"how big of a mill can I squeeze into my husbands sewing room" - love it
@Liriq Жыл бұрын
I hope you know that that's a reference to someone
@dinkledork40619 ай бұрын
Hands down the funniest thing i have heard on ANY metal-working video 😂😂😂
@fgjhham898 ай бұрын
- making lunch - making enemies lol. I love your humor!
@Zengineer2 жыл бұрын
The day I added a 2x72" belt sander was the day I realized it was destined to be the most important tool in my shop. Perhaps not a first purchase, but I built one for about $500. Years of use now, I highly recommend it as a support tool!
@Immolate62 Жыл бұрын
Amen to that, and I can't imagine a better tool for grinding cutters than one that is designed to put a razor's edge on heat-treated knives. You could even make a jig to do all kinds of grinding profiles perfectly and consistently.
@BillCutter3102 жыл бұрын
"Even the lightbulb is junk..." BaHaHaHa... pure gold, right there.
@kennethelwell85742 жыл бұрын
Re: unattended machines, the horizontal bandsaw (blue-green) in our shop caught fire one day... smoke from the motor, then flames by the time we sprinted to unplug it! So, yeah, don’t run out to Dunks after starting a cut...
@lv_woodturner38992 жыл бұрын
Many of my wood turning friends run the lathe or drill press too fast for drilling, especially with large Forstner bits. It is common for such folks to have Forstner bits with blue teeth due to overheating. The folks also do not appreciate that the blue means they have lost the temper. They just apply more pressure or speed the next time and wonder why the bit is not drilling well. Good video. Dave.
@robertpearson87982 жыл бұрын
When I lose my temper my colour doesn’t change much but the air around me tends to turn a little blue.
@Self_Evident2 жыл бұрын
If the Forstner bits are made of high speed steel, they did not loose temper cutting wood, even if the tips are blue. HHS takes 1500+ degrees F to anneal.
@lv_woodturner38992 жыл бұрын
Most of my turning friends have cheap import Forstner bits like my set. The set did not state HSS, so I expect it is e.g., O1 or some other alloy which will lose its temper. HSS is preferred but a lot more expensive. Dave.
@washoecreative5952 жыл бұрын
Years ago when I took a welding certification course, the more I learned about the safety issues of acetylene, the more desirable propane became.
@espenschjelderup4262 жыл бұрын
That had me remember they had to shoot a bottle of acetylene that was burning some years ago. It was in a small city close to me, so they had to evacuate people from a radius of about half a km from the bottle. Beeing outside the sniper had a clear shot at it. A acetylene bottle in a burning building is on another level of dangerous, as I'm sure you learned about.
@ironworkerfxr71052 жыл бұрын
Just respect it..
@johnnyjames71392 жыл бұрын
I use " turbo torch" with MAP gas. All the heat that I have ever needed.
@davidrayner98322 жыл бұрын
@@johnnyjames7139 I bought one of those a few years ago and it works great but the MAP bottles cost $50 each. I recently priced an oxy-acc kit and it was $1,200 with bottles. That means after 22 bottle of MAP gas, you've bought an oxy-acc kit but you don't have an oxy-acc kit. The question is how long will it take to go through 22 bottles? I've been through 7 or 8 so far.
@larryschweitzer49042 жыл бұрын
I used to work for a company that went out to clean up derailments. We cut up rail cars with propane & oxygen torches. Way cheaper than using acetylene. The only disadvantage was it took longer to start a cut. Once started it cut just as fast. Big torches! I kind of think that once the cut is stated much of the fuel comes from burning the iron with the oxygen. Can anyone confirm that?
@seanalexander95312 жыл бұрын
"My husband's sewing room" - just awesome :)
@tlange50912 жыл бұрын
Primary machines covered, secondary machines covered and still no coffee machine on the list. Thank you Quinn, you rock!
@Liriq2 жыл бұрын
Electricity is assumed. So is coffee. Electricity to run the machines and tools, and coffee to run the operator.
@10010110100102Error2 жыл бұрын
not everyone requires the devils bean to function. some of us are quite ok with some caffeinated drink (like coca cola, or another coke producer since coca cola has something against me because of my skin colour) or some energy drink ... or we just sleep enough. either way, no reason to drink that bitter, shitty tasting devils diarrhea or even become addicted to it.
@russellstarr91112 жыл бұрын
Why does coffee smell so good and taste so bad?
@10010110100102Error2 жыл бұрын
@@russellstarr9111 It's the devilswork! these are corrupted cocoa beans, nothing more. and instead of one day being made into delicious chocolate, they have to suffer, be cast into fire, tortured and crushed between stones and then finally boiled as a beansoup as well. don't ask me what they did to deserve this fate, though ...
