Threading Dial Bolt for Lodge & Shipley Lathe- Manual Lathe Work

  Рет қаралды 73,944

Abom79

Abom79

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 267
@jeffaddison6332
@jeffaddison6332 Ай бұрын
Hi Adam, The part fit great, thanks for helping me out
@gregprevis34
@gregprevis34 Ай бұрын
@@jeffaddison6332 hey Jeff, I operate a 20” L&S standard at work and I love it. We also have a 36” Light pattern lathe that is a real beast!
@gregprevis34
@gregprevis34 Ай бұрын
Split screen is a very nice touch!
@TupmaniaTurning
@TupmaniaTurning Ай бұрын
Really like the close up views and the split screens - works a treat!
@jeffcoulam
@jeffcoulam Ай бұрын
Great video Adam, reminds me of your older videos. I love the manual stuff. Thanks.
@rustywidebottom4678
@rustywidebottom4678 Ай бұрын
Just another comment to say how much I enjoyed the split screen. All these years and I’ve never seen how you operated the controls. 👍🏻
@charleswelch249
@charleswelch249 Ай бұрын
I always enjoy watching manual machine work. I work around cnc lathes and mills daily. At home I have antique machines and actually love to feel the part I'm making. You can feel the cutter and the metal cutting. And as far as accuracy, you can do both ways just as acute if you know your machine 😉.
@simonbarringer3415
@simonbarringer3415 Ай бұрын
The split screen is great catching all the action 👍
@BenButler1
@BenButler1 Ай бұрын
Great project. You gotta put your mark on that part, and send the customer a copy of that drawing!
@billsimpson604
@billsimpson604 Ай бұрын
It was very kind of you to make that part for Jeff. That lathe might have been made during WW II so there won't be a lot of them still around. That was a fun video to watch to see how much effort it takes to make one little part.
@jimlangerie
@jimlangerie Ай бұрын
PLEASE don't take this the wrong way. I started watching you because you were doing all these things that I could do myself. I don't have the equipment, but the process works with almost any manual process. I love the CNC work, and I'm happier than ever that Booth Machine Shop is a going concern. But it's not the same. So I am very happy that you mix in the manual machining as well. The variety and the decision making keep it very interesting, and I look forward every week. Please, keep doing your thing. I'll continue to watch, whatever we happen to get.
@UncleMattsGarage
@UncleMattsGarage Ай бұрын
Love the CNC stuff. But really love the manual stuff. I’ve learned a lot from this channel and use it it my garage
@TedRoza
@TedRoza Ай бұрын
G'day Adam. Nice quick job, but very well explained for the first timer learning how it's done. Lots of passed on knowledge Ted
@StuartsShed
@StuartsShed Ай бұрын
I like your split screen approach. I tried that, thought it looked great, but my viewers didn’t seem to think much of it. I think the two perspectives really shows a lot more of what is going on.
@guillermocarrillo3959
@guillermocarrillo3959 Ай бұрын
Love the hands on videos as opposed to the cnc type videos.
@josephford8884
@josephford8884 Ай бұрын
Classic Adam Booth fit and finish. Top notch. It's always a treat to watch.
@RobertKohut
@RobertKohut Ай бұрын
I like the split screen for the threading shots.... 🙂
@jameshodgson1609
@jameshodgson1609 Ай бұрын
Great to have the drawing to talk to. Even though as you say not necessary to make the part, it certainly adds to clarity when you are explaining to us what you are doing.
@ZombifiedWatermelon
@ZombifiedWatermelon Ай бұрын
I'm a Draftsman by trade. Not a bad print, you've got everything on there a machinist like yourself would need to create the part.
@terryjennings2356
@terryjennings2356 Ай бұрын
No tolerance specs though
@kurtfrancis4621
@kurtfrancis4621 Ай бұрын
@@terryjennings2356 I'm sure he'll add that. If you want a professional title block with the bells & whistles, that takes time and knowledge that I'm sure Adam is not familiar with in Fusion or any other CAD program. I've created my own A thru F sized drawing formats from scratch in Solid Edge (Siemens), and it takes time to do it well.
