I want to thank you for staying true to your mission statement. I am an amateur machinist and learned from watching you and others on UA-cam over the years. Sadly over the years other UA-cam Makers have strayed from teaching machining but not you. I thank you and appreciate your efforts. Marv Linke
Very nice. That’s the way it goes most times in the shop. Hours of work and setup for a few minutes of machining time on a part. But you will have that arbor should you ever need it for a future job. Thanks for making the video. Stay healthy.
Thanks for the explanation about the squareed off spacers. I didn't understand that they would square up the arbor if it was a bit squirrelly. Looking good.
Mr Pete I always learn so much from you even when you are just making a temporary tool thank you for what you do and all of your videos. If I have a issue I go back to one of your videos and there is the fix so thanks Mr Pete
Great Video Mr. Pete! This is the kind of stuff we need to learn in order to get by in the shop... this Video is in the finest tradition of the TubalCain series of educational videos! (P.S. Been busy at work with all this COVID 19 stuff, so I fell way behind on watching your videos... just at the same time you put out a lot of them!).
Over the years I have amassed a pile of temporary/one time tooling jigs etc.I don't throw anything out and a great portion I have used and re-use re pourposed,I do not find your vids boring,keep it up.
Dear Mr. Peterson, I hope you and your wife and family are keeping safe during the current pandemic. Please stay inside as much as possible and practice social distancing. I understand you are a believing person and prayer certainly can't hurt during these times. Unfortunately though the virus doesn't care whether one is religious and praying or not. It is mindless, indiscriminate and cruel and it endangers us all equally. Please don't let it get to you. This goes for everyone who is reading this. Godspeed everybody.
Just as soon as Mr Pete's sites comes up, I go ahead and click the thumbs up button, because I've never seen any of his videos that I didn't like. Then set back and watch the video.
Great project - well played. Me and my NMTB 30 Rockwell Horizontal Mill are watching in earnest. LOL. Thank you for sharing something positive in these stressful times.
@@mrpete222 please don't let it discourage Your efforts Lyle.. I guess most people won't take the time to comment/show their appreciation.. That sculpture is a great piece of art. Thanks for sharing. Hope that You and Your family are doing well. Best Wishes from Casper Wyoming.
In most situations, even more obvious in a machine shop, there are two major limiting factors.... 1- Bank account balance 2- IMAGINATION ( the most obvious one despite the appearances...!!! ) 😁😉 60 degrees!!! It's really improving and the fell for spring makes me feel so much better...!!! 🤧😎👍
Speaking of milling flats on the drill bit shank: Some years ago, a group of us blacksmith types were installing a set of large doors into a building that in now a craft school. We had made 2 sets of fancy 4 foot long decorative hinges. I was in the shop area doing something when one of the guys came in complaining that the 5/8 inch bit they were using to drill into the steel hinge mounting points was slipping. They were using a 3/4" Milwaukee Hole Shooter. He asked if I'd mill flats on the bit. I did. A while later the guy came back complaining that he had almost broken his wrist when the bit caught but the drill motor didn't stop.
That is a good story. I had a three-quarter inch capacity Millers Falls electric drill. The drill bit stuck in the work, and the drill motor did not stall. It’s through me off of the bench where I was standing while drilling
@@mrpete222 We aren't the only ones who have had that problem, of course. Here's a webpage that I put together several years ago (with hints from many others) that offers some solutions: spaco.org/Blacksmithing/Bighole/Bighole.htm
How is the one piece arbor made? Solid stock turned down or is the tapered drive end one piece and the shaft another? It would be interesting to see how to make the tapered end.
Thank You Lyle...Always a pleasure, Always informative...I have a thought. Why not have a solid carbide ground end mill cutter for milling gears? Make it a 2 step process like when milling a T-slot. First cut down to the root of each gear than put the form ground gear cutting end mill and go through the process again with the gear cutter end mill ?? Using a formed end mill would offer so much more closeness/ rigidity with zero problems clearances with cutting a rack ???...Thank You...TM
Been watching your video's for a while and just realized i was not subscribed. What was i thinking? In high school i took commercial foods and no wood shop or metal shop again what was i thinking? My wife does all the cooking and i do all the repairs like god intended lol. love the video's and history lessons keep up the great work and ignore the trolls!!!
I am had owned one of this Clausing 6"x24" bed Horizontal Milling machine . I am going to make a special Arbor mounting with a 6" lathe chuck converted for lathe use some times that I am need use it.😇🥰
I have some questions about milling machine can u plz help me I want to make small milling machine for 9mm iron rod half slot cut 15mm width and 4 mm depth So if i make fixed arbor 1 feet long and 45mm diameter with 2 taper bearings arbor one side for pully and other side 3 inches for cutter fixing then front bush or liner bearing is important or without these arbor work.