@wayne9518Ай бұрын
I prefer my caffeine carbonated. Coffee 🤢
@fpoastro2 жыл бұрын
The other big bonus to the band saw is you get to keep the drops instead of turning them into chips. Im in the commercial millwork business and the band saw is a money maker in the shop. Instead of planing off stock to chips in the dumpster your re-sawing usable material off the blank.
@julianbinder23712 жыл бұрын
what drops do you mean? I don't really get what you mean
@fpoastro2 жыл бұрын
@@julianbinder2371 the offcuts from bandsawing are all still usable materail rathet thanilling it away as chips
@julianbinder23712 жыл бұрын
@@fpoastro ah thanks
@lightmechanic23702 жыл бұрын
A hacksaw builds character.
@PatrickPoet2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the side bar on surface speed and its effect on drill speed. I wish you'd do a video just on this so I could share it with my jeweler friends who don't believe it and think they should always drill at the highest speed possible for _reasons_ which make opposite sense to reality. OR some of them think you should always drill at the slowest speed possible to avoid burning bits and on small bits which don't go very far in one revolution end up running _under_ the right speed by quite a bit. Hopefully you'll include the feeds part of speeds and feeds and talk about how fast to bring the spindle down.
@thomasa56192 жыл бұрын
“That lazy machinist” is/was a tech college teacher and has some good videos on feeds and speeds
@williamhardin52542 жыл бұрын
That's probably because they use very small drills most of the time. The smaller the drill the higher the RPM required.
@Frostfly2 жыл бұрын
As a jeweler, i'll tell you right now. speed is important. Slow tiny bits are broken tiny bits.
@VincentGroenewold2 жыл бұрын
The context matters I guess, bigger tools likely require totally different rules to follow than super tiny tools.
@pijnto2 жыл бұрын
@@Frostfly Yep I second that, many people thing that metal is metal not always the case precious metals have their own characteristics.
@netpackrat2 жыл бұрын
After I bought my Bridgeport a year ago, I asked my machinist buddy if there was any point in keeping my floor mount drill press around, since the BP should be able to do everything the drill press could. He said yes absolutely, use the comparatively "disposable" drill press for hogging out big holes in nasty steel rather than risking breaking Bridgeport parts doing a lot of routine fabrication tasks.
@ionstorm662 жыл бұрын
Battleships actually did more fueling than refueling. They have more fuel capacity than the support ships. So you would just fill the battleship up, then use it to refuel it's smaller escort ships and subs. That way the tanker spent the less time with the fleet, and and more time traveling. Battleships also had way way more amenities than anything short of an Carrier. Most of the ship is "empty" space to keep it floating, so they have all kinds of fun stuff. Barbers, commissaries, and mail rooms to name a few. As well as full on machine shops, motor shops and electronics shops.
@richardmorton13102 жыл бұрын
Blondihacks, not quite sure how long I have been a loyal viewer of your channel but every video has been worth the wait! Love your humor. Don't overlook the importance of the lowly (really not so lowly) vice!
@MegaLostOne2 жыл бұрын
Agreed, I have a 3-1/2" Craftsman (USA made) and a 4-1/2" Wilton bullet (made in 73) that is like new and still wanting another vise. I am looking at the Doyle 4" sold at HF which is made with 60K ductile iron like the older Wiltons are made of and if caught on sale can be had for around $100 US. Also a decent set of aluminum jaw inserts is very handy to have with them for holding round stock or holding something without marring it.
@richardmorton13102 жыл бұрын
@@MegaLostOne Clough42 had a nice tip on putting thrust bearing on Wilton vise. Easy mod and makes a difference. I think the video was something like top ten tools.
@rallen76602 жыл бұрын
No single vice can do everything you need, but most of us don't have room on our benches for more than one, if we even have room for that. A neat trick that I've seen on a few benches was where a receiver hitch was mounted under the front or side of the bench (usually with a leg or support under it), then multiple vices, grinders, small anvils, etc would be mounted onto quarter inch thick plates and welded to hitch stubs. Let's you change out the location of your vice and tooling quick and easy, and you can usually get to it on three sides. A nice addition is if you have the room, is to weld a heavy pipe into a tire rim and put another hitch mount on the top. See that setup for vices and grinders a lot.
@MegaLostOne2 жыл бұрын
@@richardmorton1310 Wilton changed their design over the years and some of them didn't use a thrust washer for pulling the movable jaw in, my vise is one of them and since it uses the yoke over the screw as the thrust washer I cannot put a thrust bearing in mine for that but thanks for the tip.
