I'd like to officially file my objection and disappointment concerning the "reset" of the cutter for each pass not being accompanied by a typewriter "new line" bell sound... :D
As someone who has worked with farm equipment PTO's all my life I can tell you having the PTO a few thousandths under actually makes life so much easier during hooking and unhooking simply becaue it gives a tiny bit of clearance for dealing with all the crud that ends up in the couplers.
Tony - another beautifully-done video. Very informative, and lovely to watch. I'm amazed that you can 'crank out' so many videos, and keep the quality (and entertainment value) absolutely top-notch!
I'll wait to pass judgement until he's finished the part. I don't even think it's half as long as a proper one and is certainly missing the groove part way along it - which is presumably used on some couplings to hold them together.
YOU ROCK! This Old Tony is my favorite machinist based UA-cam channel! Being a broke as wannabe farmer, this one hit home. Thank you Tony please keep up the good work. BRAVO!
Tony, your videos are educational on many levels. Big fan. One request : can you make a video on the cutting fluids: usage, types you use when and why, what's your setup is like ? how fluid cleaned ( any skimmers? ) . Looking forward to see it on your channel ! Cheers.
another thing i need to do too.. a picture explains more than 1000 words. which brings me to a project you might be interested in: -a centering stand for the mill, i didn’t buy one yet...adjustable up and down, thread fed centre.. :-) great job, thx. better than most tv news channels and talk shows.
Dead: exactly right . Nuts: A common and certainly apocryphal folk etymology is that the term originated from the historical poker games in the colonial west of America, where if a player bet everything he possessed, he would place the nuts of his wagon wheels on the table to ensure that, should he lose, he would be unable to flee and would have to make good on the bet. Since it would be expected that a player would only make such a bet when he had the best possible hand, the folklore says that this is how the best possible hand came to be known as the nuts.
Thanks for the infotaining video as always, Tony! And how serendipitous; I just broke the gears and internal spline in my electric tractor PTO gearbox. Will be a fun fix...
I'm a welder and have absolutely zero knowledge of machining nor do I have any plans to get into it, however I find machining videos fascinating and yours seem to be the most entertaining 👍
I don't even know what a PTO Spline is, but i want to learn either way...hahaha Thanks for all the awesome content... I always learn something while enjoying the entertaining dialog and goofy edits... have a great day, take it easy... I use to call "dead nuts" "gramppa" 😜😜
PTO in this case is " Post Traumatic Option" in which the customer got the estimate from a "real " machinist, then had Old This Tony do it for free. Lol otherwise it stands for " power take off" as in a shaft to power optional machinery from a tractor.
@@A_Man_In_His_Van Oh, right on, I watch Chucke2009, he is all into tractors(I'm a city boy, hahaha) he says that all the time, didn't even make the connection, thanks... I have a feeling TOT is a just a good ol' story teller, that loves making things, so his friends ask him 1st...
The nicest thing about smartphones is being able to watch TOT during conference calls. I live in fear of a surprise joke, but otherwise, makes it all better.
you forgot a very important feature, that being the locking groove that runs around the circumference. A ball bearing in the female part locks into it to prevent the shaft from sliding off and entering a low earth orbit. also on the reason for the drive groves tapering back to the od it happens for a few reasons. 1: feature of manufacturing 2:reduce stress points 3: as they are used on machinery that operate in very dirty conditions it is common for them to get covered in dirt. When the female part is installed it pushes the dirt along the grove, if the grove came to a flat face it would pack the dirt hard against it preventing it from seating fully therefor not allowing it to lock in place. The feature helps evacuate the debris
That is a possibility. It is also possible that in the intended application it is unnecessary or even intentional to allow movement in the case of a one piece shaft opposed to the commercially available 2 piece shafts. strange things happen on backyard built machines. Yes on the early shafts it was a bolt passed through a hole tangentially to the locking groove then the spring loaded pins became popular however the are prone to seizing with corrosion or debris ingress. A spring loaded collar that seats ball bearings in place (think ratchet to socket only the locking ball is in the female portion) is becoming a more popular option.
