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[Music] hey guys welcome back another week of S&S so this week I've got a couple of really nice viewer gifts that I want to share with you some really cool stuff that's come in and I always like shared those really cool interesting gifts with you so we're gonna check those out I've also got some more footage finishing out the new vid more cabinet you know we did some I did some organization with the milling cutters so it took a little footage of that and I'll share that with you and I've also got a small job that we're gonna attempt for this week I've got a small part with a broken stud inside of it so we're gonna see if we can get that out and hopefully that's not going to be too much of an issue and it's been a pretty interesting week this is the week that there was a machine shop auction here locally that I got to attend and I'm gonna have a separate video just on that auction that should be coming out pretty soon that I'll share with you too you know so you can see what all was there and you know the tools and machines and if I was able to pick up anything or not so really looking forward to sharing that with you so I think that's gonna be about it so let's go ahead and jump to it okay so check this out man my buddy Jason over fire ball tools sent me this and what we got this is a big tool bit and this one is made over in Sweden and let's see so it's for ger stuff and maybe that's how you pronounce that for ger stuff and the grade is WK e for now I just did a quick Google search on that one right there and found a couple of articles about that and I'm still researching to figure out what the exact grade is but I'm sure I'm gonna have a bunch of folks that'll tell me what it is when I looked it up it said it was super high speed so I do I do not think this is uh in the cobalt family I believe it may be equivalent to an m4 or just one of the you know high speed steel grades but this was something that he picked up and he got one for himself and he got one for me too and the size of this is it's a one-inch wide it's well I'm gonna say it's one inch dick two and a half inches wide is the width there and then what's so seven and a half inches long total and the reason why he got this is because you know Jason recently got his big 36 inch metal shaper which is just totally awesome and he threw out the idea there me and him having some kind of shape off video to where we can we can play around with some you know large depth cuts and so that's why he picked up these tool bits he thought that this would be a better tool to use you know you've got the you got more rigidity there with this wider tool bit like that versus say just a square one inch to a bit so that's the idea behind that is we're both gonna grind up a tool bit to do some cutting and I got that big piece of steel that I showed you in the last episode that I got from Ruud welding and that's that's one of the pieces that I wanted to use whenever we get to where we can play around and make these these heavy cuts so we we both got some pictures in our books that show a depth of cut of two inches and I don't know if I'm gonna be able to try a two inch cut or if I'm gonna attempt it to it's cut but we definitely want to try to push the limit of the shapers and see what they'll do so I know Jason's wanting to try it out on his Cincinnati as well so we'll give it a try on the G&E and see what kind of chip we can we can take with that thing so Jason thank you very much for the tool bit this thing is totally awesome love having these big pieces of high-speed steel in the shop all right so here's our next viewer gift of the week and this is something really really cool right here and we also have this threading tool right here as well and this is a Pratt and Whitney and this is one of those tools that are ground for threading there it's got the 30 degree angle or 60 degree included angle there you clamp this in your tool post and you have an insert there that's readily available for threading you just grind the tops off whenever you burn the edge up there and so these two tools given to me by Hugh freighter and he's from the UK and he also had this Eclipse mag base its indicator holder and this is what's really really nice right here so that's a Eclipse is made over in the UK and they make really really nice stuff so this is one of those real heavy-duty magnetic bases right here and pull it out of the box there so you can see it you've got another arm goes that work goes there with it so big heavy mag base there and you got this arm that you can you put that one in right there so you attach your indicator down there to the end and you could snug it up and one of the one of the really cool features about this guy right here is that you have a fine adjust this knob right there it actually moves it whenever you turn that so you get a little bit of fine movement in this rod here so whenever you're doing some whenever you're setting up the indicator for some inspection you know you've got some easy easy fine adjustment right there you can make with that guy to get your indicator set to where you want just seems to be a very high quality component there it says made in Sheffield England nice strong magnet I did stick it to the table and it's got a strong pull to it so it's definitely a really good magnet and really nice workmanship right there it reminds me I've got another one like this that's that's bigger than this it's got the big solid steel base that's made by brown and sharp and it's a similar build fashion on here so really really nice tool Huw I really appreciate it and I would like to do a little bit of polishing on this thing and getting it get it kind of cleaned up there's just a very minor amount of surface rust on it right there I'd like to really get this thing shining and make it look nice and hopefully we'll show it on the channel one day being being put to use on some jobs around here maybe we can use it on these the surface plate that's what he was suggesting in his letter was that maybe this could be a good one to use our own surface plate it's nice and