@MegaLostOne2 жыл бұрын
@@rallen7660 I actually should have typed my reply differently. I have the Craftsman and while it is a nice vise it's a cast iron and not a ductile iron so I plan to replace the Craftsman with the Doyle vise when I catch it on sale. The ductile iron vises are a lot stronger than the cast iron vises.
@Phylaetra Жыл бұрын
"High speed stealing" is called "High Speed Trading" on wall street... Love your channel!
@jfischer5072 жыл бұрын
Woodworker here, on the note about the drill press also being a press. I was clamping some sheets of 1/2 inch plywood together to make a thicker sheet for a router table (overkill, whatever). It was about 18x24 inches. After applying glue. I was able to get clamps around the sides, but not in the middle. Aside from filling a buckets with water and grabbing every piece of iron in the house to use gravity (and only getting 60-100 pounds depending on how hard I scrounged around), I decided to use the drill press. I put the work on the table, loosened the chuck to the point that the jaws retracted inside, cranked the quill down on the work and strapped a single 15 weight to the quill handle. This was when I was just starting out and didn't realize clamping cauls where a thing. But hey, it worked out.
@MannoMax2 жыл бұрын
Ideally, take the chuck out. Saves you damage on the chuck, and it spreads the pressure better.
@sergemalikov6829 Жыл бұрын
The narrative on all these videos is so amazing! Thank you
@johnglover31512 жыл бұрын
I once had a lovely home office 15 * 12 foot loft conversion. Now I have 4 feet in a corner because it has become my wifes' sewing room. Where else could she store the 2 sewing machines, 2 sergers, 2 coverstitch machines, 2 dress dummies, a sewing table and a wardrobe full of her fabric stash. The thread storage takes up a cubic yard. When I do get my hobby machine shop I am going to put 6 different types of boimetric locks on it to stop her from stealing that space as well. So thank you Blondihacks - in the first minute you triggered me into the hell that has become my home office..... Oh by the way I work at home all the time programming ........
@Nattroski2 жыл бұрын
One day you'll get there John! I believe in you!
@rallen76602 жыл бұрын
@@ChristopherHallett Yeah, I did that. Wound up moving into a smaller place. Sadness.
@causewaykayak2 ай бұрын
Could get into Man Sewing like marine rescue harnesses. Horse Blankets.
@markfletcher65112 жыл бұрын
"High speed stealing..." I love it. Between you and James on Clough42 I find myself, watching and enjoying, more than the other channels that I subscribe to by a wide margin. Some time back I made an Excell spreadsheet that had an entry for each material with a surface feet per minute column. From that I had a place for a diameter then the calculation gave me a rpm recommendation. Works for turning and for drilling. I can't seem to keep charts handy and always have a computer nearby. I love (really, really enjoy) your videos. I especially like the variety of subjects and that you show mistakes (failures) along with successes. From my perspective, this is an outstanding method for teaching. Keep up the great work!
@TheUnofficialMaker2 жыл бұрын
Can you share the spreadsheet?
@GaryT19522 жыл бұрын
Perhaps it's taken for granted...but an angle grinder is the first and most basic extra tool for any hobbyist. Great as usual Quinn
@tyrannosaurusimperator2 жыл бұрын
Get two or three so you don't have to swap the different types of disks
@davekellogg68192 жыл бұрын
Get a cordless angle grinder with a thin cutoff wheel, grinding wheel, and wire brush. It’s a little more primitive than a bandsaw (and messier), but still extremely flexible and fast.
@Oberkaptain2 жыл бұрын
Quinn, I would recommend instead of a dedicated bench grinder, to get one that has a bench grinder on one side and a 2 inch belt sander on the other. I use the belt sander way more than the grinder side of mine to clean up parts and to do some shaping as well.
@janheuermann21742 жыл бұрын
Maybe not for everyone but a good belt grinder is a tool I am not willing to live without. Can save tons of time on non critical features or for prepping stock for welding
@liquidrockaquatics3900Ай бұрын
I primarily do woodworking, but I picked up a portable bandsaw frame recently and I will be getting a cordless bandsaw to go in it. The table is a genius idea
@JulieanGalak2 жыл бұрын
A few other options for torches: if you just need to heat and solder/braze, an air-acetylene torch works very well. They are usually aimed at plumbers for soldering copper water pipe, but they work very well for all sort of metalwork that doesn't need welding temperatures. Another good option is Oxy-MAPP (or whatever the MAPP alternative is these days). This doesn't get quite as hot as Oxy-Acetylene, so not great for welding, but it's much hotter than Propane or MAPP alone. It's especially great for large-scale heating since you aren't limited by the 1/10 rule. This lets you run a big rosebud off fairly small tanks.