@ZombifiedWatermelon
@ZombifiedWatermelon Ай бұрын
The first thing I learned out of school was that there is no such thing as "standard drafting practices" lol. Every company I've ever worked for does it different. Some places put an exact tolerance on things if one is required, like for a press fit bearing, but otherwise it's just understood by the operator to get it close as possible. Others have a chart of standard tolerances for different applications/dimensions so that you don't have to waste time detailing them on every drawing.
@marley589
@marley589 Ай бұрын
What about the projection. Is it first or third angle? The symbol should be on all drawings.
@Sak-zo1ui
@Sak-zo1ui Ай бұрын
@@terryjennings2356that is not needed for something this simple. He is just working to improve his cad and cam skills if it was actual production data thn you need it. This is just for fun. There is more data on that sheet than what you usually get anyways 🤷‍♂️.
@xenadu02
@xenadu02 Ай бұрын
I really like all of your content. Both the manual machining and the CNC. Keep it up, don't pay any attention to the wrinkled old prunes whining in the comments.
@harlanmartin9964
@harlanmartin9964 Ай бұрын
right on! that drawing looked great! very cool stuff Adam!!
@igorkeser9716
@igorkeser9716 Ай бұрын
The best of your videos are those with manual work. Like this one.
@dusttoyou4550
@dusttoyou4550 Ай бұрын
Great Saturday Abom! Nothing compares to old style manual "Grandad Booth" machining.
@angellopezbarroso7759
@angellopezbarroso7759 Ай бұрын
GRACIAS POR UTILIZAR TORNO MANUAL ES MUCHO MÁS ENTRETENIDO!!👍🏻
@Scottforyoutube
@Scottforyoutube Ай бұрын
Great video Adam, good tip about working the fusion work into an existing project! Kevin definitely is a huge help!
@a24396
@a24396 Ай бұрын
The casual display of skill here is so impressive. Really interesting to watch, thanks so much for posting!
@johnpietros9439
@johnpietros9439 Ай бұрын
New part is better than the original
@JedReynoldsBitratchet
@JedReynoldsBitratchet Ай бұрын
Adam, you definitely own the title of Uncle Machinist. I love seeing YT hosts bolster fans and if you keep it up, you will YT's gpaw machinist.
@M5888-z3w
@M5888-z3w 22 күн бұрын
I enjoy your enthusiasm for learning new skills and I think you are going at it the right way you are interesting to watch
@waikanaebeach
@waikanaebeach Ай бұрын
As always beautifully executed, this is great value machining techniques to novice machinists
@mitchstephen5491
@mitchstephen5491 Ай бұрын
I have a Lodge and Shipley Lathe that has a taper attachment on it but it is missing the piece that locks the taper attachment to the ways. I would try and make one for it but I have no idea what it looks like. If you would have a picture that would be great. Great informative video, thanks for doing it.
@ronnydowdy7432
@ronnydowdy7432 Ай бұрын
Enjoyed watching you make parts no matter how you get it done.
@StuartsShed
@StuartsShed Ай бұрын
That 1144 is lovely stuff to machine. Just tried it for the first time recently.
@jacksoncroyce6063
@jacksoncroyce6063 Ай бұрын
I enjoyed the split screen shots, first time i have seen what lining up the marks mean. Thankyou
@fredrikbreivald388
@fredrikbreivald388 Ай бұрын
Fancy split screen action! 👏
@jerryWallis-k3w
@jerryWallis-k3w Ай бұрын
This is the kind of video I like. Good job Adam
@plainnpretty
@plainnpretty Ай бұрын
If you’re going to make something make it beautiful and Adam does with his lathe work. Thanks Adam
@KennethWhite-f8c
@KennethWhite-f8c Ай бұрын
I just so love the manual machine's... CNC machine r pretty cool but the manual machine's are just the bomb...
@jtg2737
@jtg2737 Ай бұрын
Looks good! Hello from San Antonio, TEXAS!
