Cutting mirrors with Diamonds

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Breaking Taps

Breaking Taps

Күн бұрын

Let's make some optical mirrors using diamonds 💎
Watch this ad-free on Nebula: nebula.tv/vide...
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- Fresnel Mirror paper: pubs.aip.org/a...
- NHMicro: / nhmicro
- Cylo's Garage: / @cylosgarage
- Fireball Tool Shaper: • Big Cincinnati 36'' Sh...
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- ICSPI nGauge AFM: www.icspicorp....
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Пікірлер: 869
@BPSspace
@BPSspace 18 күн бұрын
Those tiny chips under the electron microscope are so cool!! Also a 2.5 micron finishing pass is INSANE. Great video as always dude!
@BreakingTaps
@BreakingTaps 18 күн бұрын
Aren't they just the most adorable little chips?! I was so delighted to see them as fully formed chips, just smol 🥺
@friskydingo5370
@friskydingo5370 18 күн бұрын
@@BreakingTaps It reminds me of smashing a bag of chips to make micro chips 😂😂
@aurorajunior6328
@aurorajunior6328 18 күн бұрын
BPS + BT is I collaborated I would die for
@user-mn8lz7gf6d
@user-mn8lz7gf6d 18 күн бұрын
@@BreakingTaps they're very cool
@robert-wr9xt
@robert-wr9xt 17 күн бұрын
BPS in the house. Have a fun and hope filled Labor Day Weekend everyone!
@MichaelWatersJ
@MichaelWatersJ 18 күн бұрын
Your method of using Blender to render the AFM height data yields the most professional looking height visualizations I've seen in my 16 years of science. After introducing you to optimal color map design, you're showing me new tricks. :)
@gray.crawford
@gray.crawford 17 күн бұрын
14:18
@beautifulsmall
@beautifulsmall 16 күн бұрын
Ironbow color is the CLUT used on thermal cameras and its gorgeous.
@stopthephilosophicalzombie9017
@stopthephilosophicalzombie9017 12 күн бұрын
@@beautifulsmall What's CLUT?
@Sopherion
@Sopherion 11 күн бұрын
@@stopthephilosophicalzombie9017 Color Lookup Table
@EggBastion
@EggBastion 9 күн бұрын
@@stopthephilosophicalzombie9017/videos colour-look-up-table? I'm only guessing
@TheMidnightmovies
@TheMidnightmovies 18 күн бұрын
I love how one guy in a garage have all this nice equipment. I am doing a PHD in experimental physics, and I have to make metalic pieces by hand, one could only dream!
@unknownhours
@unknownhours 18 күн бұрын
Like with a Dremel?
@adfaklsdjf
@adfaklsdjf 17 күн бұрын
@@unknownhours very hard fingernails
@happytoaster1
@happytoaster1 17 күн бұрын
KZbin does make it feel like everyone owns an electron microscope.
@TheMidnightmovies
@TheMidnightmovies 17 күн бұрын
@@unknownhours yeah, or a bit bigger handdrill and saw.
@NathanBuffam
@NathanBuffam 16 күн бұрын
@@happytoaster1 where do procure electron microscope
@dengyun846
@dengyun846 18 күн бұрын
No sponsor?? @KernMicrotechnikGmbH where you at? Get this man on a plane!
@sicstar
@sicstar 18 күн бұрын
This needs a bump!
@hashgeek929
@hashgeek929 18 күн бұрын
Eh. Just get him a Kern mill. You know, for “review”.
@PeregrineBF
@PeregrineBF 18 күн бұрын
Kern are good, but @nanotechsys6311 (Moore Special Tool Company's spinoff brand) are one of the few companies that make those real commercial diamond turning lathes & diamond mills. And jig grinders and...
@Kaliumcyanidful
@Kaliumcyanidful 17 күн бұрын
👍👍
@Max_Chooch
@Max_Chooch 11 күн бұрын
Why would he need a sponsor? I mean, he'd either have to have a job that allows access to all this supremely expensive equipment, be privately funded, or rich as fk.. in any case a sponsor clearly isn't necessary.
@elonquemattheson6151
@elonquemattheson6151 18 күн бұрын
What you're calling the "rake angle" is normally called the "cutting edge angle". Rake is the angle of the face that the chip rolls over, relative to the normal of the cutting plane.