@pauldalby54132 жыл бұрын
Red gas bottle is really interested in what you're saying. Your channel is brilliant - quite addicted to it - learning so much!
@OkieRCguy2 жыл бұрын
Another great video! Your knowledge is phenomenal as is your willingness to share with us, the uninformed masses. Great stuff. I've been binge watching your videos and see no reason to quit now.
@nicoleh94032 жыл бұрын
I just found your videos today and have been binging while enjoying my covid! I am a retired educator of 30 years, and I am really impressed with the care and clarity that you put into your work. Also, I love how you focus on how to get it done with hobby level equipment. brava :)
@robertwalker74572 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the tour. With the 6*4 bandsaw you may find that the upper blade guide actually has two threaded holes that you can put the tightening knob in so you can get the guide a couple of inches closer to the work. I found out by mistake when I unscrewed the knob right out. Also on mine the plate (angle bracket) that supports the spring adjusting screw where it joins the adjusting rod was installed 180 degrees the wrong way. This meant that you used half the thread of the screw before there was any tension on the spring that controls feed rate. I reversed the plate and now can get the saw to point of balance which gives you the full range of feed rate available. This is handy for set up some times to so you don't need a third hand to hold the saw up.
@Blondihacks2 жыл бұрын
Ohhh really! I will look at that right away
@markloving112 жыл бұрын
On the subject of surface grinders, yes 99% of them are big and pricey, thankfully, if your lucky you can find a smaller bench top one like I just have! They may look small, but boi are they heavy and SOLID! So if you can can find one of these, I’d highly recommend the investment as you get all of the benefits of a surface grinder, but not the drawbacks of big floor footprint or often massive price tag!
@Blondihacks2 жыл бұрын
What kind is it? I’ve never seen a small bench top surface grinder. I’m very interested.
@daveob2562 жыл бұрын
For those considering a wire welder, one option for shielding gas is pure co2. It's a low pressure bottle, and cheaper to buy than c25 gas.
@russellstarr91112 жыл бұрын
The drawback to straight CO2 is it cools the weld much faster and can cause problems with drawing.
@philippegouvet1 Жыл бұрын
'Hope something was useful in this video?' They're priceless!! I can't thank you enough for taking the time to share your knowledge in such a crystal-clear, extensive, and informed way. I'm the despised (?) woodworker with a large shop being more and more tickled by machining perspectives. I know you made these videos for me, and I do appreciate them more than you could even imagine. They're a real treat. Greetings from France.
@2bonk222 жыл бұрын
Oxypropane works for everything except welding. I use it for cutting, heating, and brazing. The reason it doesn't work for welding is it's very hard to get a neutral flame otherwise it would work for welding too.
@ivorjones66182 жыл бұрын
welds ok i started 40 odd yrs ago spent many hours welding cars back together
@2bonk222 жыл бұрын
@@ivorjones6618 How do you get a neutral flame?
@bh.boilers2 жыл бұрын
The chemistry of the oxygen acetylene flame has a two stage burning process that consumes the ambient oxygen in the atmosphere, correctly adjusted it will give a "neutral " flame, the only flame that can be used for fusion welding. Ray.
@epilotdk2 жыл бұрын
Besides the big boy tools, the one that gets the most use in my shop is a rechargable angle grinder. Great for both cutting and grinding/sanding jobs. Mine is a Makita with brushless motor.
@kenibnanak55542 жыл бұрын
I started years ago with a 4x6 saw, a grinder with a wire wheel opposite the grinder, a few vises, some files, a hand drill and a drill press and a torch. Acquiring a mill and a lathe and all the fittings, and taking courses in how to run them *and weld dollowed by a welder) came years later. :)
@theundergroundesd2 жыл бұрын
lol. "How big of mill can I squeeze in my husband’s sewing room before he notices" lol
@wjgrind8 ай бұрын
I totally agree about the Mig welder wire. Having been a Nuclear certified welder for Tig and Stick, which I can now do both at home, I end up most times using my Hobart 140 Mig. I only use the flux core and never have had a problem with penetration or appearance of the weld .
@donhall27592 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this. My stepdad (R.I.P.) had all these tools for all the same reasons, but you explain it better. Cheers!
@keithyount3518Ай бұрын
I liked your drill bit speed rant, very much needed
@VeezyLife2 жыл бұрын
about 2 yrs ago now, i had been saving up and finally bought my Jet HVBS 712 horizontal/vertical metal cutting bandsaw and it changed my life and my productivity probably quadrupled from cutting allllllll metal for any project with a low end chop saw. one of my fav pieces of equipment in my shop.