heavy and you got some rigidity there to it so do you thank you very much also the the thread and tool I was going to mention almost forgot this thing is it says it's stamp 30 Whitworth it's originally ground for a 60-degree V thread but I know it's hard to see it but if you look on the tip it's actually been reground for a Whitworth thread I don't know if we can get in there if you can see it or not you see that edge so it's been relieved to what I believe is a 30 Whitworth thread and Whitworth is a 55 55 degree included angles so I'm kind of kind of thinking that's what that tool was was ground for was the Whitworth threads there and you could easily regrind that if you wanted to you can set that up in a surface grinder and take that edge down take both of them down so that you've got a a 60-degree cutter again but just the neat tool thanks you I appreciate it recently I had shown these tags right here I had my friend Tom Utley make these up for me these are going to be for the 10 fixture plate so I'm going to be making and I wanted to have a tag on there that had the booth machine shop and and we could put a serial number and a date on there and I thought that would be a nice finishing touch there for these so what I what I did not show whenever I had seared these before was some more tag work that tom has made up for me so we got these guys right here all right so I've got a Norton multi oil stone that I had found at the at a local antique store and that that all stone that's the part number is I am three one three it's the try stone so you got your you're a fine medium and coarse stones in there and it's one of the old school ones man it's a cast iron base with a steel lid nice and heavy and so I had asked Tom if he would help me recreate these tax for that thing because it's just you see how beautiful it is and Tom did such a wonderful job recreating this art you know he spent a lot of time in in the the CAD software to draw this up I believe he uses fusion 360 and he goes in there and he makes the art and then he does the the acid etch to make those tags so anyway I wanted to share these because they they just looked so nice this was a this was an extra one that he had made up to go on the other side you know the a-bomb seventy-nine 2019 this one goes on one edge and this is originally what was on the front of the the multi oil stone and this goes on the top the lid there so we do still have to drill our holes in there for the for the drive screws but I just wanted to mention this again because tom has recently started this this side business has turned into an actual business so he's started up a business where he's taking orders from other people on this and it's called Vaughn industrial comm I'll have a link up there in the video and one in the video description you can click on so if you have some restoration work you're doing and you'd like some help recreating some machinery tags of any kind you can get with Tom and he can help you recreate those and please be mindful that that doing this type of work is just as labor-intensive as it is to do any kind of work out in the shop he spends a lot of time creating this art on the computer and then having to do the the etch and then the powder coating and polish so it's definitely not something that is a it's not a cheap serve to do but you see the outcome of what this stuff looks like whenever he's done with it he just does a beautiful job on these tags so I just wanted to help him out you know he's trying to get his little side business going and and he's been getting in several orders I know Keith Rucker he he showed him in a video here recently and Keith did a good video explaining how Tom makes these tags you know using the the acid etch method on there and how he creates the art on the computer so you give Tom a send him an email if you've got some work for him that you'd like him to help you with all right and Tom I really appreciate all the help that you have been giving me around here man I really appreciate it been getting my shuffling done got the green cabinet on the other side of the wall over there and then got this cleaned up so I'm getting ready to put the new vid more right here so let's get to it I'll just gonna scrap it and slide it in from there you guys don't own an appliance dolly let me tell you this thing is worth its price and I think you can buy meant like Harbor Freight also this is one that belonged to my dad and my granddad we've had it as long as I could remember we've always had this appliance dolly it's got this strap that you pull around something and cinch it up and I have used this thing probably hundreds of times to move things like this you know any time you got to move a washer or dryer refrigerator you cannot beat having one of the finest dollies I mean you don't use it every day but I'm telling you when you need one you're gonna be glad that you have one so get your eyes out for one these things in pick one up because do you want for sale definitely worked out he was actually using this thing for sand paper storage this is a good idea and it's good for that it's actually two piece down in there I'm gonna save it I can get rid of it I might use it for the same thing I just didn't want it in this spot right here so this shelf right here you can position anywhere inside there that you want I thought maybe it was originally designed to slide out but it's not it's big catches and stays in there so we'll be able to take our 50 taper tooling manner just like that pretty cool driver I wanted to get close to that socket right there I was hoping maybe I could stack both of these together on this side but I was short about six inches so I'm gonna probably try to probably gonna try to get this thing up to where I can get the PAL jack under it and then maybe be able to position it down here right next to this cabinet and once I do I'll have it blocked up so that I can always get underneath it with the pallet jack I've been spending quite a bit of time working on these vignettes right here I'm making some pretty good headway so I haven't really shown you this yet so as I said I wanted