It’s not often that I see a brand new machine concept. I’m impressed with the ingenuity.
@BenKDesigns11 ай бұрын
It took a lot of balls to make this video.
@ovalwingnut11 ай бұрын
OK. Now that's humor
@thorstenhulser500810 ай бұрын
It took a lot of video to make these balls. 😜
@MegaTapdog10 ай бұрын
touché
@BeeHiverson10 ай бұрын
Does it cut the balls?
@particleconfig.893510 ай бұрын
with that, I'm not going to ruin your 69 likes there!
@SeanHellman10 ай бұрын
If you cut the abrasive sheet from the rear (paper side up, grit on the cutting surface) your knife will stay sharper longer and you will get a better cut
@FraensEngineering10 ай бұрын
That's exactly what I did after the knife immediately became blunt.
@MusikCassette10 ай бұрын
pro tip, for lasercutting layers. give them a spine. meaning each layer gets a rectangular hole in with the thickness of the material as side a. and you cut out a rectangle with side b as one side and the overall hight of your build as the other. than you can stick that spine through all of the holes. that way the layers are perfectly alined.
@FraensEngineering10 ай бұрын
A similar idea has already come up in the comments. Thanks anyway ;-)
@MusikCassette10 ай бұрын
@@FraensEngineering I did not find the comment you refer to. could you add the link? in you do not know how this works, the link directly to a comment is under the time stamp (right klick, copy link address)
@FraensEngineering10 ай бұрын
It was a hole in the middle that was used to align the disk. Unfortunately, I can't find the comment on the fly.
@MusikCassette10 ай бұрын
@@FraensEngineering well, than you can see this comment as a refinement of that Idea, in that you also cut out the spine. in my library alinement holes and spine are a standard joint (even though that is not stricktly speaking a point) so it always fits perfectly.
@MegaTapdog10 ай бұрын
nice job!! I used to make custom parts for pinball machines, video games, pool tables etc, it will help greatly if you wet down that sandpaper in warm water and just a drop of dish soap as you are deforming it, it will take the shape better and last a bit longer.
@FraensEngineering10 ай бұрын
That's a really good trick. I wouldn't have thought of that. Thank you very much
@booom231410 ай бұрын
The way the video is edited makes the hole process look really good it was a joy to watch it! thank you!👍
@Engineezy10 ай бұрын
This is amazing! I've been looking for this exact machine!
@FraensEngineering10 ай бұрын
I'm happy to get a comment from you ;-) I know all your videos and your website and have been a long time subscriber. I'm glad you like my machine. I would like to make stone balls with it next. However, I still lack the right tools to make the raw balls.
@inoxy10 ай бұрын
Since you've been bothered with 3D printing, at the first stage it was worth making a mini wood lathe. The motor rotates the workpiece. The cutter has two degrees of freedom: it can rotate radially and move perpendicular to the axis of rotation.
@planckstudios11 ай бұрын
Love this. So satisfying seeing the surface of that wood shine. Modularity of the tool heads is so cool. That concave surface must be important. I've cut down finishing times by adjusting seams to 'rear' then orienting parts to put seams safely away from contact points.
@paradiselost994611 ай бұрын
the concavity is irrelevant other than it should be more extreme than the convexity of the surface being ground. you want the contact patch to be at the outer edge. look at commercial units and theyre always more oriented to "rings" or cups, much like the hole saws were...
@verminr10 ай бұрын
I like how you've done this, it's satisfying to see the 120 degree angles and geometry of your parts. I made some wooden spheres entirely by hand during COVID times. I made a cube and used a handsaw and plane to remove the corners, then made a 'hole saw' by filing teeth into the end of a steel IKEA table leg. I held that in a vice then randomly scraped my cube on the teeth (wearing thick gloves). That got the basic sphere then I used sandpaper held on the open end of a jam jar to do the polishing. They ended up really good. I think it's interesting that random movements produce such a perfectly even and symmetrical shape.
@FraensEngineering10 ай бұрын
Hi, that sounds like a lot of work. The idea with the table leg is brilliant. How many hours of work must that have been? What do you do with these balls? Are they purely for decoration?
