue with the spring/current 😂
Your videos are great and the sound Quality is the best of any maker video I have seen. EXCEPT for that darn phone ringing!!! Keep up the great work and sound level sound!
Great stuff. That was really significant wear, surprising for a toolroom precision lathe. I wonder how it happened? I successfully used an MT reamer on the tailstock of my South Bend, plus some older MT adaptors, but they were only a light cut to remove some burrs. I'm not sure how well a reamer would work to correct heavy wear such as you had.
I'm not sure myself. Probably wasn't used (or cared for) as a toolroom lathe just given the condition of that and other problems on it. More fun for me to fix it though! Also good to hear the reamer may not have worked. 10 thou would have been a ton to remove haha
Seriously? C'mon man! You left us hanging without knowing... Kudos to the patreon who gave you the tool. Please just don't leave us waiting on the outcome of this Morse taper conundrum. Happy Easter.
I use vitrified stones on a 1/4 shank in my router to do grinding. they are about 15$ each. I lay paper towels on to catch much of the dust, but not all. step 2. tear off the carriage and clean. grinding comes up just about as often as the carriage should be properly cleaned anyway.
Trivia. Dunmore still makes motors and will service any motor they have made. They will also build custom motors to customer specifications. PS Beryllium copper plated springs, please.
Thank you Incogni for sponsoring this video! Take your personal data back with Incogni! Use code INHERITANCE at the link below and get 60% off an annual plan: incogni.com/INHERITANCE
Also, I apologize in advance for how loud the phone ringing is in the video. Probably should have given this a listen with headphones before uploading 🤦♂ Please excuse my negligence!
That’s some smart advertising ngl. Those scam calls really put me off and right in the middle of my therapeutic machining video session of the week! Bold!
As an electrical engineer, your handling of that motor caused me significant distress..
LATHE MODDING?
*creams*
Great video as always! Filming, project, humor, narration; all of it. I laugh and I learn. Was that Paul Sellers I saw sawing (pun intended)?
If you don't keep paying them then incogni can just sell your data back to the scammer now it is a 2 way business
Curse that generous patreon dude that gave you a spindle! He deprived us of an entire side project video! D:
🤣💯
I'm just counting everything about the second lathe as a side project.
Relax...
There WILL be more Side Projects...
Be patient Padawan...
😄😁😆😅😂🤣
@@wompastompa3692 inception!
Shame on him!
I love how with the community giving parts and such he is in a way continualy inheriting machines.
The Constant Grinder
The real adventure was the machines we inherited along the way.
Inheriting tools and machines to help him restore the other tools and machines he's inherited and going to inherit.
Smash cutting the video because you have a date with your wife that’s more important is so sweet.
My new favorite outro ever
Priorities!
@@InheritanceMachining should of made the new live centre increase the side projects after that call though
He was enthusiastic about the date. I'm guessing she asked him to taker her to a tooling store to shop for live centers and other tool centric paraphernalia.
@@user-ru3im9rd6b man's gotta bore what a man's gotta bore
@@user-ru3im9rd6b To a store that sells heat treatment ovens more like it
I love your content; I have cerebral palsy, so I'm unable to work, but it's so relaxing to watch. I love your dry humor.
wtf is my excuse to watch these without doing any shop work...
@@drinkmorecocacoladon’t compare your struggles to anyone else’s. We all have our own shit. You have yours and I have mine.
Amazing videos
dude what he was making a joke@@ponyboyjl13
If you think his humor is dry add a little “magic sauce”
PSA: I realize the fake spam calls were just joke segues, but a reminder for anyone watching that you DO NOT want to decline spam calls, you should let them finish ringing. Muting them is also fine. By ending the incoming call you are confirming that they reached a live person. Ending calls early can lead to being prioritized for more spam calls.
This comment should be pinned.
Truth
Damn, I hadn't thought of that. I keep getting them from Holland and Swiss and always, when I hang up, there's an immediate one right after which I also don't answer.
"... gave up the ghost" :D
As a german I can confirm: That spring definitely gave up the ghost.
As did it's first replacement. I wonder if the earlier clean up work pulled the conductor off the contact, and that's why the first spring opened up. (It was designed to hold the contact in place, not carry the load.)