Nice outboard support solution. Personally I would not bother keying the cutter. Never did key a cutter much over 50 years of production machining. Just sayin. JIM
Hey MrPete do you remember a video you did with aligning stock in a 4 jaw. Where you used some antique indicators? There was one with a ball that had a pin through it. And possibly one that you made. I believe you used the atlas in the process. I'm really interested in the indicators. Thank you.
@@mrpete222 it's ok. Thanks for trying. I didn't expect you to remember since you have so many great videos to go through. I may have been mistaken about the video. Chances are it was a non sequitur in a different subject. I want to say you were using the centering indicator in the chuck to align a tailstock. But anyway, please don't stress over it. I'll survive without knowing. I have so far. Have a great day. And good health.
Mr Pete Why am I getting an email from UA-cam, purporting to be from you posting a video about COVID. When I follow the link I get a UA-cam privacy error? Were you, or UA-cam hacked?
با تشکر و سپاس . Thank you. کاش به زبان دیگه هم امکان داشت .ترجمه و صحبت بشه .تا دیگر عزیزان هم در سراسر دنیا از علم و صنعت استادان عزیز در هر جای هستی که زحمت میکشن و برای آموزش و فراگیری صنعت این همه تلاش و کوشش می نمایند .بیشتر نتیجه بخش و سودمند بود. هر چند صنعت آنچنان نیازی به صحبت کردن در مورد موضوع مشخص را ندارد که در حال ساخت و اجرا هست. بازم کمال تشکر و سپاس رو دارم
This question I'm asking is not related to this video answered by any machinist. A friend is cutting an ID of brass stock. I don't know what type of brass it is. The boring bar he is using is brand new with cutting tip. He's getting flakes as chips and the cut is rough. I would think he is doing something wrong. Thanks for any education on this.
The spacers or tooling on a shaft make the shaft more ridged. The same principle applies to many machines. We have a molder that swings a 5" diameter by 9" long head on a 1 1/2" arbor, cantilevered, 6,000 rpm, 20 hp. Works fine. But there are times I wish it had 30 hp.
I want to thank you for staying true to your mission statement.
I am an amateur machinist and learned from watching you and others on UA-cam over the years.
Sadly over the years other UA-cam Makers have strayed from teaching machining but not you.
I thank you and appreciate your efforts.
Marv Linke
Thank you, I sometimes stray a bit myself
Really nice looking arbor for the mill, you never know you might be able to use it for a different projects. Great video Mr pete Thanks for sharing :)
I really like that chuck key handle your brother made, easy on the hands. Looks good too.
Very nice. That’s the way it goes most times in the shop. Hours of work and setup for a few minutes of machining time on a part. But you will have that arbor should you ever need it for a future job. Thanks for making the video. Stay healthy.
Thanks
Thanks for the explanation about the squareed off spacers. I didn't understand that they would square up the arbor if it was a bit squirrelly. Looking good.
Mr Pete I always learn so much from you even when you are just making a temporary tool thank you for what you do and all of your videos. If I have a issue I go back to one of your videos and there is the fix so thanks Mr Pete
Thanks
Nice bit of work there, thanks.
Looking forward to seeing you use the new arbor! Beautiful work your brother did. Thanks, Mr. Pete! :-)
Great Video Mr. Pete! This is the kind of stuff we need to learn in order to get by in the shop... this Video is in the finest tradition of the TubalCain series of educational videos! (P.S. Been busy at work with all this COVID 19 stuff, so I fell way behind on watching your videos... just at the same time you put out a lot of them!).
Thank you for watching and catching up. Yes I’ve been putting out quite a few hoping that it might give people something to do during this time
Over the years I have amassed a pile of temporary/one time tooling jigs etc.I don't throw anything out and a great portion I have used and re-use re pourposed,I do not find your vids boring,keep it up.
Nice, that looks every bit as good as the factory one, great work Mr. Pete!
Good morning Mr. Pete, great companion video to the rack cutting series. Waiting for the next segment. Coffee please and thank you.
Good morning Mr.Pete,thanks for your great education that you give us,God bless you.
Dear Mr. Peterson, I hope you and your wife and family are keeping safe during the current pandemic. Please stay inside as much as possible and practice social distancing. I understand you are a believing person and prayer certainly can't hurt during these times. Unfortunately though the virus doesn't care whether one is religious and praying or not. It is mindless, indiscriminate and cruel and it endangers us all equally. Please don't let it get to you. This goes for everyone who is reading this. Godspeed everybody.
Thanks
Just as soon as Mr Pete's sites comes up, I go ahead and click the thumbs up button, because I've never seen any of his videos that I didn't like. Then set back and watch the video.