@mickymondo7463
@mickymondo7463 Ай бұрын
Looks to have a similar thread cutting gearbox to my Colchester Student 1800, very easy to use. The caveat you should have added when you were checking for burrs with your finger, is that it helps to have finger tips like a Blacksmiths apron when doing that
@bdove7939
@bdove7939 Ай бұрын
Very nice work. These are my favorite videos. Thank you.
@josaonline09
@josaonline09 Ай бұрын
Love the drawing….like to see you learning…truly is inspiring brother
@paulader9007
@paulader9007 Ай бұрын
This is the first machining channel I started watching about 6 years ago. I like watching Adam work. I am curious how much production work Adam is actually doing these days. He used to machine 6’ long cylinders now he makes 6” long bolts. There is a lot expensive equipment in this shop - it just doesn’t seem to get much use. I personally like videos with fabrication and repairs he used to do.
@jacobraeker3799
@jacobraeker3799 Ай бұрын
We all have to evolve and adept at some time i been watching his vids for almost 10 years and theres so much you can learn in machining different kinds of parts never close your mind to any possibility of learning something new even if its not your cup of tea
@ByronWilliams-n7s
@ByronWilliams-n7s Ай бұрын
Hi Adam Great to see the centring chuck made in Sheffield England See we can or used to make lovely things in the past👍 Great job keep it going Byron
@ivandavilaperez4659
@ivandavilaperez4659 Ай бұрын
Congratulations you are a máster. I learn a lot with you. Greetings from Puerto Rico. I have a machine shop in my home.
@qzwqsy
@qzwqsy Ай бұрын
Very nice Adam
@angelramos-2005
@angelramos-2005 Ай бұрын
Excellent work,Adam and great skills.Thank you.
@thomasjackson8096
@thomasjackson8096 Ай бұрын
I've learned there is never a one-off. Having a drawing of past work (hardcopy or softcopy) will help you when you get a request for this part or something similar in the future. Taking the time to make a dimensioned drawing has prevented a lot of mistakes that wasted time and materials.
@RicksterX-92fs
@RicksterX-92fs Ай бұрын
Excellent manual machining!
@stuartschaffner9744
@stuartschaffner9744 Ай бұрын
Nice job, Adam! Be sure to save your drawings and programs. With nice documentation like you used, they might prove useful on future projects.
@RobertGracie
@RobertGracie Ай бұрын
Another awesome video from you Adam, keep them coming these are a great relaxing thing to watch at the end of the day!
@garywoodard5759
@garywoodard5759 Ай бұрын
or at the beginning! or anytime, actually sometimes i watch 5 or 6 of your earlier vids instead silly tv programs for an evening's entertainment/education rock on
@nickskulark6318
@nickskulark6318 Ай бұрын
It would be so cool to get that schematic with the small parts
@JoseAntNS
@JoseAntNS Ай бұрын
The imperial system is friendly as always. Very nice video.
@larry3064
@larry3064 Ай бұрын
Very well done
@bboomer7th
@bboomer7th Ай бұрын
Good explanatory video. Thanks.
@tommyj7087
@tommyj7087 Ай бұрын
Awesome project. Thanks for sharing the wealth! I learned a lot as a newbie.
@RobertKohut
@RobertKohut Ай бұрын
CNC stuff is nice, but this is the stuff I enjoy watching most.... :-)
@bulletproofpepper2
@bulletproofpepper2 Ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing.
@robertjospeh1097
@robertjospeh1097 Ай бұрын
Great job Adam!!!
@a.bakker64
@a.bakker64 Ай бұрын
17:00 nice split screen👌🏻
@ljackson8220
@ljackson8220 Ай бұрын
Nice work
@george-b3i-d2d
@george-b3i-d2d Ай бұрын
my son in law was working at a shop in New Mexico where they had a 48 X 16ish Lodge and Shipley, that thing was BIG!
@CothranMike
@CothranMike Ай бұрын
That is a 4 foot swing, 16 foot between centers right?
@george-b3i-d2d
@george-b3i-d2d Ай бұрын
@@CothranMike yep
@CothranMike
@CothranMike Ай бұрын
@@george-b3i-d2d Large & Shapely indeed!