@verminr10 ай бұрын
@@FraensEngineering The table leg worked well, I have coarse teeth on one end and finer teeth on the other end. Making a sphere takes me about 5 hours from cube to about 2000 grit sanded. So far I just have them as decoration and presents for my family. I'll make more when I have some more interesting pieces of wood. Great idea of yours with the plywood discs glued together!
@HandbrakeBiscuit10 ай бұрын
"You have nothing to sphere but sphere itself..."
@sealdoggydog10 ай бұрын
"Tell me you're an engineer without telling me you're an engineer"
@kyledodge551310 ай бұрын
Well rounded idea
@226SW4010 ай бұрын
The beauty of genius.
@ktwice748111 ай бұрын
Dude.. you did it again! Amazing machine and video (and music! 8) and thanks again for sharing your work ❤ 🇳🇱
@FraensEngineering11 ай бұрын
Thank you for the nice comment ;-)
@StephenBoyd219 ай бұрын
I wondered who would get around to making one of these.
@FraensEngineering9 ай бұрын
Someone who likes to polish wooden balls.
@calsmicroco.930410 ай бұрын
ok at 3:50:00 how is your parts holding up? this is good, but curious on the friction heat from the sandpaper to the pressure pushing against the sandpaper and wood. did the part have any deformation or heat issues. or is it still holding up. Also, your machine should be leaning or standing up where the dust will escape at the y opening for them to fall out. just a thought
@FraensEngineering10 ай бұрын
The sandpaper heats up slightly. But nowhere near enough to damage the 3D printed parts.
@imthedentist11 ай бұрын
Help i now have the innate urge to go and make this but its three am on a sunday
@FraensEngineering11 ай бұрын
I can understand that. It is very satisfying to grind balls. It's 11 o'clock in the morning on a Sunday ;-)
@octimus200010 ай бұрын
I always polish my ball at that hour
@verminr10 ай бұрын
I'd like to find a good method to measure how spherical they are, I haven't got round to it yet but I think the biggest deviation is less than half a millimetre in a sphere of 70 mm diameter. Would be nice to compare 😊
@FraensEngineering10 ай бұрын
I am currently grinding a sphere that is 3D pre-printed. I will try to measure the diameter. However, the ball has a diameter of 100mm.
@Jacno772 ай бұрын
What size 3d printer bed is required? Can a a1 mini print the parts off? Its a 180mmx180mmx180mm bed size
@maverickrj59510 ай бұрын
Seeing you have a lathe could it drive one of the sander heads while the two others are non driven sanding heads?
@dgoddard11 ай бұрын
Great build and great music. I usually hate vids that don't have talking in them, but this was awesome.
@merlindraws361610 ай бұрын
if you're going to use a laser cutter to cut out disks you should probably cut a hole in the center of each to glue a dowel in the middle. it should keep them nice and uniform so you dont have to grind away as much!
@FraensEngineering10 ай бұрын
I'm pleased that so many good ideas have already come together here in the comments. Thank you very much.
@tbopetc439010 ай бұрын
Try installing flap discs for an angle grinder
@FraensEngineering10 ай бұрын
That's a great idea
@cho4d10 ай бұрын
i think this technique is more suited to refining a sphere than creating a sphere from rough stock
@FraensEngineering10 ай бұрын
Basically, you're right. However, it is also possible to form a relatively coarse ball. Of course, it is easier to grind an already clean ball further.
@TheCaptainsAntics9 ай бұрын
Nice balls
@canadiangemstones763610 ай бұрын
Cool, now make it in steel, with diamond abrasive, and make gemstone spheres!
@FraensEngineering10 ай бұрын
Stone balls would be the next step. I plan to test it. However, the rough cut is still a problem.
@xMartin3141510 ай бұрын
@@FraensEngineering Fette Flex?
@JakeWitmer10 ай бұрын
@@FraensEngineeringI wonder if a very large rock tumbler could do the trick, after receiving rocks crushed uniformly by a large rock crusher. I'm interested in this idea for forming curved ends of compression rods for tensegrity construction, so the ropes or metal cables will smoothly bend around a curve, rather than be cut over time by wrapping around a harsh hole or pipe end. Maybe if end-plugs compression rods are made of stronger and tougher material than the rod, it will allow for more certain and predictable strength. ...Perhaps even better if these spheres had a curved end-mill drill into them on either side, 4 times, connecting in the middle, so cable could be looped through the holes.