Thank you very much
Darn, you are really up bright and early!
Great project - well played. Me and my NMTB 30 Rockwell Horizontal Mill are watching in earnest. LOL.
Thank you for sharing something positive in these stressful times.
I very much enjoyed the still photographs at the end of the video. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you, I don’t think many people watch them I mean look at them
@@mrpete222 please don't let it discourage Your efforts Lyle.. I guess most people won't take the time to comment/show their appreciation.. That sculpture is a great piece of art. Thanks for sharing. Hope that You and Your family are doing well. Best Wishes from Casper Wyoming.
Well done Sir! As for fabricating the Arbor we're machinist we can make anything, please excuse the pride. See you next weekend.
👍
Looks goog Lyle👍
Always enjoy watching you skin a cat. Always learn something, of course that is also about me! Keep um coming!
👍
Great work Mr. Pete. Thank you for sharing.
My, new to me, Steinel horizontal Mill has similar issues. It is also a 30NMTB. A very timely video for me.
👍👍
Thanks for another excellent video Lyle. Because of you I've recently started searching for an affordable mill in need of a home.
Good idea, there are lots of them out there
MrPete is the greatest
😁
Pete I hated school but I would have not missed a class if you was my shop teacher,
Great video sir. Love that horizontal mill. I wish I could find a small shaper in my area. Stay healthy Mr. Pete.
Another fine video Mr. Pete. You do nice work. As you say: 👍
Looks like that should get the job done. The typical projects breed projects with this one.
Another interesting video
Thanks
Two thumbs up 1👍👍
In most situations, even more obvious in a machine shop, there are two major limiting factors....
1- Bank account balance
2- IMAGINATION ( the most obvious one despite the appearances...!!! ) 😁😉
60 degrees!!! It's really improving and the fell for spring makes me feel so much better...!!! 🤧😎👍
Instructive and interesting as usual Mr. Pete. Thanks for the video
Thank you for another great video Lyle .
Great project. Thanks for sharing. Very ineresting
thank you for your time making the video. stay safe sir.
THANK YOU...for sharing. Very much enjoyed.
You've given me some good ideas about how to make arbors for my little Atlas MF horizontal Mill. Thank you!
Pyro, I have an MF as well. Mr Pete, I liked you leaving the OD of the spacers rough, that showed it's not a critical surface.
Mr Pete, I liked you leaving the OD of the spacers rough, that showed it's not a critical surface.
I like your brother's sculpture.
👍
Speaking of milling flats on the drill bit shank:
Some years ago, a group of us blacksmith types were installing a set of large doors into a building that in now a craft school. We had made 2 sets of fancy 4 foot long decorative hinges. I was in the shop area doing something when one of the guys came in complaining that the 5/8 inch bit they were using to drill into the steel hinge mounting points was slipping. They were using a 3/4" Milwaukee Hole Shooter. He asked if I'd mill flats on the bit. I did.
A while later the guy came back complaining that he had almost broken his wrist when the bit caught but the drill motor didn't stop.
That is a good story. I had a three-quarter inch capacity Millers Falls electric drill. The drill bit stuck in the work, and the drill motor did not stall. It’s through me off of the bench where I was standing while drilling
@@mrpete222 We aren't the only ones who have had that problem, of course.
Here's a webpage that I put together several years ago (with hints from many others) that offers some solutions:
spaco.org/Blacksmithing/Bighole/Bighole.htm
hi nice work .
Nice in between project. Could you of mounted the cutter more to the outboard support to cut a longer rack? Just thinken. Nice job. Thanks Lyle.
Excellent project execution. Thank you.
Great job on the arbour and spacers mrpete. Stay safe stay well. regards from the UK
Another great video Mr Pete, thanks very much. I'm off to my lathe now to make some aluminium handles for my chuck keys 👍🙂
👍
"We're in a field trip if you like it or not". Haha. The best. No one like you
The clearance problem on the Clausing mill is the reason why racks were hobbed in manufacturing. Nice job, as usual.
I was hoping you would do this video mtpete!! Thanks so much and as All Ways TWO thumbs up Sir!!!!!
Lol we are on a field trip love it.
How is the one piece arbor made? Solid stock turned down or is the tapered drive end one piece and the shaft another? It would be interesting to see how to make the tapered end.
Do you think you could possibly mill about 1/4 inch off of the bottom of that arbor support for enough clearance to travel further.
Do they make a rotary gear cutter for the vertical milling machine? That way you can get the full table length.
I used a peace of ABS Plastic 5/8" bar for both my Lathe & milling Chuck Keys
Could you use such an arbor to turn a lathe into a limited horizontal mill?