@buddynewman8949
@buddynewman8949 Ай бұрын
excellent work
@w.kentcarneal6998
@w.kentcarneal6998 Ай бұрын
Nice job sir. The part looks great and will certainly do the job. Also, great work on the video production. I always enjoy the close up stills too. Thanks!!
@sylvainrichard1577
@sylvainrichard1577 Ай бұрын
that is what we call....enlarging your knowledges
@Ervan-l9v
@Ervan-l9v Ай бұрын
Nice work! Love your assortment of tooling.
@martineastburn3679
@martineastburn3679 Ай бұрын
I rather think the slot next to the nut for the dial to slide on - is to relieve oil and scum from the lathe that might get on - and the dial hole pushes it. Allows for a tight fit on the nut.
@DealerLoot1
@DealerLoot1 Ай бұрын
I love your videos and making it so so educational for us patzers! Thank you!
@hughobrien4139
@hughobrien4139 Ай бұрын
Nice work! Learned something new yet again.
@jackpledger8118
@jackpledger8118 Ай бұрын
Once you had the drawing in Fusion 360 it is just a couple of more processes in manufacturing to convert to G code and use the CNC lathe.
@ericsandberg3167
@ericsandberg3167 Ай бұрын
I thought the same thing....knock one out on the Milltronics just to compare.
@CothranMike
@CothranMike Ай бұрын
@@ericsandberg3167 ...and the tools need to be set up if the ones in the turret are not correct for the job, and then there is the trial or air cuts to prove the g code, some tweaks here and there, another proof pass and tada a part! Been there done that, like the manual machining better for all that. And if he didn't have to setup the cameras for specific shots, edit and/or reshoot, place titles within the flow of the video... come on, I like what he does, the way he does it, how and why he does what and when he does what he does, don't you? He is the cameraman, the editor, the director, the stunt man, the craft services person, the best boy, the grip... too many jobs to list, and for what? Just so we can sit, watch, comment and clap. I don't hear any claping from y'all. Now, what do you all have to say to that?
@ericsandberg3167
@ericsandberg3167 Ай бұрын
@@CothranMike I enjoy all of Adam's vids and can relate to them because I do both manual and CNC in my shop. I made the initial comment because he had already built the model in F360 and made the drawing as well, so a few more steps and he could bang one out on the Milltronics for comparison and as another learning exercise as well as more content on the CNC side that he is doing fantastic at.
@CothranMike
@CothranMike Ай бұрын
@@ericsandberg3167 thank you, and I apologize for my snappy tone. My cats are being a bit creative in pestering me while I'm reading and commenting today, and I see comments which some folks are making and they set off a trigger, frankly, lack of editing in the comment, and I have read comments from this poster before which had clarity far above what he showed, again, thanks for your comment and again I apologize.
@CothranMike
@CothranMike Ай бұрын
@@ericsandberg3167 Good Idea, let's see that.
@tysonpurves7220
@tysonpurves7220 Ай бұрын
For my own learning what calculations or rule of thumb for depth and width of thread relief and also radius.
@mftmachining
@mftmachining Ай бұрын
Adam, why don´t you use a DCMT cutter? You would not run permanently into clearence issues with your live centers.
@elchuco00
@elchuco00 Ай бұрын
Flawless execution! Cool little job showing different dimension targets. Nice job homie!👍
@1joe4432
@1joe4432 Ай бұрын
Awesome video
@bertppichon2684
@bertppichon2684 Ай бұрын
Very good video!!!
@garagewizzard
@garagewizzard Ай бұрын
Pretty cool work Mr Booth 🎉
@maynordiaz5408
@maynordiaz5408 Ай бұрын
Amazing work 🙌
@pauliepatches
@pauliepatches Ай бұрын
It's amazing how with a few hours and a couple tool swaps you have a part that would take months if it were even possible to find one.