Die shpringy shproingy hast die geist aufgeben.
I thought springy sploingy was literally the German name for a spring lmaoo. It’s so on brand 😂😂
@@TheMilfMoncher But then you looked it up and found out that spring actually means Feder in German?
Is "gave up the ghost" actually a common saying in english?
The fact that you can rebuild that motor simply and efficiently is the reason why old stuff is so cool. It's like the creators designed it this way. Anyone with some mechanical knowledge can repair it. Not like the trash created today
I wholeheartedly agree with this comment.
That's why right to repair should the norm everywhere!
this comment exactly describes the bane of my existence, ESPECIALLY WITH CARS. Repairing anything on them is prohibitively expensive due to the parts being artificially overpriced, and needing the engine block to be taken out and stripped almost completely.
I was JUST about to say this! It's SO nice that it was obviously designed with self-repairability and longevity in mind. Not like shit today. It could be! That's not an issue! But it's not.
I don't think it was "designed to be repairable" as such. It's mostly the cheapest way of assembling things at that quantity at the time.
I watch this channel at normal speed on a big screen, never sped up and never on my little phone. Some content deserves that, and I deserve to treat myself to good content in that way.
wow, thank you! 🙏
And i watch his videos in VR for that ultimate experience
"one restless sleep of lucid dreams later, I think I know what's going on"
I feel like these are the words of inventors of the past, those great men whose inventions and discoveries changed the way we live
That box of springs will be just the ticket for your spring cleaning project.
niiiiice
It is a real delight to see you care and refurbish all the amazing equipment, the tools, your Inheritance. With your knoledge and skill. Thank you. You honnor the Machining way of thinking.
Thank you for being here as well!
I love the way you show your love for your wife. Too many of us complain about our wives constantly, taking for granted how truly blessed we are to have them. And especially that they will have us.
Oh, and nice machining content, too!
my heart was in my throat for you during the whole malfunctioning grinder incident..i love my dumore ( ive got the lil brother to yours ) and while theyre built like tanks electricky has always mystified me ..i was like
" oh no NOT THE SMOKE??!"
😂 i was literally thinking, man... everyhting is going so smoothly. Then POOF! all that wen't to hell!
When the grinder started up 7:48 all i heard was R2D2 screaming 😂
😆
the pitch kept going up. i was waiting for it to blow up.
There's no way you only replaced the one of those two springs bindings 😆Fair play wanting to get back to the main project but... c'mon hahaha
Just my thought. it will never be as easy to do the other one. It´s just as old...
My thoughts exactly. You already have it open and cleaned up with the new pieces ready to go. Just do both and give yourself peace of mind.
Somehow it literally never occurred to me to do both until now 😆
@@InheritanceMachining 😅 I know you would have because I can picture your voice from other videos saying "And while I'm here... may aswell give this other connection the same treatment" but I was giving the video the old side eye in those moments haha
@@InheritanceMachining Now you will suffer until you replace the second one :D
I love the spring box I work in a multi generation precision machine shop and we have a spring drawer just like that in our tool room.
they key is to have them all in one place haha
Even though I’m not a machinist, I enjoy your videos and definitely get something from them.
I think the spring is the main electrical connection in most of these designs, it was in the drill I refurbished that is a universal motor like this one. I think it just needed a larger diameter spring to support the inrush current, but of course soldering it directly is even better!
The best 21minutes and 51 seconds of my Friday morning (Cutting Edge Engineering is 31:32) :)
Wanted to throw out a minor tip: though it probably doesn't matter too much given the size here, it's generally bad practice to blow on solder joints. It causes it to cool faster and therefore become more brittle and prone to failure in the future.
Thanks, i didnt know that! I usually do it when solding small things because im quite bad at soldering and dont want the rest of the board to overheat :P
Keep this in mind as you're working on this Hardinge HLV-xx clone. These lathes have a dove tail bed with the power feed on carriage. This means as the power feed runs the carriage across the dove tail bed the forces will be applied at an angle to the carriage moving on the dove tail bed causing the corners of the carriage to wear in a "crabbing" pattern.
Other issues to be aware of, wear pads under the carriage/tail stock.