@BreakingTaps
@BreakingTaps 18 күн бұрын
Whoops, that's my bad. Cheers for the correection!
@DirtyRobot
@DirtyRobot 17 күн бұрын
A lollypop is in fact not related to underage media or to soda drinks or popular music. Also do not confuse rake angle with hoe mounting.
@bingobongo9340
@bingobongo9340 18 күн бұрын
this is the highest level of DYI
@soulextracter
@soulextracter 18 күн бұрын
Do yourself it?
@lerikhkl
@lerikhkl 18 күн бұрын
@@soulextracter do yourself innit?
@Bean_guy2
@Bean_guy2 18 күн бұрын
@@lerikhklThat’s not cricket
@How_To_Drive_a_TARDIS
@How_To_Drive_a_TARDIS 18 күн бұрын
Dogs Yawning Indubitably
@dragonmaster391
@dragonmaster391 18 күн бұрын
yes but no. There are people actually doing more complex things DIY, you just don't consider them as people but corporations and groups. Everyone is doing this stuff DIY, using whatever they can/want from others while figuring it out for themselves. Though there's countless individuals or groups advancing technology whether for their own fun or for an end objective (this case seemed to be both). This stuff is not difficult to understand and do, It just requires you to understand what's going on well enough to achieve the results you desire, which is true for any aspect of life. Figure out some basis that you can work outwards from and expand your knowledge as you develop capability. Have some confidence to try stuff and learn through trial and error, there's no other teacher really. What is the difference between a Master and an Apprentice? A Master has failed more times than the Apprentice has ever tried.
@infinitelyexplosive4131
@infinitelyexplosive4131 18 күн бұрын
The microscope shots in your videos are always fascinating. It's a view that I never get to see in the rest of my life
@cylosgarage
@cylosgarage 18 күн бұрын
Glad to see MCD and diamond machining getting the large scale attention it deserves. My master plan is slowly working 😁 Edit: Just got to the end of the video! Thanks for the holler!
@BreakingTaps
@BreakingTaps 18 күн бұрын
You've introduced me to a very dangerous and deep rabbit hole 😅
@AngryTurtleGems
@AngryTurtleGems 18 күн бұрын
Hey! If you're ever interested in other cool crystals (like big chunks of optical sapphire) I'd be happy to send you some.
@wack1305
@wack1305 18 күн бұрын
Aye, I should have known I’d see you around this part of KZbin too
@Raul-pg1pf
@Raul-pg1pf 18 күн бұрын
What a nice surprise!
@yoshums7970
@yoshums7970 18 күн бұрын
Woah, ATG in the wild. Hella cool of you to offer him some material for toying with.
@fpfree8821
@fpfree8821 18 күн бұрын
Ummm…..I’m interested in other cool crystals 😬😳
@nckwntzl
@nckwntzl 18 күн бұрын
Hey it's the 💎 🐢
@JeffBilkins
@JeffBilkins 18 күн бұрын
If your metal is impure with gritty bits but you can machine extremely precisely, then maybe deposit some ultra pure layer on top and machine half of that?
@BreakingTaps
@BreakingTaps 18 күн бұрын
Ah yeah, that's a point I completely forgot to mention! A layer of electroplated nickel is commonly used in the diamond turning field. It's apparently a bit of a pain to turn nicely (nickel isn't the most fun to machine in general) but it's hard and can be plated in a very pure form.
@ericscholem6629
@ericscholem6629 17 күн бұрын
maybe do silver instead. Equally easy to make a silvering bath, i guess just the tarnishing could be problematic over time.
@zebo-the-fat
@zebo-the-fat 17 күн бұрын
@@ericscholem6629 Gold plating maybe? but not sure if gold would be too soft (also gold plating uses nasty cyanide salts)
@Taliesin6
@Taliesin6 15 күн бұрын
@@BreakingTaps what about using the same diamond bit to burnish the copper ?
@MarekLewandowski_EE
@MarekLewandowski_EE 13 күн бұрын
​@@BreakingTaps you should be able to get silver on copper without much trouble. You may even want to look into... Tin. Unfortunately oxidation will hit fast, so either it's prototyping only or you'd need some coating
@matthewbaker7513
@matthewbaker7513 17 күн бұрын
As a telescope mirror maker, I'm just screaming screaming screaming to finish it up with a very dilute cerium oxide slurry, haha.