@akaHarvesteR2 жыл бұрын
I got myself a porta bandsaw last week for my bday. What a life changer that is compared to the old hacksaw. It’s actually so fast, I almost feel I’m not getting much use out of it, because every time I need it, it gets the job done in mere seconds. Those cuts used to take 10+ minutes. It’s almost anti climactic, in a way…. In a good way.
@softdorothy2 жыл бұрын
Got a small tank of shielding gas for my little Hobart MIG welder. They don't have to be huge. (And, wow, what a difference it made - my only prior experience with welding had been with the flux-core wire that had come with the machine.)
@AlexanderBurgers2 жыл бұрын
Additionally, you can weld mild steel with CO2 shield gas instead of Argon, it's somewhat cheaper and a 5kg bottle of CO2 lasts way way longer than a 5 liter Argon bottle.
@mathewmolk20892 жыл бұрын
If it's total versatility at the least cost is what you are after an AC/DC buzz box will outshine all other processes hands down, Tere is even stick aluminum..The skill level is quite a bit higher, but practice makes perfect.
@douglashank84802 жыл бұрын
I wish this had been the first video I saw when I started as a hobby machinist. Even now, 3 years in, it's still very useful. Thanks!!👍👍👍
@jarrettowen4193 Жыл бұрын
Good video. Adding to the need of bench grinders. You can buy all sorts of different wheels(buffing,wire, diffrent grits,drill bit sharpening attachments etc.) The low horsepower bench grinder I have,used to be just for tungsten sharpening for welding. Now I have buffer wheels on it for small parts that I don’t trust the big bench grinder with. Thanks for the video!
@davidsomerville78682 жыл бұрын
Nice video. Support of support. A Scotch Brite deburring wheel on a bench grinder is an incredible thing. I use a big mig welder but stay with two small tanks. That way it still fits under a bench, when you run out you swap and refill at your convenience plus easy to handle and fits in a car. A wall mount garage vacuum like a VacuMaid is incredible to have, with the addition of a shield it'll keep you from having to move your cutter grinder. Chips and debris are easily dealt with. Use a remote on the outlet so you can keep the vacuum out of the way.
@wirefeed34192 жыл бұрын
Great shop run through and Thank You Thank you for talking about drill speed. It is amazing how many people don’t know or don’t agree with the larger the drill size bit the slower the speed must be ran. So many people burn the ends, dull or break their drills and always blame the drill as being cheap junk, saying they should have paid more. Just because drills especially older cord electric drills run at high speed does not mean you should use all of it.
@russellstarr91112 жыл бұрын
One of the best investments I ever made was floor standing drill press. Mine only goes down to 200 RPM, but it goes up to 3600 RPM. Drilling those tiny little holes with a hand held drill motor usually ends up with a broken bit. Another great investment was the combo belt/ disc sander. It's great for removing the burrs after using the bandsaw for those fabrication needs.
@jimc47312 жыл бұрын
With a little thought and fabrication, you can add a third stepped pulley between the motor and spindle pulley, using two belts to slow down the spindle speed. The setup was commercially available 80ish years ago and still may be. JIM
@russellstarr91112 жыл бұрын
@@jimc4731 Mine already has three pulley setup.
@garryhammond76162 жыл бұрын
The Best intro words you have ever used.....Well done Quinn.
@andersgrassman6583 Жыл бұрын
I made my first benchgrinder out of a waching machine motor I was a teenager, and my lathe was a 2"x12" Simat (Norfolk), so I couldn't machine the rotor in that small and lightweight lathe, but at school there was a huge lathe I could use to turn axle shoulders and drill and tap the axle ends for disc fasteners. Worked quite alright! (I also powered the lathe with a waching machine motor. It had forward & reverse and two speeds & quite powerful. The lathe didn't come with a motor.) This was in the end of the 1970's, and exchangeable toolbits weren't around - at least not for hobbyists. And also any machinery was way more expensive than today. These days I'd say a belt sander with a grinding wheel on the side, might be more useful than a regular disc grinder. And they are very affordable!
@occasionalmachinist2 жыл бұрын
Great video Quinn. Personnally I'd start with stick welding rather than MIG, but can't argue too much...
@markbernier84342 жыл бұрын
Tip, watch for electronically controlled drill presses. A discouraging number start at 600 rpm and go up from there.
@randombuilds83362 жыл бұрын
A portable band saw with a stand is probably one of the most used tools in my garage. I have a full size mill, an atlas lathe and wish I had bought a portaband sooner.