The Hardinge HLV-xx lathes have become a "desirable" lathe in the same way as the Monarch EE, yet there are designed in problems with these lathes users/owners need to be aware of.
Wow, I hope he sees your comment.
"Dressing the wheel" moment was brilliant 🤣
Was going to comment about you not cleaning up the commutator when the motor was stripped, but I see that you eventually did, before the final assembly. Cheers
I love it when things are simplified to "settling on the happy only ground". 😂
*How are they such a cute couple even when it's only one of them in the video???*
I know the lathe spindle wasn't on when you put the towels there, but try aluminum foil instead. You can crumple it up with the waste in it when done, and if you DO turn the spindle on, things are a lot less dramatic if the spindle grabs the foil. It just tears rather than turning into spinning death. EDIT: you did turn the lathe spindle on with the towels there :P
but the foil gives nasty papercuts :c
@@dimitar4yWhat the hell kind of foil do you buy?
@@user-ym4xy6us5e all the foils cut ;(
See that light switch inline with the power cord to the motor? That's your problem right there Brandon!
Horrible things, hate them
Having replaced a fair few of those on the older lamps, I too feel that pain. Don't know how they make them so poorly.
I am having SO much fun living vicariously through you, imagining I have even a fraction of your tools. And watching you build stuff is cool too, I guess (that last part was sarcasm). The best part is watching you actually get the stuff you take apart back together working
4 month already :o times flies past so fast
Was looking forward to another restoration video/ episode :D
You're telling me! 😂
I would recommend a side project. You should make a guard for the tool post grinder's belt. Not that lathes are safe in the first place but seems like a non obtrusive way to CYA
Your videos just make my fridays. Or at least every other Friday! Keep up the good work 🎉
Yeah ya jinxed it. Can’t get away without at least 5 side projects. 👍👍❤️
Hell yeah! Been waiting for more content on this beautiful lathe 🔥
As a person who very much learns by *doing*, this is exactly the sort of machining video I like to watch! I can't afford even a small fraction of this kind of equipment but have been increasingly veering toward it in my hobbies, and being able to watch other machinists learning from scratch and sharing the mistakes and learning moments is invaluable to so many of us. Thanks for doing what you do - you're right at the top of the list of Patreons I will contribute to when I can afford to.
P.S. your voice is so relaxing!
Not only an Inheritance Machining video, but one about grinding?
As a manufacturer of high precision CNC bore (among other applications) grinding machines, I loved watching this. Not what our bore grinders do, but still the same as what my bore grinders do, if you get what I mean. There's just something special about doing it "by hand".
And if you like the surface finish, I wish I could show you around the metrology lab over here. 😁
The box of shame is adorable I always knew he would be a good character!
it even went
i swear if i see people complete the video without skipping when it's LITERALLY 19 MINUTES SINCE IT'S BEEN POSTED
Some of us watch at 2x speed.
@@dekutree64 damn, tiktok is really burning out the kids' brains these days, isn't it?
@@dekutree64 speedrunning
@@dekutree64 Why on earth would anyone want THAT? No attention span for 21 minutes?
@@_Jester_ Gain twice as much information in those 21 minutes. It may not seem like much, but if you watch a 21 minute video every day for a year, that's 64 hours of time saved to do more important things.
Well, today just became even better.
Huh. After visualizing the conic section… you’re right, the trajectory of the indicator tip is hyperbolic in shape
Hey awesome! You installed your outlets the correct way...ground prong up!
Seeing you lean over the grinder with the belt running gave me goosebumps. I would recommend fabricating a belt cover for that thing if you don't want your shirt getting sucked into it.
Tools you can work on are THE BEST!
Wow those springs in the motor were holding on by a THREAD! Also wow convenient you had that replacement just hanging around lol
Also yes the spring has partly to do with easy construction, but it also was meant to be able to withstand more high speed vibration over a length of years of duty than just solder alone.
Great job on this. As a cylindrical grinder myself, I'd have used a flow of coolant into the bore while grinding. This creates mess galore though so I suppoe we pick our inconveniences.
The motor runs on white smoke)) There is not enough white smoke, fill the motor with white smoke and everything will be fine)) Thanks for the interesting videos!