Thank You Lyle...Always a pleasure, Always informative...I have a thought. Why not have a solid carbide ground end mill cutter for milling gears? Make it a 2 step process like when milling a T-slot. First cut down to the root of each gear than put the form ground gear cutting end mill and go through the process again with the gear cutter end mill ?? Using a formed end mill would offer so much more closeness/ rigidity with zero problems clearances with cutting a rack ???...Thank You...TM
I am often thought that myself. Those cutters are not seem to be available
@@mrpete222 after a lot of looking www.exportersindia.com/super-capital-tools-company5408263/mill-gear-3525981.htm .....tm
Interesting as usual . . . so now expecting Steve Summers to upload, haha.
Been watching your video's for a while and just realized i was not subscribed. What was i thinking? In high school i took commercial foods and no wood shop or metal shop again what was i thinking?
My wife does all the cooking and i do all the repairs like god intended lol. love the video's and history lessons keep up the great work and ignore the trolls!!!
Thank you for watching
I am had owned one of this Clausing 6"x24" bed Horizontal Milling machine . I am going to make a special Arbor mounting with a 6" lathe chuck converted for lathe use some times that I am need use it.😇🥰
👍
Nice vid!!
Nice idea to use a 5/8 adapter since you had one instead of having to machine a 30 taper on one end.
Why Have A keyway on the shaft the Bushing holds the cutter by friction I have taken a taken a 3/8" cut by 3/4" deep in mild steel without slippage ?
Good video. As always. I tried to open your latest video about "Corona Virus Quarantine", but it is marked as "Private".
I have some questions about milling machine can u plz help me
I want to make small milling machine for 9mm iron rod half slot cut 15mm width and 4 mm depth
So if i make fixed arbor 1 feet long and 45mm diameter with 2 taper bearings arbor one side for pully and other side 3 inches for cutter fixing then front bush or liner bearing is important or without these arbor work.
Nice outboard support solution. Personally I would not bother keying the cutter. Never did key a cutter much over 50 years of production machining. Just sayin.
JIM
Probably not necessary it was a small diameter cutters
@@mrpete222
The belt and suspenders double security way of thinking...!!! 😉
...you were LUCKY!!! It would be bad news if the cutter SLIPPED!!!
@@daleburrell6273 You are correct in your statement.
JIM
NMTB 30 taper. Often referred to as 30 taper.
Hey MrPete do you remember a video you did with aligning stock in a 4 jaw. Where you used some antique indicators? There was one with a ball that had a pin through it. And possibly one that you made. I believe you used the atlas in the process. I'm really interested in the indicators. Thank you.
I just did a bit of a search, I could not find that one. It really does not sound familiar to me
@@mrpete222 it's ok. Thanks for trying. I didn't expect you to remember since you have so many great videos to go through. I may have been mistaken about the video. Chances are it was a non sequitur in a different subject. I want to say you were using the centering indicator in the chuck to align a tailstock. But anyway, please don't stress over it. I'll survive without knowing. I have so far. Have a great day. And good health.
Our amazing shame power must only be used for the greater benefit of humanity!
That is why tubalcain makes the best "junk"!
Mr Pete
Why am I getting an email from UA-cam, purporting to be from you posting a video about COVID. When I follow the link I get a UA-cam privacy error? Were you, or UA-cam hacked?
Very disappointingly, he gave out some, arguably, really bad and irresponsible advice. Looks like UA-cam pulled the video because of that.
با تشکر و سپاس .
Thank you.
کاش به زبان دیگه هم امکان داشت .ترجمه و صحبت بشه .تا دیگر عزیزان هم در سراسر دنیا از علم و صنعت استادان عزیز در هر جای هستی که زحمت میکشن و برای آموزش و فراگیری صنعت این همه تلاش و کوشش می نمایند .بیشتر نتیجه بخش و سودمند بود.
هر چند صنعت آنچنان نیازی به صحبت کردن در مورد موضوع مشخص را ندارد که در حال ساخت و اجرا هست.
بازم کمال تشکر و سپاس رو دارم
This question I'm asking is not related to this video answered by any machinist.
A friend is cutting an ID of brass stock. I don't know what type of brass it is.
The boring bar he is using is brand new with cutting tip.
He's getting flakes as chips and the cut is rough.
I would think he is doing something wrong.
Thanks for any education on this.
Try rotating the boring bar slightly in both directions to see if it makes any difference. It might be the Brass alloy. Some of them define being cut
@@mrpete222 Thanks I'll let him know.
The whole completed arbor looks like a RPG round lol...
The spacers or tooling on a shaft make the shaft more ridged. The same principle applies to many machines. We have a molder that swings a 5" diameter by 9" long head on a 1 1/2" arbor, cantilevered, 6,000 rpm, 20 hp. Works fine. But there are times I wish it had 30 hp.