@ZeusJuri
@ZeusJuri 15 күн бұрын
nekřič a zamysli se.
@mvadu
@mvadu 18 күн бұрын
Ever since that short video few days ago I was eagerly waiting for this.. Amazing tech! Both what you did and what it's going to be used for!
@lindenhoch8396
@lindenhoch8396 18 күн бұрын
How nice that quantum technology will finally be more accessible to us average joes. Dusting off my old 2 micron milling machine.
@jwrm22
@jwrm22 18 күн бұрын
It's open source, as in royalty-free and freely to use parts of it within the licensing. But this project has quite the barrier of entry, and is likely more interesting for engineering schools or small university labs. Bringing the entry cost down from millions to several thousands is quite a feat, though.
@stevendoesburg6555
@stevendoesburg6555 17 күн бұрын
It does make it way more accessible to phds and postdocs who have access to otherwise well equipped labs to build on.
@tommysirard395
@tommysirard395 18 күн бұрын
Hi! Want to try something to improve surface finish with a MCDT? Coat the surface to be finished with a Sharpie marker. Learned by accident from a co-worker that partially coated a surface. The blue spots of sharpie stood out, even if the tool cut the surface. It was shinier than the uncoated surface. We then discovered that there is search papers written about surface tension induced by an adhesive ( such as glue stick, sharpie, paint marker,etc). It was found to improve surface finish. Let me know if you try it 👍 As always, I really enjoyed your videos , fantastic work 🤘
@edumaker-alexgibson
@edumaker-alexgibson 17 күн бұрын
This checks out from experience of 3D printing. Essentially, any differences at all that the machine encounters in the surface of the material being cut must impact the cutting process, however slightly, and therefore must impact the finish.. By coating the cut surface in sacrificial adhesive, you are decreasing the contrast between the cutting tool encountering a high spot, especially if coated, with surface tension as a factor, vs freely spinning over a low spot with no surface tension.
@connorjohnson4402
@connorjohnson4402 15 күн бұрын
Thats wild! It does make some sense, and is about the lowest barrier of entry to put it to the test., Except that the mist cooling or spray bottle with isopropyl might cause an issue with that. I hope he gives it a test if he ends up seeing the comment!
@tommysirard395
@tommysirard395 15 күн бұрын
@@connorjohnson4402 alcohol will certainly dilute the ink, we used an odourless solvent instead. The blue Dykem liquid is a lot similar to Sharpie's blue ink. Both cleans up really well with methanol, leaving a dry and clean surface the the part.
@TheRealWulfderay
@TheRealWulfderay 18 күн бұрын
OMFG those baby curls!! :D I never thought I would think of a metal shaving as "cute", but here we are!
@SeanCMonahan
@SeanCMonahan 18 күн бұрын
Old and tired: milling chips measured in mm. Fresh and shiny: milling chips measured in μm.
@bob2859
@bob2859 18 күн бұрын
I love the contrast where there's atomic force microscopy and that mist cooling setup in the same video.
@tmo26
@tmo26 18 күн бұрын
Homer: "Uuuuhhh! ... Atomic mist cooling!"
@SeanCMonahan
@SeanCMonahan 18 күн бұрын
How about the cameo of the hand dispensed squirt bottle of rubbing alcohol for the first scribing test?
@Ahnii
@Ahnii 18 күн бұрын
Awesome work and fantastic visuals!My inner voice screamed when you lifted and reset the tool in the z axis over and over, I was so excited when you addressed my thought immediately afterwards and talked about the improvements😅
@MSP_TechLab
@MSP_TechLab 18 күн бұрын
It is amazing that such level of precision can be achieved on modern regular industrial cnc.
@mathiaschaves7604
@mathiaschaves7604 18 күн бұрын
Video sugestion: would be fun to see you rank your projects in a tier list. As you develop you workshop in the highest level of "DIYness" I think some of the projects have become, although amazing, so out of proportion from what mortals call a DIY that we cant even begin to apreciate your work the way we should. I think a tier list would be a good video to reconect with the mortal plane and maybe incentivise some of us to ascend too (Hope you don't mind the jokes). Could be in a scale of technical or theoretical difficulty, "coolness", satisfaction of the end result, affordability, etc. Anyway, your channel is awesome.