Wait, what? Negative side-projects count now? Amazing!
When you make the rules, anything goes!
Love your videos. Incredibly entertaining and despite myself I even learn something.
I'll count that as a win! Thanks!
The lathe is just sitting there....MEANCINGLY lel
Another great video. I have been machining for 15 years professionally and 3 months ago I started CNC cylindrical grinding. Let me tell you, there is a reason they call it an art. It's been a lot of fun to learn so far and in my limited expertise, you did a great job. I look forward to your videos every Friday. Keep up the good work!
Very cool! And thank you. The learning is the funnest part!
In awe of the box of shame's role in this one. Raw talent.
Mountain Dew...Check
Pinch of Kayak...Check
Inheritance Machining video...Oh Yeah.
Brandon making the quality video we all know and love...Hell Yeah
I didn’t “check” the comments to see if anyone else was similarly minded before posting my own. Good health to you, sir.
Absolutely love the content. Please keep it coming!
Thanks!
Those springs appear to be for vibration-proofing for the electrical contacts, that tend to come loose inside the motor. I've never encountered anything like this before. It's likely an unpopular or obsolete method for electrical connections, given its lack of robustness, as we observed today. I'd prefer to use Y-shaped spade connectors secured with a screw and some Loctite.
They were very common back in the day. Easy to connect and no need for soldering when replacing bearings or such in the field. Mostly I remember them being bronze coloured springs, perhaps for better conductivity.
THANK YOU UNIVERSE! It’s been bothering me since you cleaned up the rest of the grinder that you didn’t change the filter!
I just wanted to thank you for taking the time to make these videos ! I have a small machine shop and just started machining 4 years ago. Ive learned a lot from your videos ,..thank you.
My pleasure! Thanks for being here. Happy machining!
Project idea: custom guards for some of your tools. You mention having guards for those belts in another video. How about something that also prevents an external grinding wheel from exploding into your face? You've got a unique challenge to keep things camera friendly, too. I'm curious what you'd come up with
Love your gentle humor, voice and clear explanation of mistakes and fixes. I don't have machining machines, but the thought process is worth the watch and education. Thanks!
Glad you enjoyed it! Thanks!
Now THAT is a pleasant surprise on a Friday afternoon! Thank you for the awesome content!
My pleasure! Thanks!
Bro. The build up to that ad was genius.
I liked it, but opinions are divided 😂
@@InheritanceMachining some people hate ads because they don't use adblock and they already get bombarded with 30+ ads before the video.
13:55 Holy cow! What's this? A UA-camr with an appropriately sized soldering iron? I'm very impressed!
It's so clear that you put as much time and effort into your videos as you do into machining. I'm fairly new to this channel, and the more I watch, the more I can see how much precision goes into every element of these videos. You've got a subscriber in me xox
Ha, I love the use of the Polly Pocket jacket to "dress" the wheel.
The button is the cherry on top of this channel.
Always there to punctuate a satisfying moment.
It's so nice to see what you make in your manual machines. Im so impressed.
I love your videos and the precision you are able to do there.
Thank you.
Dude that was the best ad transition i have ever seen. Love ur vids btw
It's quite a divided approach 😂 thanks!
Your voice reminds me of Tom Bodett. You've probably heard that a million times. I enjoy your work. You make it look simple.
Nice job!!! Keep posting
I had same problem with my lathes tailstock, since i dont have toolpost grinder used a Mt2 finishing reamer which gives good results, not has shinny ,but work better than before
The noise from the grinder when trying it after the first spring, and then trying it a third time both made me laugh like a madman.
My dad told me that when one headlight goes, make sure you replace both, because it wa salmost guaranteed that the second would go pretty quickly after the first, and most likely in a rainstorm or snowstorm.
For that reason, I would have replaced both springs on the grinder…
I love your channel!
that was one of the best native ads i’ve seen on youtube. product not for me but i sat through it. nicely done.
did they give you a script or are you hopelessly creative?
Thanks! The script is all us. But we maybe wen't a little overboard with the phone calls. Lesson learned haha
4 months? It seems like only one month! Time is going by so fast! Camera angles are great, especially the one at 19:32.
You're telling me! 😂 thanks
Nice of you, Mike!