@cornnatron3030
@cornnatron3030 Ай бұрын
months ?? a ordinary bolt or all thread would have sufficed to use it to make one on the lathe its for . its just a stand of with a bose to rotate on when not in use to safe wear on the gear. the bose is to safe wear on the rotating . so if you dont rotate it cause its in use during that one job you could just bolt it on noting critical aslong as the gear is in nice contact with the leadscrew and when threading you start on the right numbers and if unsure what numbers use always the same. or dont disengage the halfnut 😉
@CothranMike
@CothranMike Ай бұрын
@@cornnatron3030 two different thread pitches on each end of the all thread? amazing, next you'll be telling me a chunk of pipe works as a standoff. What about the nut and jam nut needed to screw this into the saddle body, and the two wrenches needed to tighten them. Come on, this is a functional part mirror made to order just as the sample, what is wrong with that? Oh, never mind, I see you were commenting on the person could be able to make his own part with a piece of all thread in this pinch. Gotcha, yes, it would be possible in fact to do this after you turn down the thread journal for the 3/8 dia and use a die for it as well, then you could do sorta what you indicated. Sorry, you just hit one of my triggers with your ill considered typos, lack of thought and no editing on your re-read of what you typed as your comment. PLease, do better, you can!
@cornnatron3030
@cornnatron3030 Ай бұрын
@@CothranMike well i speak and write 6 languages and english isnt my native tong and typos is the last thing im concerned about in a comment section. and i aint saying it should be the finished part its just so he can temporarily mount it so he could use it to do single point threading . to make the simple part that it is . would have been a nice and simple project to get familiar with his machine. learning and figuring out such things is part of being a machinist . cant always ask someone else what you need to make as setup to make a certain part ,you got to figure that out yourself. how long has adam been doing it and even he is still learning and figuring out such things.
@nardaoeletronica
@nardaoeletronica Ай бұрын
Excellent job.
@minigpracing3068
@minigpracing3068 Ай бұрын
Is it worth sending a PDF of that drawing to Keith at Vintage Machine to put in his archives to help "the next guy" that might need the same part? Eventually alk these old machines are going to need parts built from scratch or repaired to nominal.
@arlynsmith9196
@arlynsmith9196 Ай бұрын
Loved this!
@boriskolnestrov9957
@boriskolnestrov9957 Ай бұрын
God bless you all Helene din't touch you👍
@santiagocubideszamora8691
@santiagocubideszamora8691 Ай бұрын
Thanks!
@rodneywroten2994
@rodneywroten2994 Ай бұрын
Nicely done Adam. Sorry been in rehab for two and a half months, trying to catch up
@williamsquires3070
@williamsquires3070 Ай бұрын
Hi Adam. I hope you and your family are okay after the hurricane blew through Florida. 😊
@charlieromeo7663
@charlieromeo7663 Ай бұрын
Nice job!
@RustyInventions-wz6ir
@RustyInventions-wz6ir Ай бұрын
Very nice work sir
@rcorran12
@rcorran12 Ай бұрын
Great Video Adam, Just wondered why you threaded it with single point threading rather than using a die? Maybe just for our edification I suppose and you already had it in the lathe but surely threading the ends with a die as the final step would have been quicker and more accurate?
@r2db
@r2db Ай бұрын
A die will not cut the full thread depth all the way to the thread relief groove. There will be some degree of taper in the threads, which unless you do some sketchy things will not allow the nut to fully seat. Is it quicker? Sure. Is it "more accurate" when considering machinist standards? Absolutely not. For a hobbyist, using a die would likely be fine. For a professional, who normally is measuring things to 0.001" or even 0.0001", it would be an insult to their profession.
@berniejanssen2863
@berniejanssen2863 Ай бұрын
When you were cutting and machining the heavy tubing for the weld shop, did they figure out why his bandsaw blade was snapping. I'm guessing that he was using the wrong blade set. You need the teeth further apart when cutting thicker materials. We had the same type of bandsaw where I used to work. We never noticed the supplier sent us a different blade that we usually ordered. The teeth were too close together and the steel had no room between the teeth before they exited the cut and would snap off the teeth. They would work fine on thinner materials.
@胡柏先生
@胡柏先生 Ай бұрын
6:14 Why don’t used the TN or VN inserts? That can solve this problem .
@MrJohnnaz
@MrJohnnaz Ай бұрын
Those triangle inserts will fit right in next to a live center.