@wolfitirol83472 жыл бұрын
Had no idea about the 1:10 rule but thanx for telling me Im using a very small set cause I don't need it often ...thank god for hardening I've got a big (well compared to others..ca. 50x50x50cm) electrical oven for heat treating specially build... One important thing nobody told me was the grinding stuff ...it's bad for the other machines so I have two separate rooms now one for grinding and the dirty works and the main work shops for turning,milling and so on...😇😎
@dcviper9852 жыл бұрын
As a former destroyer sailor, thanks for that intro. ❤️
@LordOfTamarac2 жыл бұрын
Before I built my 2x72 belt grinder I used my bench grinder a lot. Now I’m all but ready to throw it away. To anyone who wants to grind HSS tools and has the space and funds for a belt grinder, I highly recommend it. That tool has become one of the most used machines in my shop. Rounding corners for fabrication work, grinding HSS tooling, it’s an absolute beast. With the water catch bucket, and the abrasive fabric backed, it is so much cleaner than the bench grinder as well. The abrasive grit that comes off a bench grinder is atrocious.
@rallen76602 жыл бұрын
I've seen a few knifemakers set up their belt grinders with a sliding platen holding a mag chuck, and using it as a simple surface grinder. I don't think you'll get super accurate dimensions, but it's an easy and cheap way to put some nice surfaces on parts and tooling.
@clehrich2 жыл бұрын
Thanks, very helpful! Clear, straightforward, and no BS. Love it!
@CaptK-py8rq2 жыл бұрын
Another stellar video Quinn! I just ordered the Grizzly G0516 7" x 12" metal cutting bandsaw...you're helping me to quit "over think" things when I "need" a tool or machine and just buy the darn thing, it's not like I won't use it! Life's too short...and, every year that goes by, it's getting shorter. Always look forward to your enjoyable videos, love your dry humor too, thanks again!
@Just1GuyMetalworks2 жыл бұрын
Great video, Quinn 😊. I literally sold my baby (1966, Chevy Bel Air) to buy my oxy/acetylene tanks and torch set. When you need it you reeeally need it! 🤣. That goes for all of those tools. I initially bought a cold cut saw, but without buying a bunch of expensive blades for different materials it's just not nearly as versatile as my old bandsaw. It mostly just sits on the floor however, super great for cutting tubing for for fabrication as it's just soooo fast 😁. Being a person with a shop in perpetual evolution I can relate to all of this. Welding bench will be next for me... if I can dig it out of the snowbank to continue that particular build 😏. Cheers!
@cyril.engineering2 жыл бұрын
There are helical attachments for D-bit grinders. Great for touching up flutes. They cam as you extend what could be considered a spindle. Some attachments just handle a set flute count.
@brianrajala7671 Жыл бұрын
You have accomplished a solid tool inventory for yourself.
@willhartsell22832 жыл бұрын
Love your 24 Hour Le'Mons sticker. Those races are awesome
@tofuisnotfood3348 Жыл бұрын
Killing wasp and shooing solicitors for the torch set up killed me. I laughed to hard
@jamesreed61212 жыл бұрын
As far as I know Drill Presses come in two varieties, Metal or wood. The wood drill presses usually cannot run slow enough for large drills with out overheating the drill and dulling it. I think most wood drill presses run at about 700 RPM thereabouts. Metal band saws will run at about 300 RPM or slower. Also, most Metal Drill Presses I have seen use three drive pulleys to obtain the slower speeds. So, if you see a Drill Press with only one drive belt and two drive pulleys it probably is for wood working or very small drills (3'16" or less) be sure you get the right tool for the job.
@jimsvideos72012 жыл бұрын
Thank you as always for the continuing education. Give Sprocket some pats for us, ok?
@martinpanev66512 жыл бұрын
Such a great video… just moved shops to my big shed and we’ll see if I can squeeze some more cool tools in there! Maybe i might get a bandsaw next… it would be nice to stop cutting 4 in. Stainless with a hacksaw..
@larryschweitzer49042 жыл бұрын
I've had one of the 4X6 bandsaws for 25? years. The basic machine is OK, but as with so many Chinese ... cheap, many things will need some adjusting, modifying. Once that is done they work quite well. Lots of videos. I got lucky and was given an old Italian, much abused, industrial cold saw. What a difference! Much faster, beautifully smooth cuts. Heavy vice, blade turns away from the fence so parts fall free and never jamb into the fence slot. I'm using steel blades.
@martinpanev66512 жыл бұрын
@@larryschweitzer4904 Well, thanks... Ill have to be on the lookout for nicer ones on facebook marketplace!