I am 2 weeks away from getting into the fabrication department at my place of employment. We have a Bridgeport and two engine lathes. I only have a certificate from a community college but I will get plenty of time to teach myself. Thanks for the videos I look forward to catching up.
That filter element looks very much like what's used in some vacuum cleaners. I bought a sheet of it from somewhere years ago. A HVAC supplier might have some sheet stock of filter material.
Thank you for the smile on my face. I hope, your grandfather is watching you and smiling from above, too
Don't blame a bit for cutting this short to go out with the missus. Love to see some love for the toolroom lathe and I'm looking forward to more,
Oh, and nice to see the motor on that grinder's still kicking.
Honestly i needed the break myself 😂 Thanks
I would have been thrilled to have received a Vortex Viper :D
honestly me too 😂
If either spring breaks again, I wonder if it would be better to just strip enough copper to wrap all the way around that bushing. You'd have to make sure it's wrapped tight when you solder it, though, so there's no chance of it slipping off due to heat expansion. I also wonder if you could braze the copper wire on the bushing.
nothing realllly needs to be hardened. Aluminum is sooooo nice and easy to work with. yesss, wouldn't it be so easy? no more thinking about what your next project is, just repairing your old ones yesss,
eternal cycle of remaking the same part since it's one-time-use
Mike has good taste in optics!
You and CEE Australia help complete my Friday night here in Manila.
I randomly stumbled on of your videos one day. And now i watch every single one your videos. There just so satisfying and calming.
The fact I’ve seen every video is crazy to me. The channel has become so classy. Long live inheritance machine
I wish you had this issue with the motor before I bought a new band saw to replace one that had the same issue, and the same subsequent issue with the spring/current 😂
Sell it back! 😂
Your videos are great and the sound Quality is the best of any maker video I have seen. EXCEPT for that darn phone ringing!!! Keep up the great work and sound level sound!
17:16 : I know this wasn't expected... but man is it pretty with all the sparks o_o
that's your inner machinist calling out to you, go become a surface/grinder expert somewhere. sparks foreeeeeveeeerrr
You could make a height adjuster for your indicator so you can set it on centerline!
Great stuff. That was really significant wear, surprising for a toolroom precision lathe. I wonder how it happened? I successfully used an MT reamer on the tailstock of my South Bend, plus some older MT adaptors, but they were only a light cut to remove some burrs. I'm not sure how well a reamer would work to correct heavy wear such as you had.
I'm not sure myself. Probably wasn't used (or cared for) as a toolroom lathe just given the condition of that and other problems on it. More fun for me to fix it though! Also good to hear the reamer may not have worked. 10 thou would have been a ton to remove haha
@@InheritanceMachining And lotsa fun for us to watch you fix it! Happy Easter to you and your wonderful wife. I hope your date went great.
Seriously? C'mon man! You left us hanging without knowing...
Kudos to the patreon who gave you the tool.
Please just don't leave us waiting on the outcome of this Morse taper conundrum.
Happy Easter.
10:02 And then we discovered why brushed motors got phased out.
I freaking lost it at 'Trying not to die bro'. Your videos make me miss having access to a machine shop.
god i don’t know anything about machining really but damn i love big metal and clunk noises idk something about it, it’s great
When you selected the spring, it appeared to have some type of coating and I wondered if it would cause problems with the electrical connection.
This time he finally did a different boring pun!! I love it!
I use vitrified stones on a 1/4 shank in my router to do grinding. they are about 15$ each. I lay paper towels on to catch much of the dust, but not all. step 2. tear off the carriage and clean. grinding comes up just about as often as the carriage should be properly cleaned anyway.
boring operation right now. decided to measure the chips. went in for 20 and came back out for a spring pass. The chips were 20 then 3 for the spring.
ended up 7 over on dia that doesn't matter much
You are quickly exceeding the skill level of many life long machinists. Bravo, beautiful work as always
Trivia. Dunmore still makes motors and will service any motor they have made. They will also build custom motors to customer specifications.
PS Beryllium copper plated springs, please.
just the side project of repairing that motor could´ve been an entire video on its own that I would love to watch
The "Spring" in is actually a buffer resistor.