@FraensEngineering10 ай бұрын
I don't quite understand what you mean, but the tensegrity construction looks very interesting. I have been working on a vibration tumbler with magnetic drive for about 2 months. It works really well and I'm currently polishing my second batch.
@EclecticOmnivore10 ай бұрын
> make gemstone spheres! Thought the same thing ... but I don't see that the extra hardware (steel and diamond abrasives) are required at each stage. Required at some point? Some yes, some not at all. Here's how I see it (corrections and additions are appreciated!); * As long as the mechanism can support the heavier material, that design is fine. If it can't, making a more robust mechanism, while keeping the general design, should reach the intended goal. * There will be a change at each stage of the abrasives that are used. Saw a tree down with a chainsaw? Good. Use the same chain saw to make a thin walled bowl -- from the same wood? Stupid, even if possible on a dare. Using the right abrasive at each stage will save time/effort. Ignoring this while making new machines to make things faster is not going to make things faster or reduce effort required to make things faster. (Note: At the same or better quality level.) * As long as the abrasives used are efficient at the stage of carving (or polishing), they are suitable at that stage. Unless the sphere is a one-off, there's a gap between what is possible and what is efficient. * For most (?!) of the polishing stage, diamond abrasives are not required. Here's why: The Mohs hardness scale should be included to see if the abrasive material at each stage (not just polishing) would be effective. Ignoring that would likely waste time and materials; even tool steel requires sharpening and/or replacement.
@RobertZarfas10 ай бұрын
I used to have a neighbor who had something similar for stone. Do you think this could be modified to make stone spheres?
@FraensEngineering10 ай бұрын
For stone balls, I'd have something. Just an idea. However, I'm still struggling with the rough cutting of the spheres.
@KallePihlajasaari10 ай бұрын
@@FraensEngineering Loved the video. A unit I saw for rock had diamond hole saws the same way you did. The big problem is you will need to mitigate abrasive dust and water so the motors may need work.
@brianlewis60757 ай бұрын
would this work for rocks with diamond abrasives
@FraensEngineering7 ай бұрын
Unfortunately, I have not yet been able to test this. Unfortunately, I don't have any diamond grinding tools.
@SilentShiba11 ай бұрын
That Reese going crazy bro
@kekelala689310 ай бұрын
I need a spear for my table it goes at the bottom under my 6+2 = 8 with extra leaf put in to hold the table stable, underneath stabilizing the table from unnecessary movement...
@FraensEngineering10 ай бұрын
I don't understand what you mean.
@menchelke10 ай бұрын
That one ball @7:33 has a literal Pegasus coming out of the clouds in it. Or a dragon. Either way metal as fuck for wood.
@paulmeynell886611 ай бұрын
Very impressive
@justinbanks23804 ай бұрын
Just found your channel and this build. Very nice! Definitely gonna have to build one. Is the size of ball made somehow adjustable? Or what size or range balls are made?
@FraensEngineering4 ай бұрын
Hi, the size can be adjusted by the distance between the individual grinding heads. I have ground balls up to about 100mm in diameter.
@jaeseopark72911 ай бұрын
cool video!
@DarkWgf10 ай бұрын
如果做成4個 也就是把本來3個往下移 再加1個在正上方 會不會更順暢?
@FraensEngineering10 ай бұрын
No, three are enough. You just have to place them at the right angle.
Have you considered spinning the rough cut on a lathe?
@FraensEngineering11 ай бұрын
Yes, I have. But I didn't want to contaminate my lathe with wood dust.
@TheXtremesquirrel11 ай бұрын
Very nice!
@MrDhalli650010 ай бұрын
Yea, because any time I see Crocks in a video with power tools I know I'm in for a high quality video.
@OrionAegis10 ай бұрын
The moment i have access to a 3d printer im gonna try this for stone spheres.
@FraensEngineering10 ай бұрын
I'm just waiting for someone to test it. Please report when the time comes ;-)
@OrionAegis10 ай бұрын
@@FraensEngineering I'll be sure to.