I was thinking along the same lines, but rather than do the whole cut with a fly cutter, maybe just one more pass with a simpler one with a radius on the face just to skim a light pass at the root to accomplish the minor diameter.
Let us know if it fits, breaks or drives. Interesting, most of youtube machinists make tools and stuff for there shop. Real life useful projects are quite rare even here on my favorite channel. Reminds me of my early days on citizens band radio where i figured out quickly that non pros used it exclusively to talk about there radio.
@@RMWeinberg In Germany, that was basically the only thing that was allowed for quite a while. Well .. besides of "topics, which are too mundane to justify using official communication systems" Don't want to cut the states telephone services sweet profit.
Picking up after someone elses guffaw is always tough. It usually takes more time and be better starting from scratch. From experience most of these 550 rpm drives are badly worn for sure. So all your head scratching and milling will be just fine fella.
I'm a software engineer so picking up after someone else's guffaw is a constant in life. You need to try to get into the head of what they were thinking at times and its a place you don't want to go on many occasions. You learn fast when to just throw out something and do it from scratch. Way fewer antacid tablets involved.
@ChrisHallett83 Boy tell me about it. The other pet peeve I have on that is make comments useful. Restating what the code is obviously doing is of no use. Tell me why its doing something or tell me what the goal is for non-obvious code. Just do something useful.
That looks exactly the same as every spline I’ve ever seen in my career as a mechanic. I’ve never seen one with the curved depression between the splines, although 99% of what I’ve dealt with is metric. Nice job!
I really really wish I had the equipment and knowledge for cutting splines. There's some great old equipment out there that could use new splined parts and this alone is causing these cool machines to be placed on the scrap heap. Thanks for sharing, you did a great job, BTW!
@@ThisOldTony I know, but when you said it I was remembering the farmer down the road that lost an arm on the PTO. I always cringe and giggle when I hear "PTO" or "HiLift Jack". Really enjoy your videos.
Wow, the videos coming in at a much faster rate now, I love it! Is it because you can dedicate more time to filming and editing because of the Patreon?
Thanks for the tech, Tony! Still wondering how the heck 5' long spline shafts are machined...There's more than a few otherwise great glassblowing lathes out there in the world that get written off as a loss because of spline shaft damage. Usually this happens when the new owner was an idiot and strapped the machine to a trailer by the spline. Anyhow, from what I've heard they are very difficult to source and machinists hate making them.
Love these videos Tony. It is clear that you have forgotten more than I will likely ever know when it comes to these subjects. In other words, thanks for making me feel stupid.
Great video! I was contemplating though......would it be cheaper and faster (albeit less fun) to take a 540 rpm to 1000 rpm adapter and cut the 1000 rpm end off? In doing so, you would be left with a perfect 540 rpm splined shaft that could be attached to whatever it would be needed attached to.
@@RambozoClown, I didn't know that. Thanks for bringing that to my attention. In light of the new information, you are correct. "ToT to the rescue"! 🙂👍
@@duanelundgren7985 N series haven't been produced since the 1950s. I don't think that there is enough of them kicking around to justify a company producing an adapter for it.
@@TestTubeGub-GubSnailman 1952 was the last N. There are thousands still in use. Farm stores and Tractor Supply still sell PTOs and adaptor to current sizes.
It's before my time, but as I recall the old Ford size was 1 1/8" - 6 and you can still get stuff for that. Never heard of 1" - 6 so I figured it had to be something small, or maybe a Euro standard from the UK or something?
I always took the parts out of the lathe and piled them into the stolen shopping cart. When the cart was full (heavy) we pushed it into the building next door. The old guy that owned the company would brooch the splines. I never had time to peek in there and see how his brooch machine was setup but it did nice work on those splines.
I cut a couple of splines just like that back in 1988 at Aberdeen Proving Grounds, MD working for my uncle. If I remember right it was on an old Van Norman horizontal mill, nice job Tony!
Hey Tony! What's your vocation? I'm graduating from engineering school this semester, but I've found that the majority of work in my field is desk work and analysis. We only have 1 manufacturing class in our entire curriculum! Your profession seems much more interesting. So what do you do for a living and how did you get there?