@GameBacardi
@GameBacardi 18 күн бұрын
19:17 Quality over quantity 👍
@-szega
@-szega 18 күн бұрын
14:40 my face when microscopically planing copper with a single-crystal diamond tool gives you tearout like cherry burl.
@Ki113dbysw0rd
@Ki113dbysw0rd 18 күн бұрын
it's the same all the way down, mannnn
@kylwell
@kylwell 18 күн бұрын
We found, when doing ultra high resolution scans, that the ball screw lubrication made a heck of a difference.
@hughmac13
@hughmac13 2 күн бұрын
The type or amount of lube--or as simple as just making sure the screw looked thoroughly coated?
@MarcelVerheijden
@MarcelVerheijden 18 күн бұрын
Sorry, your "Huge 8 micron" chips made me giglgesnort... These high precision tools and projects are amazing thanks for the vid.
@ArcadeGamerson
@ArcadeGamerson 18 күн бұрын
You have to machine it in one motion not swirling or back and forth or whatever you're doing, that's where you're going wrong. The surface must be milled to zero tolerance then slowly cut one pass but first put a bevel on the edge of the copper so you're not starting from flat and presenting a chip from the start. I've been involved in industrial mechanics and CNC machining for more than 30 years.
@paranoiia8
@paranoiia8 18 күн бұрын
Just for fun did you checked that diamond in close up to see if it doesn't have any super small surface issues?
@Max_Chooch
@Max_Chooch 11 күн бұрын
Seems like an important oversight
@_VaporWolf_
@_VaporWolf_ 18 күн бұрын
Wow dude, what an awesome video! The cinematography must've taken ages. Thanks for bringing the world of machining to life💪
@Narwaro
@Narwaro 18 күн бұрын
We still have quite a lot of milling machines that technically use hydrostatic ways (they have central lubrication that maintains oil pressure) I’d claim. They have excellent stiffness and wear resistance when under high loads, such as stainless and hardmilling. As I can achieve 0,25um Ra in aluminium using non-polished carbide inserts, I’d reckon those machines would be absolutely perfect for making mirrors. Diamond MCD tooling is ubiquitous these days, but more on lathes than milling machines. Ive just never tried it.
@jonathanlebon9705
@jonathanlebon9705 15 күн бұрын
This is just so cool. Just a middle aged guy admiring your work. I especially like how you talk through your process and problem solve. I'm sure many hours went into your research..setup..tests etc. A admire your tenacity with a project like this. Really cool to see. Thank you
@smnkm4ehfer
@smnkm4ehfer 16 күн бұрын
As a 20 year machinist that does the complete opposite end of the spectrum(I'll spin a 100,000lbs assembly on a 12ft swing lathe and take chips the size of your spindle), and I appreciate how cool this stuff is. I do some small stuff too, but the smallest is like drilling 0.015" holes, or holding +/-0.000¹", not a few nanometers lol
@qpwodkgh2010
@qpwodkgh2010 17 күн бұрын
@0:33. THAT machine is what scientists use to create a Bose-Einstein Condensate. They use the lasers to cool down the sodium atoms and use evaporative cooling to do the job.
@MrGory1969
@MrGory1969 17 күн бұрын
Try Tellurium copper it is a free machining alloy. Some machines have servo amplifier gain noise that can cause the chattering or its just the ball screw bearings. If possible try cutting on the Y axis to see which axis is worse. Heck even a compound motion to see if it will eliminate it. could be machine harmonics. Great video !!!!
@dukeofminecraft
@dukeofminecraft 3 күн бұрын
jesus christ, so imagine doing this entire process and troubleshooting all these steps. Now imagine doing all of it and having to keep it extremely well documented and then editing and making all of these sick visuals with high speed and different scientific visuals. This content is so impressive.
@L1qu1d_5h4d0w
@L1qu1d_5h4d0w 11 күн бұрын
0:00-3:45 and as a CNC-machinist I'm already blown away... just WOW! Thank you for sharing this great knowledge in such immaculate quality, you got a new Sub ^^
@Harvey-b2j
@Harvey-b2j 4 күн бұрын
Sunshine is delicious, rain is refreshing, wind braces us up, snow is exhilarating; there is really no such thing as bad weather, only different kinds of good weather.