@robertmatthews42852 жыл бұрын
This may not be relevant to this video, but perhaps it’s entertaining. In college I worked summers in the in-house machine shop at a large paper mill. More than once we drilled four inch holes with a very large drill press. Ran so slow you could easily count the revolutions. We also had huge lathes for resurfacing large paper machine rollers (12 ft diameter 40 feet long kinda big). You climbed a ladder and sat in a chair at the control station on the carriage head. You road the carriage while machining. Could set it up and start a pass, climb down and go get lunch and be back before a single pass was complete.
@larry_g92622 жыл бұрын
Another thing to think about when outfitting a shop is the size of tools you need to compliment each other. Your tool set seems to be very well suited to the work you do. I've seen others who have a Sherline lathe and a full sized Mill. They do not play well together. One has to think about moving parts from machine to machine and if the work envelope of one machine will not hold what the previous machine worked on then things are difficult. Keep up the good work. lg no neat sig line
@wrecktech2 жыл бұрын
The hand shots are channeling This Old Tony 🤪
@janbertilsson7062 жыл бұрын
Today i learned something new.. I have used oxyacetylen welders Since i was 15 and totally missed that there is a limitaton of how much gas you can drain out before it becomes a safety issue.. I guess i have to go and read some more about it.. Btw you have an awesome KZbin channel👍
@bobuk57222 жыл бұрын
Quinn. Moving heavy things. I have an Excel/Optimum 260kg mill on a 90 kg cabinet base. I got some high quality lockable professional ball bearing castors and the results are night and day different from the usual run of the things. Expensive, yes, but really worth it. You do need a smooth hard floor though.
@stampeder16862 жыл бұрын
I really enjoy your channel. You have got me to get back into using my metal working shop....Dusted off my lathe and gave it a bunch of necessary attention. Now to the OTHER tools. One of the most necessary "tools" or rather additions is CASTERS on everything. I even have my 20 ton press on casters. My lathe is on a heavy base and on casters. Yes it does have a flat bed. In a small shop having everything on casters allows for maximum flexability. Another very useful tools it a conversion chart on the wall. I consult mine all the time and having it where you can just quickly look at it saves a ton of time. Love you videos and keep up the great work!!!!
@moehoward012 жыл бұрын
I like how you say "woodworking" like you have a mouthful of bitter lemons. 😁
@lukewarmwater64122 жыл бұрын
snow.... or a bag of ice. cold is as good to have as a tool as heat, as in a torch. and a band saw is a must!! it makes cutting angles sooo much easier. and you can make one cut and get several parts.... I love my cheap harbor freight bandsaw. also, if you are playing around making crucible steel, the chips that come off the bandsaw are perfect for making steel.
@MyLonewolf252 жыл бұрын
As someone who works on a cars in the rust belt. The gas ax is a invaluable tool
@s.s.productions Жыл бұрын
I discovered your channel recently and I love how down to Earth you are and how on point you make your videos. I binge watched many of them and I learned a lot. I make my living with my small metal workshop and you gave me lots of information that will make my life easier. Thank you!
@wayngoodman30992 жыл бұрын
Quinn, GREAT work - as always!! Three questions: 1) where would you recommend your viewers look for those ‘surface speed charts for drills’? B) what is that contraption on the stud to the right of your drill press, with what appears to be a DeStaCo clamp attached? III) in your lovely discussion of how oxy/acetylene can give you “that finger of God heat” you mention the ‘bomb in the room’ issue of acetylene and not exceeding the capability of 1/10 of capacity of tank per hour… how would an old white-haired humble weekend warrior do that math? I’ve known since I was knee-high to a grasshopper that there was liquid acetone lurking in there - and why - but no one ever bothered to ‘splain how to know how close one might get to dancing with the devil… Always like your vids, ALWAYS like your humor, huge THANK YOU for helping me get thru the pandemic!
@tomsmith3045 Жыл бұрын
This is a great list, except now I have to buy another portable bandsaw to setup as a vertical. I have a 4x6, and you're exactly right about how miserable it is in the vertical orientation. One thing I'd add to the list, if people want to do precision work in steel, is getting a TIG setup. They only need one kind of gas for everything, and the learning curve for ferrous metals isn't that high. Yes, they're slow, but the prices have come down quite a bit for import inverters. Suggest one that does ac/dc with HF start and runs on 220v.
@AlexanderBurgers2 жыл бұрын
Once purchased, the bench grinder could also be made into a belt and/or disk sander, along with buffing, tool cutting/sharpening, wirebrushing, deburring, etc. Really all a bench grinder really is, is a dual shaft induction motor with a bunch of attachments to put on. What those attachments look like is really not limited to anything once it arrives in the workshop. :)
@cynic-al2 жыл бұрын
For all my tools that I don't use very often I fabricate a steel stand on casters so I can wheel it into the middle of the room then back into the corner when finished. If its something like a flypress that needs to be a bit more rigid just bolt a lump of steel to the floor that you can then bolt your tables to.