Could you make. Follow along series for beginners. ...... Sort if like Making a project that is made up of multiple parts that are not mega challenging.
It is very valuable to show how to do parts with a manual machine, also the procedure to do it. This skill needs to be retained so the knowledge isn't lost!
Don't you have that fancy extra axis chuck on the CNC lathe and a lot of small endmills and time to waste programming weird paths? Old problems require modern solutions!
It won't work properly. Notice the grove around the shaft at 0:52? This is required to keep the 'knuckle' end engaged to the shaft. There is a little pin with a notch in it that is pushed out of the way then engaged in the grove and held in place with spring tension. What you built is very nice, but as soon as lateral movement is applied, it'll slip off the shaft.
Yeah, i was thinking the same thing. 1" 6 is ford 2n,9n,8n and some old farmalls f12, f20. There are off the shelf adapters that you could start with cheaper than custom machining.
This video brought back horrific memories of installing Mack transmissions into an improperly aligned clutch. I'd rather give birth than push on a 1000 pound trans with poor fitting splines. I hope your distant friend appreciates the quality work you did here.
I have made one splined shaft in my life and I used a very similar process with the exception that I used an end mill. It was a drive shaft for a Gravely and the guy it was for said it worked great. He still uses it to this day.
I'd like to officially file my objection and disappointment concerning the "reset" of the cutter for each pass not being accompanied by a typewriter "new line" bell sound... :D
After reading your comment, I heard the carriage return ring in my head each time.
Ugye hogy ugye? :)
Ding
That WAS an oversight. Tony is slipping
Maybe use the typewriter song? ua-cam.com/video/RlqDFPLUhig/v-deo.html
As someone who has worked with farm equipment PTO's all my life I can tell you having the PTO a few thousandths under actually makes life so much easier during hooking and unhooking simply becaue it gives a tiny bit of clearance for dealing with all the crud that ends up in the couplers.
You should make a graph of how often you use your rotary table for welding vs. how often you use it for cinematic shots of rotating parts
I'd print it out and spin it on the table.
@@ThisOldTony 😂😂😂
And cake decorating!
@@sillywizard6220 The one project my wife would totally get excited about!
@@ThisOldTony lol
05:48 that animation was great. I was kind of lost on why it looked like it did and that cleared it up perfectly and super well! Great video!
It never gets old watching other people work
bryan gorski LMFAO. 😂🤣
Lol are you my boss?
2 @ThisOldTony videos in one week!?!? I must be dreaming, this is amazing!!
Love those 1st time projects. By the time your done you kinda know what your doing. Great video Tony👍
And then, the next one like it, doesn't show up for another 10yrs and you forgot everything that you did the last time.😒
Ha! As if there was ever any chance that he would not be able to pull this off. If it's possible, Tony can figure out how.
Steve Summers, since when do you have time to watch UA-cam videos?
Love your videos, Tony! You crack me up and I learn a ton. I can’t wait to cut some stuff this weekend. Woot!
@@RockingJOffroad At work😁
Mr.ThisOld these nice short videos are awesome! Hugs and kisses!
Tony - another beautifully-done video. Very informative, and lovely to watch. I'm amazed that you can 'crank out' so many videos, and keep the quality (and entertainment value) absolutely top-notch!
@Ron Covell, your own videos are pretty awesome too!
You're very skilled. Good job.👍
I'll wait to pass judgement until he's finished the part.
I don't even think it's half as long as a proper one and is certainly missing the groove part way along it - which is presumably used on some couplings to hold them together.
This is the first comment I see, and he's struggling to put a tool in his chuck to do the think. The contrast is beautiful
The animations for each process is much appreciated!
YOU ROCK! This Old Tony is my favorite machinist based UA-cam channel! Being a broke as wannabe farmer, this one hit home. Thank you Tony please keep up the good work. BRAVO!
I appreciate the effort you put into that transition behind the machinists handbook.
Another great video. The "Good Book" comment made my wife snort with laughter. Keep up the great work.
And thanks for the meatball shirts!
James Draper If she's snorting with laughter, watching TOT videos isn't the only thing you're doing right - congratulations my friend!