@justin-tv3pc10 ай бұрын
can you design one that can do rocks?
@FraensEngineering10 ай бұрын
That's exactly my plan. However, it is currently failing due to a rough stone. Unfortunately, I don't have the right tools to make a rough cut. Do you have any idea where I could get a stone from?
@justin-tv3pc10 ай бұрын
@@FraensEngineeringmaybe ebay or a rock supplier for landscaping. I live in Colorado and there are rocks everywhere.
@justin-tv3pc10 ай бұрын
@@FraensEngineeringhammer and chisel?
@balazslakatos981710 ай бұрын
great project. sand dust clogged paper less effective, you may want to adress this issue
@FraensEngineering10 ай бұрын
Can you describe in more detail what you mean?
@balazslakatos981710 ай бұрын
@@FraensEngineering for example @5:17. if the dust remains in the sandpaper it becoma less effective. try dust extractor such as vacuum.
@tylernope275210 ай бұрын
Ah yes, making a sphere from a sphere. the old pass time of redundancy.
@FraensEngineering10 ай бұрын
You need a blank. The machine then grinds the ball into a perfect ball. But yes: two are better than one ;-)
@AlexTheStampede11 ай бұрын
First song reminds me of GTA 4, not sure why. That aside, the results are impressive! Very, very cool build.
@FraensEngineering11 ай бұрын
Yes... those were the days ;-)
@AaaAAAA-oi1dh10 ай бұрын
The comment below is probably the bast thing I have seen all day!
@collinpribula327010 ай бұрын
Aawweessoommee!👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻🥰🥰🥰💓💓💕💞💛💛💗💗😍😍💖💖❤️
@ovalwingnut11 ай бұрын
I'm most impressed with the shear amount of abuse it's able to take I haven't been this impressed since I stepped out of the shower dripping wet (sorry for that visual). Thank you for the video!
@anon_y_mousse11 ай бұрын
That's neat. How long did it take for the second one to run?
@FraensEngineering11 ай бұрын
You have to plan for a few hours. However, you can leave the machine to run on its own. You should only check from time to time whether the motors are still at a comfortable temperature.
@Geeksmithing10 ай бұрын
I am here before the 1 million view mark!
@FraensEngineering10 ай бұрын
1 million... that's still a long, hard road ahead. I don't think I'll ever reach that ;-)
@Geeksmithing10 ай бұрын
@@FraensEngineering I have faith! Subbed!
@artcraft289311 ай бұрын
I saw this idea in rocks sphere manufacturing. If you have good drill press you can try using sphere cutters from china. Biggest I buy was for 50mm dia spheres. Or use this method of preparing sphere blanks for sanding kzbin.info/www/bejne/gHOTqWisaryIj6c
@genefoster549 ай бұрын
I really like your design as a finishing tool not so much for a rough our, seems it would destroy the tool very shortly .Still as I said nice work.
@FraensEngineering9 ай бұрын
I am testing whether I can grind stone Sphere
@genefoster549 ай бұрын
@@FraensEngineering Really?
@FraensEngineering9 ай бұрын
But it will still take some time. A raw sphere has been molded for the time being.
@genefoster549 ай бұрын
How about a finer tool hole drill cutting first from 90 degrees latitude and longitude in a cross section then use your neat tool?
@genefoster549 ай бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/jqaYiWmLhKacoNksi=ZLLCyWQz8CnI46J5 This with your design would make fast work. As for the stone I am a professional glazer I have some ideas to share
@SilentShiba11 ай бұрын
End product looks really amazing. IDK how you could use it for further utility, but I bet they would make great juggling balls, artistic features, light fixtures, etc. Extremely cool. Do you think you could grind a clear plastic down so you have a clear transparent wizard orb?
@FraensEngineering11 ай бұрын
You could try to print a ball out of transparent filament and grind it. Should work I think.
@fra20259 ай бұрын
Wow!!!!😮
@IronJmo11 ай бұрын
This is how pal spheres are made
@Ali3699910 ай бұрын
🙂❤❤❤❤
@bschwand11 ай бұрын
Interesting machine, however overly complex... You do realize that any object left to bounce on a flat surface will inevitably tend towards a sphere ? All you need is a moving abrasive flat surface, like a disc from an angle grinder, and a way to loosely constrain the wooden piece. Then you can even start with a cube and it will grind itself into a sphere...