@dziban303
@dziban303 18 күн бұрын
oooh sparkly
@adrianflo6481
@adrianflo6481 17 күн бұрын
this is so fucking good and packed with information. but i never got bored. you jsut added weirder and weirder tools. "ill just pop it into my electron microscope. i never leave home without one." -Oh whats that? in my other back pocket? - "oh thats just my atomic force microscope, had it since i was 12"
@kael13
@kael13 10 күн бұрын
Oh man, would've loved to show my granddad this video. He was an oldschool aerospace engineer with a metal machining hobby. Someone doing this on their own would've blown his mind.
@davidg3944
@davidg3944 13 күн бұрын
Love the way you present your work - very clear, no extraneous "noise". And nice results on the mirror shaping!
@4ftGodzilla
@4ftGodzilla 14 күн бұрын
The YT recommendations I receive are often mediocre, but once in a blue moon I get gems like this video of yours. Impressive!
@adammurdoch1708
@adammurdoch1708 17 күн бұрын
Being able to see things like this that i didn't know existed and is so niche and fascinating is why i love youtube
@ares395
@ares395 18 күн бұрын
Watching you do stuff that I'd never consider in my wildest dreams to be DIY possible gives me similar feelings to watching Mythbusters back in the day. I'm just amazed.
@vibin_psilocybin
@vibin_psilocybin 18 күн бұрын
Dawg..... Ive only seen like 3 of your videos so far, but the quality is just insane. This is becoming one of my favorite channels
@jdholbrook33
@jdholbrook33 18 күн бұрын
Don't forget, the ball screws are turned by brushless DC motors. Not steppers but still have a certain "step" to them based on how expensive the drives are. They are digital and will produce "steps" even if we can't see them or hear them.
@thomas8719
@thomas8719 17 күн бұрын
AC Servos are more common nowdays and i think the linear guides play a bigger role but your point is still valid. 👍🏼
@vornamenachname8001
@vornamenachname8001 17 күн бұрын
@@thomas8719 whats the difference between a brushless dc motor that is precisely controlled and an ac servo?
@notanymore9471
@notanymore9471 17 күн бұрын
@@vornamenachname8001I may be wrong but I believe the servos have encoders built into them whereas a brushless motor doesn’t necessarily.
@puffinjuice
@puffinjuice 18 күн бұрын
This was really good. I watched your short video on these mirrors and had so many questions and doubts. You answered all my questions and doubts with this video. Nicely explained, excellent footage!
@guytech7310
@guytech7310 18 күн бұрын
Probably an easier & cheaper method is sputtering copper\alum. over glass or sillicon wafer, then glue them to the a machined metal part with the correct angles needed. Consider that precision telescope mirrors are made this way.
@LBcolin
@LBcolin 18 күн бұрын
Dude! Those SEM pics. Wow. Great work with the toolpathing
@zidwid
@zidwid 18 күн бұрын
As the video was going I was doing my own commentary, then as it progressed you addressed what I was saying. I had to make a part for a very well known "Place" we will say. I have a small desktop sub 200 pound aluminum framed machine. Its highly accurate, but with the specs on the part I was doing I found that if I heated my machine in an enclosure just above 300 degrees F I would not get any thermal expansion. It took me over 3 months of trial and error to machine pillars in a substrate that was less then 25 microns tall. You did a great job. One thing I did have to do and was thinking a solution to the differences in copper harness was tempering each substrate before trying to machine them. My though was "Level the playing field"
@64Pete
@64Pete 15 күн бұрын
My jaw was on the floor with your opening shot. Fascinating stuff to someone whose run-of-the-mill surface finish is a 4" angle grinder or maybe the da sander if I'm feeling particularly fussy. Appreciate your output fella, keep it up! ✌ 🇦🇺
@letmehavemyhandle
@letmehavemyhandle 13 күн бұрын
This is ASMR fo some of us nerds. Reminds me of how we did machining in university. But we measured in millimeters. Your measurements blew my mind.
@cambeyon
@cambeyon 4 күн бұрын
I paused your video when you mentioned hydrostatic bearings to go learn more about it and then deja vu when I got to the ending of your video to see Cylo's footage that I just watched!