You're a teacher for life. I learned a lot from you this old Tony. Thanks a million
Another TOT masterpiece! You and Some More News are my favorite things to watch, thanks so much for being awesome and sharing such great content!
Tony, your videos are educational on many levels. Big fan. One request : can you make a video on the cutting fluids: usage, types you use when and why, what's your setup is like ? how fluid cleaned ( any skimmers? ) . Looking forward to see it on your channel ! Cheers.
I'm a simple man. I see a new "this old tony" and I drop everything.
Heh. I miss-read "simple man" as "single man"...
another thing i need to do too.. a picture explains more than 1000 words.
which brings me to a project you might be interested in:
-a centering stand for the mill, i didn’t buy one yet...adjustable up and down, thread fed centre.. :-)
great job, thx. better than most tv news channels and talk shows.
you are officially the number two 'this old' search suggestion after this old house. congrats.
I was on the lake fishing and had to stop to watch. Great video. By far my favorite UA-cam channel.
Dead nuts... Or on metric- spot on
Oskar Tuulik I laughed so hard I Peed my pants a little bit when I heard that one.
Dead: exactly right . Nuts: A common and certainly apocryphal folk etymology is that the term originated from the historical poker games in the colonial west of America, where if a player bet everything he possessed, he would place the nuts of his wagon wheels on the table to ensure that, should he lose, he would be unable to flee and would have to make good on the bet. Since it would be expected that a player would only make such a bet when he had the best possible hand, the folklore says that this is how the best possible hand came to be known as the nuts.
Knowing me ill fuck up and say dead on nut spot.....
Dead Nuts
Spot On
Accurate
Dead On
Correct
Exact
On-Target
A Remy (short for "A Remington")
Bang On (British)
,,, plus a tenth, minus nothing
Thanks for the infotaining video as always, Tony! And how serendipitous; I just broke the gears and internal spline in my electric tractor PTO gearbox. Will be a fun fix...
When i was young, i never thought that i will watch Machining Videos bevor Breakfast :-) Thank you Toni for Sharing.
The first clip gave me an anxiety attack!
ahaha me too!
The very best form of humour does not need drawing attention to or explaining. As ever the very best.
He was just reenacting his wedding night.
Me too, Cringey.
Now that you've got some experience, making it again will be a lot easier when he finds out that it needs to be heat treated to survive.
Don't think so. Most pto adaptors are really soft
Your part of my daily therapy Tony Thanks for the great videos. They keep my mind and brain going.
I'm a welder and have absolutely zero knowledge of machining nor do I have any plans to get into it, however I find machining videos fascinating and yours seem to be the most entertaining 👍
I don't even know what a PTO Spline is, but i want to learn either way...hahaha Thanks for all the awesome content... I always learn something while enjoying the entertaining dialog and goofy edits... have a great day, take it easy... I use to call "dead nuts" "gramppa" 😜😜
PTO in this case is " Post Traumatic Option" in which the customer got the estimate from a "real " machinist, then had Old This Tony do it for free. Lol otherwise it stands for " power take off" as in a shaft to power optional machinery from a tractor.
@@A_Man_In_His_Van Oh, right on, I watch Chucke2009, he is all into tractors(I'm a city boy, hahaha) he says that all the time, didn't even make the connection, thanks... I have a feeling TOT is a just a good ol' story teller, that loves making things, so his friends ask him 1st...
Looks dead nuts to me, nicely done Tony!
You mean "Spot On", right?
#TeamMetric
Dead nuts x 0.1 = Spot on.
@@DerKlubbi LOL #TeamMetric
Another great video Old Tony! Always love your stuff.
I appreciate the ingenuity on this one. Very clever.
The nicest thing about smartphones is being able to watch TOT during conference calls. I live in fear of a surprise joke, but otherwise, makes it all better.
Avenue X Remember to use the mute button unless you or the team are speaking
It's the fear of getting caught that makes it sexier
my favorite pto is the one on my kitchenaid stand mixer. one of these days i'm going to bring stand mixers into the machine shop...
This was not something I was wondering about when I woke up this morning. :D One always learn something new everyday. I enjoyed it!