@FraensEngineering11 ай бұрын
Sounds interesting. Do you have a link to such a machine?
@bschwand11 ай бұрын
@@FraensEngineering I'll check and post but here is maybe a more practical description of such an implementation: Take a tube 50cm long, 15cm diameter. Mount vertically. The top open end is where you drop the block of wood (say 5cm long) to be rounded. On the bottom end, place an angle grinder with a sanding disc, so that the disc essentially covers the opening. drop a block of wood in the tube while the grinder is running. The important part is that the wood piece should bounce around and roll randomly, if it gets caught, it will just grind a flat. So chopping off each corner of the cube to grind will help.
@FraensEngineering11 ай бұрын
It's great that it works like this. That would be an excellent method for preforming the balls. With the Sphere machine you can then finish grinding and polishing them.
@bschwand11 ай бұрын
@@FraensEngineering yes, but you can also polish as long as the disc has very fine abrasive, or a felt pad with polishing paste ( and the cylinder interior could also be felt lined and polishing paste loaded )
@paradiselost994611 ай бұрын
@@bschwand yep. or mount an orbital grinder above a flat board with sanding sheet, and a spacer in between with a hole cut through to shove the item in. the orbital motion helps... some sort of feeder so you can adjust the gap between sanding surfaces... pretty well much how ball bearings are made, though they do start with a forged, "close to ball shaped" lump of steel. this approach, using the three cutters, is more trended towards the final polishing process, not rapid material removal.
@augusta89019 ай бұрын
You mean sphere-sanding machine...
@MMiler10 ай бұрын
👏👏👏😎👏👏👏
@Stefan_Van_pellicom11 ай бұрын
No balls, no glory!
@Nicky-hk9qu11 ай бұрын
👍
@freedom_aint_free10 ай бұрын
Very interesting ideas ! But it's either unwillingly wrong or plainly clickbait: it should read something along the lines of "3D printed sphere *polishing* machine" the way it's worded gives us the impressing that the machine actually makes the spheres.
@FraensEngineering10 ай бұрын
Hello, such machines are called Sphere machines. Unfortunately there is nothing I can do about it. If you took it as clickbait, I apologize.
@danielch666210 ай бұрын
Anybody wants to make their own, 4 would have been better than 3. Because the real world is 3D and not 2D. It's obvious when he had to hold it in because it was falling out.
@FraensEngineering10 ай бұрын
I don't think this is the way you describe it. Professional ball machines work exactly according to this principle. I only had to hold the ball in place because the ball was very inaccurately pre-cut.
@ianbelletti624110 ай бұрын
You certainly found a way to get some balls. You just took the saying too literal.
@grib371810 ай бұрын
Токарный станок похоже стерт из этоц реальности
@darrinswanson11 ай бұрын
Bocce anyone?
@brianshipman694310 ай бұрын
no chance this actually works.
@RingpopSmiths10 ай бұрын
Am I the only one triggered by his improper use of wooden T-nuts?
@FraensEngineering10 ай бұрын
Of course, you can also drive just one grinding head. But what exactly is the point?
@RingpopSmiths10 ай бұрын
@@FraensEngineering T nuts are designed to be used under compression, not under tension. You've installed them all under tension by putting them on the the same side of the board as their bolts. The result is that, under low to modest load, the nuts will come loose (pop out of the board). They cannot typically support more than a few pounds of force in this configuration. If you had instead placed the nuts on the bottom of the board (opposite to the bolts, as they're designed to be used), then the nuts would be capable of supporting orders of magnitude more load, and it did likely contribute to a stiffer mechanism overall. Each nut would then be able to support over a hundred pounds of force.
@FraensEngineering10 ай бұрын
Do you mean the melt-in nuts?
@RingpopSmiths10 ай бұрын
@@FraensEngineering no, I mean the T nuts you pounded into the wood. i.e. the "wooden T-nuts" that I said in my first comment. Search for "t-nuts for wood" on Google and you'll know exactly what I'm talking about.