@berkeokur99
@berkeokur99 17 күн бұрын
Never thought I would be interested in cutting mirror surfaces with diamonds, yet here I am wanting more!
@gpchagger
@gpchagger 16 күн бұрын
I didnt know someone will take surface finish so seriously, amazing video!
@KnightsWithoutATable
@KnightsWithoutATable 17 күн бұрын
The reason you can't find larger stock of ultra pure aluminum is because it's sale is restricted a bit since it is used in the nuclear fission field since aluminum is one of the few materials that neutron radiation doesn't cause to degrade since it returns to aluminum after it decays from being given all those extra neutrons. As such the smaller pieces are probably being recycled rapidly to keep the prices low so you aren't going to find cutoffs since collecting small cutoffs over time through multiple channels is one method to circumvent anti-proliferation treaties. Again, people trying to kill each other ruins perfectly good science and economic solutions to problems.
@TurboLoveTrain
@TurboLoveTrain 11 күн бұрын
I think it's more to do with the fact that there isn't a demand. The biggest consumers of aluminum are the transportation manufactures and they don't want pure aluminum they want specific alloys in dimensional stock.
@KnightsWithoutATable
@KnightsWithoutATable 11 күн бұрын
@@TurboLoveTrain That too. Pure aluminum stock isn't really all that useful outside of the nuclear industry and some very select industrial applications, so it is a secondary reason for not finding it.
@greentree180
@greentree180 17 күн бұрын
From my brother..... That is quite interesting and very cool. There is one more thing that might have caused his wavy appearance - stiction (caused by the co-efficient of friction being higher when stationary than moving). I remember from reading an Amateur Scientist in a Scientific American way back that there are materials that have, in effect, negative stiction (where the coefficient of friction is less when stationary than when moving). The guy in the AS article used that type of material in effect as the “ways” on his scriber for scribing a diffraction grating.
@adawg3032
@adawg3032 17 күн бұрын
the coolest part of these IMO is how strong the binding is between the carbon lattice and the metal that holds the cutting bit.. Basically the carbon lattice is formed electrochemically and this essentially works as the strongest glue ever
@user-yv5mt9rm3d
@user-yv5mt9rm3d 18 күн бұрын
Absolutely amazing video, thank you! The absolute thickness of the resulting chip isn't necessarily correlated to the absolute depth of cut - you can see this difference in your video where you cut metal inside an electron microscope. There are also some videos from roughly the 40s that show this. You can also tell some information about this from the texture of the inside of the chips - there is lots of compressive stress as the texture is very rough but the outside is smooth. That rough surface would have been smooth before the cut assuming you'd have machined it already (which you must have in order to get uniform chips to measure). This is perhaps a long-winded way of explaining why the chips end up coiled - because of the compressive stress causing the material to yield and permanently deform.
@danielmabella
@danielmabella 16 күн бұрын
We are cutting lacquers and DMM copper plates with diamond cutter with 3μm rim. With that knowledge available from record cutting the procedure to determine the optimal rake angle of the cutter to avoid the chip being a problem is known in our craft You do almost do the same thing , just in a different field and down to the nanometer dimensions. - we remain just about still in the μm world - well done, great what you proofed and found independently and a worthwhile video
@matthewmarting3623
@matthewmarting3623 11 күн бұрын
This is surely the astrophysics of machining. My mind is completely blown.
@DMSparky
@DMSparky 18 күн бұрын
The humble hardworking genius is back at it again, doing things that the majority of us had no idea were even possible. Some banger tunes on this video too. I had to Shazam the outro song.
@wouldntyaliktono
@wouldntyaliktono 17 күн бұрын
I love that the internet has enabled us to do things like crowd-source the funding for a postdoc in materials science and metrology.
@gustavgnoettgen
@gustavgnoettgen 18 күн бұрын
6:39 the following part almost fits to the rhythm! Amazing technology. I can only try to imagine what we could make with that. Like tiny versions of bigger instruments, without much more engineering but magnitudes of order more precise.
@waylonk2453
@waylonk2453 17 күн бұрын
Amazing video! Thanks for including all the images from your precision instruments. I'm still working in thousandths, so it amazes me to behold the world of micron scale.