to use it for milling storage so we've got most of my 50 taper milling tooling in here as well as all of the insert face Mills that I have and some of the other high speed steel face Mills we've got our arbors in here or college for the knt the board head so real happy with being able to utilize this for this right here and I got I got more plans and I'm getting ready to start working on for the drawers down here below I want to use the lower storage for milling cutters so I've got two boxes over there that I've been you know stacking up with all of my milling cutters that either already have or all the milling cutters that have been given to me by other people you know viewers of the channel so I want to start putting those in there but I'm going to do something with the drawers there so something else that I've decided to do is these arbors for the milling machine the long arbors I want to make a shelf that's going to bolt to the side of this cabinet right here that those will hang on and those will actually kind of free up some space in this cabinet and it's actually a better way to store those hang them down so that there's not pressure on the arbors all the time when I when we were at the old shop we had an old brown and short horizontal mill down there and it had several arbors and it had several of the 50 taper holders there and I had my uncle help me we made some wooden shells for the wall and we we the board some holes in it for the 50 tapers and for the milling arbors we just milled a notch in there so that we could just hang those on the wall so that's what I want to do on the side of this cabinet right here and I have this piece of angle iron that I had found when it was out when I was out cleaning the shed up and this will make a perfect shelf to hang those arbors so a plan on getting it cleaned up and we'll set it up in the middle of machine and then we'll mill us some notches in here and in drill this couple holes so that we can bolt it on to the side of this cabinet right here and have a good way to store the long arbors for the mill so for the drawers I'm gonna start using these for all of my milling cutters you know the horizontal milling cutters and what I decided I wanted to do I've always liked carpets as a as a drawer liner so I went down here lows this morning I was going to get him to cut me a strip of carpet I didn't realize that they only cut it you know to the foot they don't cut to exact measurements so I wanted them to cut it 25 inches wide to fit these drawers right here and they just they don't do that so I ended up looking around and they had this box that's called carpet tile and these are already cut to 24 by 24 so they fit in they fit in the drawer pretty good but they got a little bit of side-to-side room but I don't think that's really going to hurt anything there so come with 15 of them which is plenty for both this cabinet here and the one next to it right there so I'm getting ready to just put all those in there these things come with the peel and stick bottom so you can use that if you want but I don't think that I'm gonna utilize that I just wanted a carpet so that it helps protect the sharp ground edges of the milling cutters and help keep them from sliding around so that's what we're going to do we're going to line all these with he's a carpet and I'm gonna pull the milling cutters out we're gonna start going through them and any of the ones that are kind of dirty and rusty I'm going to start doing a vapid us clean up on those as well well I got all the cutters put away most of my still got a couple soaking I'm much more happy with how I've got these things set up now then having them all just stacked up in a boxes this is a these are tough to kind of get perfectly organized just just by design you know how they're how they are my my preferred way was the way my dad had them he had a big old piece of plywood nailed on the wall with nails in it and he had all these hanging on the wall there that's a good way to do it if you got the wall space I just don't have the wall space here but I've got them stacked in size right here so that I'll know when I come over you know if I'm looking for a 1/8 cutter these are my 1/8 cutters back here all the way down to the smallest you know 1/16 sizes 7/32 3/16 quarter 5/16 3/8 at least they're all together by width of cutter and then I can go through the to find you know what diameter I could use or you know arbor hole size so you know we got 7/16 here we got 1/2 inch there I did find this one I didn't realize I had as a twelve millimeter cutter so that one was pretty cool it's made in England by it says Clarkson high-speed steel so that was pretty cool right there I just put it with the half-inch and you know I'll be able to see that so we've got our 9/16 5/8 and 3/4 cutters over here on this side the next drawer down so I've got the biggest cutter here these are all one inch and then we have a couple of 7/8 and an inch and a quarter and then this is an inch and a half so these are all the biggest cutters that I have right there and then on this side what I've done I had a whole stack of cutters all these guys right here that are like non-standard widths just oddball different sizes and so I put them all together in stack and they're all right here and then these are all radius cutters you know different size radius right there we've got some some big radius cutters so we've just got those all together right here if I need that there's also some cutters that people have gone and ground the corners so we have actually have like corner radiuses on them so I have them all right here together so at least I have them all segregated in their unique spots that I can go to I've got just know have to empty drawers I have more plans for some more storage and on the bottom them down here this is where I put all of my other big mil tooling like all these face mills these are things that I probably won't use and eventually have to get rid of some of this stuff but at least I've got it in one spot instead of in different locations around the shop and also the shell mills that I've been cleaning up