@Xris-FJ1200
@Xris-FJ1200 Ай бұрын
Salut Adam merci pour cette nouvelle video. Il y a 1 mois, j'ai réalisé une pièce qui ressemble beaucoup à celle-ci. C'est une vis de 10 (pas métrique) d'un côté et qui fait axe de l'autre, elle tient le sélecteur de vitesses de ma moto. A l'origine, elle possède un six pans creux côté sélecteur, ce n'est pas simple à réaliser. J'ai donc fait une pièce qui possède un six pans de 17 mm au milieu comme celle que tu viens de réaliser. Les cotes sont assez précises chez yamaha, la partie axe du sélecteur doit faire 11;98 mm (!) et l'autre côté est à 1/10 mm près car le côté vis passe dans un sielnt-block dont le diamètre est exactement 10 mm.... J'ay suis arrivé et je n'ai plus de jeu avec mon sélecteur. Mais, j'ai rencontré le même problème pour faire le pas de vis avec la pointe du tour et la taille des outils. C'est vrai que j'avais coupé trop juste en longueur ma pièce avant usinage. Pour résoudre ce problème, j'ai trouvé une petite ralonge intéressante montée dans le mandrin de la poupée. J'ai pris un centreur de taraud télescopique qui possède une pointe fine de 4 mm de diamètre. J'avais ainsi assez de place pour ramener l'outil à fileter au départ. J'ai fait plusieurs pices, les suivantes je les ai coupées plus longues et j'ai coupé le bout à la fn de l'usinage. Mais j'ai rencontré ce problème plusieurs fois, surtout quand on ne dispose que d'un seul morceau de fer tout juste de la bonne longueur ! Peut-être existe-t-il des pointes fones encore plus longues ? Amitiés de FrancXris
@hennievangalen3789
@hennievangalen3789 8 сағат бұрын
Could use a hear treatment?
@kenshoemaker
@kenshoemaker Ай бұрын
I'm not a machinist. Please share why you turned the small diameter first. Would the outcome have been any faster if you had turned the larger diameter first? Also, if you scale the drawing to 2x, it will still fit on the page and eliminate the need for extra drawings. The larger size allows for dimensioning without the clutter.
@zambootookabooky3725
@zambootookabooky3725 Ай бұрын
The order of operations allows for a more rigid part during the single point threading. If it were all taken down to the smaller diameter, there could be more part deflexion.
@kenshoemaker
@kenshoemaker Ай бұрын
@@zambootookabooky3725 I fully understand what you mean. However, I was thinking that if he turned the large diameter first, the amount of removed material would speed up the removal of the portion where the threads are. The change in material thickness for the larger diameter seems inconsequential for this part, and deflection wouldn't be an issue. Again, I'm an industrial engineer and not a machinist. Saving time means increased profit. Thanks for your insight.
@clarenceburton9654
@clarenceburton9654 Ай бұрын
Awesome 👏
@joeyg8172
@joeyg8172 Ай бұрын
Is that a Walter threading/grooving tool? Also the 431 inserts did good without the live center on the 1st turn.
@DJ-yp4kc
@DJ-yp4kc Ай бұрын
Great Job...........now CNC it just for practice
@marley589
@marley589 Ай бұрын
Is the drawing first or third angle projection?
@kennethpalmer1909
@kennethpalmer1909 Ай бұрын
I would like to know the thinking behind the two different threads on the part?
@royreynolds108
@royreynolds108 Ай бұрын
The threads are original to the machine the part goes on.
@Grandpa600
@Grandpa600 Ай бұрын
Adam, as a matter of interest, do you regularly 'Zero' or Calibrate your most used micrometers, gauges etc. yourself, or do you use outside Services?
@RobertKohut
@RobertKohut Ай бұрын
Nice!! 🙂
@kevinhewitt1428
@kevinhewitt1428 Ай бұрын
The hobby machinist issue. You need a lathe to fix a lathe.
@r2db
@r2db Ай бұрын
Correct. You need a lathe to build a lathe. The nice thing for the hobbyist is that you can often use a smaller and less precise lathe to build a bigger/ more precise lathe. Also, many different tools in the hobbyist shop can be used as improvised lathes if you only have one "real lathe" and have a problem.
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