Thank you Tony
I have no tools, but I still enjoy watching.
you forgot a very important feature, that being the locking groove that runs around the circumference. A ball bearing in the female part locks into it to prevent the shaft from sliding off and entering a low earth orbit. also on the reason for the drive groves tapering back to the od it happens for a few reasons. 1: feature of manufacturing 2:reduce stress points 3: as they are used on machinery that operate in very dirty conditions it is common for them to get covered in dirt. When the female part is installed it pushes the dirt along the grove, if the grove came to a flat face it would pack the dirt hard against it preventing it from seating fully therefor not allowing it to lock in place. The feature helps evacuate the debris
Yes, probably he just left that part out of the video. The axles I have has a springloaded pin with a milled section on it for locking.
That is a possibility. It is also possible that in the intended application it is unnecessary or even intentional to allow movement in the case of a one piece shaft opposed to the commercially available 2 piece shafts. strange things happen on backyard built machines. Yes on the early shafts it was a bolt passed through a hole tangentially to the locking groove then the spring loaded pins became popular however the are prone to seizing with corrosion or debris ingress. A spring loaded collar that seats ball bearings in place (think ratchet to socket only the locking ball is in the female portion) is becoming a more popular option.
The end user has a lathe. He can cut his own groove. I know this because I watched the video.
@@pcwizzzkid I don't care for those at all. They're quite a bit heavier, and close to impossible to release inside the PTO guard on some implements.
@Steven Also true.
I confess... I'm the one who was yelling at the screen that your cutter wasn't at correct height.... until you made subsequent cuts.
Great Video Tony! i love taking what i learn and bringing it back to the shop
This is a staple of knowledge sir… thanks!!
Could have done it perfectly with a fly cutter and a ground HSS form tool. Would also have been an interesting video!
Kravchenko Audio I was thinking a form tool and a shaper would be fun.
EnlightenedSavage didn’t ToT sell his shaper?
@@cameronwebster6866 true but he has a time machine so that shouldn't be a problem
I was thinking along the same lines, but rather than do the whole cut with a fly cutter, maybe just one more pass with a simpler one with a radius on the face just to skim a light pass at the root to accomplish the minor diameter.
@@EnlightenedSavage - how would he do the 'ramp out' at the end?
Can we finally have a walkthrough of your shop??
Nice video too.
I have considered, but never tried this approach. Nice to see it in practice. Thanks
You never cease to amaze and entertain!
Let us know if it fits, breaks or drives. Interesting, most of youtube machinists make tools and stuff for there shop. Real life useful projects are quite rare even here on my favorite channel. Reminds me of my early days on citizens band radio where i figured out quickly that non pros used it exclusively to talk about there radio.
Same as ham radio, only we also talk about our antennas
@@RMWeinberg In Germany, that was basically the only thing that was allowed for quite a while. Well .. besides of "topics, which are too mundane to justify using official communication systems"
Don't want to cut the states telephone services sweet profit.
Picking up after someone elses guffaw is always tough. It usually takes more time and be better starting from scratch. From experience most of these 550 rpm drives are badly worn for sure. So all your head scratching and milling will be just fine fella.
I'm a software engineer so picking up after someone else's guffaw is a constant in life. You need to try to get into the head of what they were thinking at times and its a place you don't want to go on many occasions. You learn fast when to just throw out something and do it from scratch. Way fewer antacid tablets involved.
@@NickFrom1228 Got ya. I have seen way too many V8 engines come into the shop disassembled. I charge more when they come in like that.
@@TomokosEnterprize as a software engineer I also hate when people disassemble V8 JavaScript engines and expect me to fix it
@@michaelandersen7535 Got ya, LOL.
@ChrisHallett83 Boy tell me about it. The other pet peeve I have on that is make comments useful. Restating what the code is obviously doing is of no use. Tell me why its doing something or tell me what the goal is for non-obvious code. Just do something useful.
That looks exactly the same as every spline I’ve ever seen in my career as a mechanic. I’ve never seen one with the curved depression between the splines, although 99% of what I’ve dealt with is metric. Nice job!