right there I've got more to do they're gonna go in here as well this is a big success face mill right here one of my local viewers give me that couple years ago and more big high speed steel face mills right here this is one that I had actually I had it we ground this is a four inch and I keep it in this box because it's never been used but it's been a it's been a few years since I had a ground but it was it was reground and I'm just waiting for the the right job to put that one to work that's another these are roughing geo mills down there this is this is one that a viewer had give me I think I said that that's an ass I've never done anything with it then I put it down there so I'm really liking this cabinet right here so this is gonna be you know mostly all milling machine store driving putters and I'm gonna start putting in one of these drawers I've got a lot of big in mills I've got a bunch them over here in this cabinet but I want to put all the big in mills over here all of the large diameter stuff you know likes a inch and a quarter up to two inch and put them in here so that's where we're at on the bid Mar storage I think I showed you in here already but I'm gonna work on the shelf that I want to build to bolt onto the side of this that's gonna be where I hang the the long arbors on and the other now this would just be some more storage for what you see in there you know in the holders and things like that we got our face Mills the ones that I'll be using more of right right up top and I'm loving it I'm liking it so there you go this is a lug nut belongs to a friend of mine and it's got a stud that's broke inside of there this was done at one of those places that you know you go to have your tires fixed and brakes put on your car and so we don't know if it was over torqued or what happened but it did break off inside there and he asked me if I could try to get it out of there not because you can't replace this but whenever you replace one of these you have to buy an entire set so he asked if it would be worth messing with and I thought it would be fun to maybe try to get this out of there it is it's a 14 millimeter stud 1.5 is the pitch there it's got a stamp right on the side so I appreciate them for letting me know what size it is so it may be I don't know if it's cross threaded I don't think it's bottomed out in there it may be just over torqued and stretched and then unbroken in that case it could easily come out of there I don't know but what I'm gonna do right now is just set it we're gonna put it in the vise right here and I want to use some penetrating oil and just let it soak for a while I've got other jobs I'm working on right now but we're gonna let this soak for a while and we'll come back to it later and see about trying to get this out of there so I'm going to use my CRC knocker loose and I'm just going to keep this thing filled up with some solvent and hopefully let it work down in those threads to help loosen it up maybe make it a little bit easier to back out of there if it if it does want to come out of there so we'll come back to it and go to the Machine and see if we get it out this guy's been sitting here for about six hours with the same penetrant that I sprayed on there earlier the knocker loose and I can't really tell if any of it has gone down in those threads it doesn't look like much as if it has so looks like it's pretty it's locked up pretty tight but let's go ahead and see if we can work some magic on this thing pour that out there I'm gonna see if I can convince this broken stud to come out come out of there we're gonna use this 5c collet Chuck over here in the milling machine so a 25 30 seconds collet fits this perfectly she's got a nice fit there so hopefully this thing will hold it good all you do is you push this down push this on the collet makes it squeeze and then it's got a little set screw here where you can lock it and into location okay and give that one a snug there and we should be able to indicate this OD here and get us in the center got my Center Point in there just for reference get us over there close to it and we'll put an indicator in there that looks like it's in the middle both ways there we'll use this indicator set up right here to find the center of it wrong way maybe I was going the right way I was just off I was still off quite a bit sitting those letters right there so that's about two on each side going just the opposite way of what I was wanting to go it should be within about a thousandth right there so we're gonna call it Center it's gonna be close enough for this job well I got the 3/8 collet in there we're gonna go ahead and use a 3/8 in mill to create a flat spot and then I also have this 3/8 stubby left-handed drill we're going to start with this and see if it'll do anything maybe crack it and you know unscrew it out of there well did you see that I seen it spinning which is what I was hoping that it would do so we might have this might be very easy let me get this drill in there and we'll just start with that all right let's see if we can get that stud to back out of there you got a 3/8 left-hand drill bit [Applause] look at that that's what I'm talking about well that one definitely was was nice and easy getting that out of there as I was hoping that it would I can see a few metal strands down in there so it's been working on pretty good I'm gonna run a tap down in there to clean those threads up picked up a little bit of trash in there all right it looks good to go I'll let my buddy know that it's ready and I hit you don't want to buy a whole set of lug nuts all right good deal [Applause] [Applause] [Applause] [Music] you
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Channel: Abom79
Views: 107,245
Rating: 4.956008 out of 5
Keywords: abom79, machine shop, manual machinist, broken bolt, broken bolt removal, eclips mag base, eclips precision tools, machinist tools, von industrial, machinery tags, milling machine
Id: Z1KeTPcF0h4
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 34min 12sec (2052 seconds)
Published: Sat Feb 09 2019
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