@LanceMcCarthy
@LanceMcCarthy 17 күн бұрын
I always love watching your videos twice, once on Nebula, then again here so that you can get more engagement.
@beautifulsmall
@beautifulsmall 16 күн бұрын
This is fascinating. Flatness and smoothness is something I got a great appretiation of plastering a wall. Both together are hard. Those tiny cutting chips are so cool, Stunning micrographs. The shaping machine. Hand powered shapers are available, used to make geko skin moulds and internal gears. Analysis of chip thickness I've never seen before, the difference of the roughness of the two sides is amazing. To see the ball bearing difference and runout in the face was beautiful.
@erickvond6825
@erickvond6825 15 күн бұрын
Having heard you talk about the temper of the copper stock it occurred to me that it would be easy enough to anneal the copper stock by simply heating it with a torch until it's red hot and letting it cool back to room temperature on it's own. This insures consistently soft material to work with.
@realcygnus
@realcygnus 18 күн бұрын
Nifty AF ! & Cylo is very much sub worthy.
@markos.5539
@markos.5539 15 күн бұрын
the high speed video looks amazing! need to send those to manufacturing and material lecturers for licensing. It's too good to not be used in class around the world.
@C-M-E
@C-M-E 17 күн бұрын
You have some of the most small batch but high interest projects I come across. When you're getting into micron perfection, the frequency of steppers/actuators even come into question on what truly makes the smoothest of the smooth cuts. NASA has some really interesting white papers on mirror surfacing that one can find with some intense google-fu. I came across some other 'light reading' with Edwin Hubble's techniques of achieving flatness even in his time which was remarkable. The irony of the Hubble telescope's early issues did not go unnoticed. 😉
@AddictedtoProjects
@AddictedtoProjects 17 күн бұрын
You set the bar SO High for the rest of us. Well done dude! Well done! 😎👌
@SignalDitch
@SignalDitch 4 күн бұрын
Dude, your channel is always a pleasure. This video was a blast. Those microscopic chips are so cute.
@noahhood3825
@noahhood3825 15 күн бұрын
I love when I figure out how to get a consistent mirror-finish on a piece of copper with my monocrystalline diamond machine.
@sorbiusfaust9022
@sorbiusfaust9022 17 күн бұрын
This video rocks love your voice over and you sharing this for free is gold you get a 10/10
@pauldorman
@pauldorman 18 күн бұрын
Everything in this video is peak awesome!
@TripleSSSz
@TripleSSSz 3 күн бұрын
2 AM and i watched a guy make a mirror out of a piece of copper with tools i know nothing about for purposes i probably wouldn't understand. God i love the modern world
@twen7yseven
@twen7yseven 6 күн бұрын
It's so amazing to see at the microscopic level in HD. Crazy :)
@JonathanSheridan-g7i
@JonathanSheridan-g7i 4 күн бұрын
A leader or a man of action in a crisis almost always acts subconsciously and then thinks of the reasons for his action.
@matthewvenn
@matthewvenn 13 күн бұрын
"no longer the huge, 8 micron thick chips!" loved the video - great work!
@mikekizzy5200
@mikekizzy5200 14 күн бұрын
Awesome and so fascinating Old timer engineer here and this an eye opener for me 😳 Wow just wow subbed You learn something new every day 👍
@moken79
@moken79 18 күн бұрын
Absolutely love your video(s)! A lifetime ago, I used to help build and design AFMs, and it's so cool to see how you've used yours."
@samuelschuur7044
@samuelschuur7044 17 күн бұрын
You make a lot of neat videos, but I think this might just be my favorite one yet - hitting that precision machine design part of my brain just right!
@lmamakos
@lmamakos 17 күн бұрын
Oh no, what a rabbit hole to fall into! I fear following you down that hole will lead to an angry rabbit with fangs, like that one in Monty Python and the Holy Grail. Amazing work!
@lahma69
@lahma69 17 күн бұрын
Simply incredible.. Your content continues to astound me on every new video you release. [Chef's kiss]!
@TylerKrick
@TylerKrick 18 күн бұрын
I cannot get over those perfect chips starting at 17:00. Great work!!!
@marcusm5127
@marcusm5127 17 күн бұрын
Wtf this is so next level. My dude is talking about the project like he is 3d printing a nerf gun and not two steps behind bleeding edge quantum computer research.