I really really wish I had the equipment and knowledge for cutting splines. There's some great old equipment out there that could use new splined parts and this alone is causing these cool machines to be placed on the scrap heap.
Thanks for sharing, you did a great job, BTW!
"no one should get their hand torn up on it", hell of a statement when it comes to PTOs. 😕
I meant continuing to work on it / install!
@@ThisOldTony I know, but when you said it I was remembering the farmer down the road that lost an arm on the PTO. I always cringe and giggle when I hear "PTO" or "HiLift Jack".
Really enjoy your videos.
@@Iowarail ... I have PTO stories too ... not that I even like to think about them 😟
I really was expecting more cursing and smashed hands. I mean at least that's what happens whenever I handle a PTO spline.
Especially in the winter, when your fingers are numb until they aren't....eh?
Amazing! I need to get set up like Tony!
Thanks for the awesome videoTony! Keep them coming please!
Great video!! More of these projects/ short videos. I literally rewatch your videos like an old person watching reruns of CSI
My wife's immediate reaction was "Lucy, you got some 'splining to do!"
Your wife calls you Lucy?
Wow, the videos coming in at a much faster rate now, I love it! Is it because you can dedicate more time to filming and editing because of the Patreon?
I think he's on house arrest...
Looks great! Nice work sir!
Outstanding given what you were given to work with!
Thanks for the tech, Tony! Still wondering how the heck 5' long spline shafts are machined...There's more than a few otherwise great glassblowing lathes out there in the world that get written off as a loss because of spline shaft damage. Usually this happens when the new owner was an idiot and strapped the machine to a trailer by the spline. Anyhow, from what I've heard they are very difficult to source and machinists hate making them.
Today on This Old Tractor...
Nice work! It’s cool to see how you tackle problems with what you have available.
The best way to do something the wrong way, great work Tony!
Tony, you should do a episode with Ray Magliozzi from car talk
"Pacifically". The best trolls are the subtle trolls. :D
I work at a machine shop, and once in a while, we have to make PTO splines. The machinists always do it the way you just did!
Love these videos Tony. It is clear that you have forgotten more than I will likely ever know when it comes to these subjects. In other words, thanks for making me feel stupid.
So what's the verdict? Was the cousin of a friend of someone who is the acquaintance of a complete stranger happy with the results?
I would also like to know. I would more also like to see the application and if it works. Yes... more also
@@RasmusJohanson Everyone died.
Worked but a little overkill for an orange juice extractor
Any news?
i just wanted to go to bed but... Tony... Well... here i am.
Awesome skill set and machine work. I've seen many car CV joints that look exactly like PTO fittings
Nice choice of music.
Your videos are very therapeutic - especially in these hard times.
Great video! I was contemplating though......would it be cheaper and faster (albeit less fun) to take a 540 rpm to 1000 rpm adapter and cut the 1000 rpm end off? In doing so, you would be left with a perfect 540 rpm splined shaft that could be attached to whatever it would be needed attached to.
1"- 6 is some oddball dinky garden tractor PTO. Standard PTO is 1.375 - 6. TOT to the rescue.
@@RambozoClown, I didn't know that. Thanks for bringing that to my attention. In light of the new information, you are correct. "ToT to the rescue"! 🙂👍
@@duanelundgren7985 N series haven't been produced since the 1950s. I don't think that there is enough of them kicking around to justify a company producing an adapter for it.
@@TestTubeGub-GubSnailman 1952 was the last N. There are thousands still in use. Farm stores and Tractor Supply still sell PTOs and adaptor to current sizes.
It's before my time, but as I recall the old Ford size was 1 1/8" - 6 and you can still get stuff for that. Never heard of 1" - 6 so I figured it had to be something small, or maybe a Euro standard from the UK or something?
Video has been posted 34 seconds ago but it has 20 likes already. Now that is what I call devout followers (including myself)
Darn skippy!
Spectacles, Testicles, Wallet, and Watch!
These videos are the unbelievable. You should be in television
I always took the parts out of the lathe and piled them into the stolen shopping cart. When the cart was full (heavy) we pushed it into the building next door. The old guy that owned the company would brooch the splines. I never had time to peek in there and see how his brooch machine was setup but it did nice work on those splines.