@ctrlz44392 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the tip about drill press speeds. So far I was more into woodworking and my drilling speed indeed was too high (however I had no clue about this). When I adjusted drill press for a lower speed and less pressure I started to get nice long spiral shavings and the "right" feeling while drilling. It so much better now! I am happy happy!
@kelvin0mql2 жыл бұрын
OMG, THANK YOU for the Elephant joke reference! I tend to use that exact same analogy frequently at work, and the Venezuelan/American Chief Developer always looks at me like I’ve had a little stroke.
@mikehenthorn17782 жыл бұрын
my day job is boilers and chillers. with that out of the way i can say that i have most of the tools you call extra and i haven't picked up my milling machine yet. i have been doing every thing i can with the other tools and now i find i need milling machines.
@billryland61992 жыл бұрын
I keep watching for the next video on your large steam engine. That is the ultimate hobbyist project. Thanks.
@adelheidsnel51712 жыл бұрын
The Finger of God got me once again😇 glad to see my humble shop approved. Nice video, gratitude from the Netherlands
@Disinterested12 жыл бұрын
on the subject of the mig ... you can get a gas/gasless welder where you change the polarity when using gas etc ... a good all rounder as you can run flux core when space is a concern but gas when you want a high quality weld (as a hobbyist)
@russellstarr91112 жыл бұрын
The single advantage to flux core is the ability to weld outdoors in the wind.
@clayz12 жыл бұрын
Honestly BH you do know your stuff. Enjoyable video.
@dans_Learning_Curve2 жыл бұрын
Picked up a Porta-Band from a garage sale for $6. Yep, not a mistake. Needed a little repair. New drive tire.
@anthonymarino42602 жыл бұрын
EXPERIENCE. TALKS. WELL SAID THIS IS THE STANDARD. NEVER LOOK BACK LOTS OF $$$$$$. BUT LOOK AT THE OUT COME
@benchapman52472 жыл бұрын
I bought my first bandsaw about 4 years ago, now I have 4....They are addictive.
@HelenaOfDetroit2 жыл бұрын
One support tool I would suggest adding before a d bit grinder would be an arbor press.
@Blondihacks2 жыл бұрын
Very true. Arbour presses are great
@jjbode12 жыл бұрын
Dave Vick's point is what I learnt, too; speed matters for the tool's life, not the wood.
@kurtarmbrust2 жыл бұрын
Propane/oxygen is what I us in my mini torch for jewelry soldering gold and silver. Burns clean. Other jeweler I know use natural gas/oxygen.
@kefler1872 жыл бұрын
It was very considerate of you to include the metric conversion for the few of us in the world that actually use metric XD
@roberttaylor23282 жыл бұрын
Another lovely video. Cute tool and cutter grinder. My biggest tool by weight is probably the 1959 year K.O. Lee Aberdeen T&C grinder. Just watched my first Stefan Gotteswinter video: so soothing for this career T&C guy! Top notch content, Quinn Dunki.
@firebird86002 жыл бұрын
Yay! It's Blondihacks time!!
@tombier91702 жыл бұрын
Totally agree about having both a cutoff bandsaw and a porta-band on a stand. Have both at the day job and use them constantly. Price for a small vertical metal cutting bandsaw was just prohibitive.
@joshuavanvliet55142 жыл бұрын
So this is coming from a knifemaker so my priorities may be a bit different. but that being said a good quality 2x72 belt grinder is also a great addition to the workshop, if you have one that has exchangeable arms there are also surface grinding attachments an disk sander attachments available for example. Of course in the shop of a knife maker it sees way more use than in many other shops but I believe that it is a machine that should not be overlooked no matter what field your in.
@donaldsutherland2442 жыл бұрын
Thank you for all your videos! You are an excellent mentor! For non-powered tools, your future video, Vises, my oldest tool is a 150+ years old vise. Files? 4 drawers in two toolboxes of mine, are used to organize all my files. Belt sanders. -and regarding hot joining, Soft solder, Hard solder, Brazing? Abrasives? Again, thanks! Thank you for the jokes too!
@theDaftman2 жыл бұрын
I learned something about settling tanks today, thanks
@procrastinator412 жыл бұрын
Over speed + over pressure is a problem in wood too. I’ve seen so many hole saws, speed bits, batter bits and drills ruined by ignorance/enthusiasm/impatience.