@tmarti69
@tmarti69 17 күн бұрын
Two experiments you could try. One is Areogel gravity experiment the other is converting the mirror from copper to graphene, like diamond mirror does not burn. One concept is that gravity is entanglement, as large items slowly share their entanglement they pull the fabric of space time, and compound entanglements so they do not appear to be so. So, if you surround a small speck of aerogel with entangled light it floods the speck with tertiary entanglements lowering its connection to the overall fabric of space time. In other words, making the aerogel speck just slightly lighter in weight. Diamond mirrors are common now combining laser beams using the mirrors in an oxygen free vacuum that prevents it from burning. If you convert the copper surface to graphene and separate it you should get a supper light weight version of a diamond mirror put in nitrogen or vacuum environment for laser optics, your death ray, or laser cutter.
@lumotroph
@lumotroph 17 күн бұрын
I am so glad you are making this. You’re one of my favourites. Bravo.
@anomalus3544
@anomalus3544 9 күн бұрын
I really have no Idea why the algorithm thinks I like this vid. But damn those 20min felt like 3. Why is that so interesting and satisfying
@pauldonlin3439
@pauldonlin3439 14 күн бұрын
Very cool video! I was initially interested in your channel from your early machining videos and this was super cool to see it tie into that stuff.
@iNeverRez
@iNeverRez 6 күн бұрын
"High precision gravity mapping".... mind blown at this practice...
@Dangineering
@Dangineering 17 күн бұрын
Your videos are always so beautiful. I can’t thank you enough for putting in the effort you do.
@JamesNathaniei
@JamesNathaniei 4 күн бұрын
He who lives in harmony with himself lives in harmony with the universe.
@Ant0ine64
@Ant0ine64 18 күн бұрын
It's amazing to achieve this precision alone, it feels like you unlocked some alien technology
@scotbird2552
@scotbird2552 18 күн бұрын
This is impressive. Even more being it's your own setup. Diamond turning is a really interesting method of creating optical surfaces, and I'm very interested how your v1 trap worked out!
@pauldorman
@pauldorman 18 күн бұрын
I remember an awesome video showing scribing done on DIY CNC mill, including fine control of the spindle for direction changes. Had a hunt but couldn't find it. It occurs to me that an obvious option for improving the finish of your mirrors is to create a lapping tool with the same technique. Those little scratches and waves would polish right out in a few minutes and I'm sure you could get a near perfect mirror finish if you're careful.
@LilMissMurder3409
@LilMissMurder3409 13 күн бұрын
I'm a sucker for the miniaturization world. It never ceases to amaze me what big, clumsy, human sausage fingers are capable of creating at the micron scale. There's an apocryphal WW2 story, very like untrue, about a gauntlet thrown down by British scientists who, as a boast, sent the Germans a sub-millimeter twist drill bit. As the story goes, they then later received a package containing the original bit with a hole drilled down the center... This kind of thing tickles me pink and, even though it may be a ridiculous story, I'd love to see someone with the tools and know-how investigate how feasible it might actually be.
@kellymoses8566
@kellymoses8566 17 күн бұрын
Only the second KZbinr with a electron microscope that I've seen.
@JimBombo-oz3et
@JimBombo-oz3et 12 күн бұрын
Crackin me up with "my tenths indicator doesn't really move at all." 😂
@mrxgn
@mrxgn 18 күн бұрын
keep doing what you're doing, its super appreciated, shine on you crazy monocrystalline diamond!
@WhiffenC
@WhiffenC 17 күн бұрын
Very cool video, love this. I feel like having the metal colder would help bonds be stiffer but at the same time more stiffness would make jaged breakouts. Warmer metal would be softer but then you form pools of metal that bunch up in front of the tool. What if everything was very cold but introduce very high vibration on the head so you only heat up whats being scraped off the surface. Optics are tough, this was a great watch and gets the brain going to achieve the ultimate finish. The vibrations will probably cause so many other issues in surface finish. Just due to the tooling bending from side to side chaging cutting angle and the inertia in the tooling machines... would be awesome to experiment like you, this is a very rewarding experiment!
@Davepotnoodle
@Davepotnoodle 18 күн бұрын
I know close to nothing about machining, but this was a really enjoyable watch!
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