Y'see, I thought PTO stood for Pachman-Turner Overdrive.
Bet you're startin' to miss that shaper right about now, huh ;P
I cut a couple of splines just like that back in 1988 at Aberdeen Proving Grounds, MD working for my uncle. If I remember right it was on an old Van Norman horizontal mill, nice job Tony!
Good stuff...as always. I like doing those "one-of-a-kind" jobs. Sometimes they're quite challenging.
Hey Tony! What's your vocation?
I'm graduating from engineering school this semester, but I've found that the majority of work in my field is desk work and analysis. We only have 1 manufacturing class in our entire curriculum!
Your profession seems much more interesting. So what do you do for a living and how did you get there?
CaptainNonsense From what I’ve understood, he is a dentist with a hobby thats gotten a little out of hand.
Could you make. Follow along series for beginners. ...... Sort if like Making a project that is made up of multiple parts that are not mega challenging.
You mean like two thirds of his other videos?
See there is always another way to do something. I like it. Very useful information. Thanks for sharing.
Great video. I think you hit on a great point that there is a book that tells you what to do. Reading is good. Thank you.
II don't always go Full Screen. But when I do I'm watching T.O.T or AvE.
Hard to tell which one this was.
Do let us know if it works or not, if you're told of course.
will do!
It is very valuable to show how to do parts with a manual machine, also the procedure to do it. This skill needs to be retained so the knowledge isn't lost!
Loved it Tony, perfect home shop, make do with the tools ya got kinda job.
Don't you have that fancy extra axis chuck on the CNC lathe and a lot of small endmills and time to waste programming weird paths? Old problems require modern solutions!
thats too many steps for me when my fridge is only 14 away
Love the computer graphics, made the effect of the first two cuts crystal clear
If Tony released a 30hr long video, I'd still watch it, this man is the business.
It won't work properly. Notice the grove around the shaft at 0:52? This is required to keep the 'knuckle' end engaged to the shaft. There is a little pin with a notch in it that is pushed out of the way then engaged in the grove and held in place with spring tension. What you built is very nice, but as soon as lateral movement is applied, it'll slip off the shaft.
The "customer" has a lathe. He can probably put that feature in if he needs it. TOT was only asked to do the splines.
He's probably just going to engage the pto and use his angle grinder! :D
Version 2.0 will have the new feature, "Works."
@@ottard That is how a farmer in Australia would do it
@@evabaroni6693 Hey, at least they don't use a gas torch like we do
I think you should have turned the shaft down to the minor diameter, and then cut six slots for keys. Then just turn the OD round.
:-)
Excellent job, Tony. I'm considering a similar job so this is very relevant. Top marks for video production too. All the best, Mart in England.
You are correct about the 90' degree corners, old time machinist said always machine a radius to relieve shear stress.
You go to all that trouble and then you find out that a PTO spline is 1-3/8" 6 spline, just like a Big Block Ford clutch...
There are, of course, several standards. Even different speeds get different splines.
Yeah, i was thinking the same thing. 1" 6 is ford 2n,9n,8n and some old farmalls f12, f20. There are off the shelf adapters that you could start with cheaper than custom machining.
@@petepeeff5807 The current tractor 540 rpm pto is 1 3/8" six spine. The Old B John Deeres had 1 1/8". I have never messed with Ford tractors.
So like Five different people commeting first
I've liked Five different people ... now what? 😁
Love your vids, Tony. Thanks for sharing!
Great musical choice, awesome cinematography. You're getting really good at this video making stuff!
Wow, 1 view - 6 comments 😁
Thanks TOT, you read my mind. This will be very helpful if and when I need to cut some splines for a project I have in mind. 🙂❤
This video brought back horrific memories of installing Mack transmissions into an improperly aligned clutch. I'd rather give birth than push on a 1000 pound trans with poor fitting splines. I hope your distant friend appreciates the quality work you did here.
I have made one splined shaft in my life and I used a very similar process with the exception that I used an end mill. It was a drive shaft for a Gravely and the guy it was for said it worked great. He still uses it to this day.