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The Shop Incorporated WeBurnForALiving
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 23 ก.พ. 2014
WeBurnForALiving.com Line boring, bore welding, machining, fabrication and welding.
WeBurnForALiving I love to make things, and also to fix things. I'm stubborn and it can be helpful. Welcome to The Shop Incorporated!
WeBurnForALiving I love to make things, and also to fix things. I'm stubborn and it can be helpful. Welcome to The Shop Incorporated!
Plasma cutting top soil screening machine
Mobile job cutting out rotted side panels for the trommel area and welded in new panels. Thought I captured the welding, sorry folks! #happynewyear2023
มุมมอง: 346
วีดีโอ
Cushman Trackster 'mini ripsaw' goes everywhere I want it to, even in black dirt!
มุมมอง 251ปีที่แล้ว
Next stop, bring the trackster home to see if she can contend with the driveway!
Cushman Trackster 'mini ripsaw' to plow the driveway
มุมมอง 209ปีที่แล้ว
Cushman Trackster 'mini ripsaw' to plow the driveway
Moving millings with my mini dump truck and mini excavator
มุมมอง 226ปีที่แล้ว
Moving millings with my mini dump truck and mini excavator
Machining 316L stainless steel on the lathe and Bridgeport mill
มุมมอง 2842 ปีที่แล้ว
Machining 316L stainless steel on the lathe and Bridgeport mill
6061 Aluminum welding 3" nipple to custom machined flange
มุมมอง 292 ปีที่แล้ว
6061 Aluminum welding 3" nipple to custom machined flange
Installing and tensioning wire on industrial clay cutter
มุมมอง 402 ปีที่แล้ว
Installing and tensioning wire on industrial clay cutter
Repairing a Komatsu skid steer quick attach
มุมมอง 352 ปีที่แล้ว
Repairing a Komatsu skid steer quick attach
Komatsu 228 bucket and digger stick line boring and bore welding repair
มุมมอง 532 ปีที่แล้ว
Komatsu 228 bucket and digger stick line boring and bore welding repair
How to measure external threads quickly and easily
มุมมอง 382 ปีที่แล้ว
How to measure external threads quickly and easily
Best Air Tool Coupler! Coil Hose Pneumatics 5 in 1
มุมมอง 972 ปีที่แล้ว
Best Air Tool Coupler! Coil Hose Pneumatics 5 in 1
Volvo Wheel Loader steering repair weld
มุมมอง 6912 ปีที่แล้ว
Volvo Wheel Loader steering repair weld
Making a bench mount setup for my bore welder
มุมมอง 1312 ปีที่แล้ว
Making a bench mount setup for my bore welder
Avalanche snow push box getting 3/4" ar400 welded onto both heels
มุมมอง 362 ปีที่แล้ว
Avalanche snow push box getting 3/4" ar400 welded onto both heels
Time lapse welding uphill 7018, pictures at the end!
มุมมอง 132 ปีที่แล้ว
Time lapse welding uphill 7018, pictures at the end!
Carbon Arc Gouging horizontal grinder infeed sprocket replacement
มุมมอง 782 ปีที่แล้ว
Carbon Arc Gouging horizontal grinder infeed sprocket replacement
Vertical uphill 7018 welding cordking firewood processor
มุมมอง 382 ปีที่แล้ว
Vertical uphill 7018 welding cordking firewood processor
How precise is this methode in comparison to acetylene/oxygene cutting torch
Three holes at once? Naughty boy
What amp are u set on?
Was just thinking would a weight on the bar dampen the vibration then he put on the stilson, nice 1👍
Is that a custom turbo setup or from another vehicle?
Cutting torch works great and you don’t get the sharp edges. However I understand unless your a diy metal worker or know someone with access to a torch that this would be one of the next best ideas to keep from having sharp edges
changen dem harmonics baybe
👍👍
Ill try this on the mill 🫠
Got a link by a chance? I need one of these for 1” O.D. Tubing.
Was it a pain to tune since it’s carbureted?
Awful music oh my goodness
Gonna have to give it a try
It's acting as a tuned mass damper/harmonic absorber. It's taking up the vibration in the boring bar. Same principle is used in car chassis/exhausts/pullies, power transmission lines, buildings, etc. Very neat, works well. 👌🏻
😜 "Promo SM"
Use thicker & heavy boring bar.
Not always feasible. It takes time for things to show up and sometimes new tooling isn't in the budget, especially as a hobbyist.
Agreed. Even as a shop, when a rush job comes in you don't have the opportunity to get something. You have to be able to work with the tools you have to get the job done
I never thought about using this method .😅 I've strapped heavy material on the bars before... messed with cutter geometry, speeds and feeds but never a pipe wrench on the back side. Well played good sir, well played.
Give it a shot and let me know what you think! I also use rare earth magnets because the magnetic field breaks the resonance
@@weburnforaliving I'll definitely give it a try! Thanks for sharing.
Why fold the tabs down instead of cutting a continuous circle?
It's the most reassuring method to prevent someone from getting cut. Cutting close to the edge and trying to remove a sharp edge from thin sheetmetal is a losing battle compared to this method
Why all the extra work. They make a can opener for them
Use the tools you have to do what you need. Can't make money buying tools you can't justify price on!
@@weburnforaliving ah so you spent all your money on the snap-on truck...... my boss payed 80 bucks and has had them for years
@@weburnforaliving yep just looked em up u-line has em 79.99
@@mikemitchell9157 already had the tools so it cost me no money. Snap on chisel bits have a lifetime warranty so why would I buy anything else
@@mikemitchell9157 so go buy it!
Anyone wanna play, Name That Tune?
What's your guess?
Top speed Cargo capacity
call HVNY Imports in Goshen NY, they sell mini trucks. I just fabricated the Turbo
Funny, mini ripsaw!?
If you look up pictures of a trackster with no cab, or windscreen they really do! :)
@@weburnforaliving I know what mini ripsaw should look like and the trackster is not it..
@@jeffnations6649 no imagination lol
I like the crochet hook for pulling chips. Smart.
Thanks. Got it from @octaneworkholding
Very neatly done! I hadn't thought about thermally conductive aluminum as a straight edge, but that makes a lot of sense. ^_^ You always teach me something, in these videos. Thank you. Happy New Year!
Just using it for the weight properties, the straightness isn't critical!
👍👍
Hum, adding a lever arm to offset the axial harmonic. Not just a machinist, perhaps Jedi?
That was very cool. Good Video........
Nice work.
I found your channel a on a short. So I checked you out. I just subscribed. Good work. I have a channel also, I mainly do engine machining. Take care, Ed.
Nice work. Have a good day.
This is the stupide………. Wait, what do you mean it works…. Never mind
Cute cuts. I peel 0.600” off the diameter per rough pass. Old SIRCO PA-24x80 Manual lathe. Ohh, have to watch this with the volume off, ffs crap music.
This was a great video! Fascinating from start to finish (to the point where having to pause to take a phone call in the middle actively annoyed me), and I feel like I just got a condensed course in practical milling. Personally, I found the commentary highly informative. It pointed out details that I had not noticed (golden color of offcuts), introduced concepts that make a lot of sense (send heat away with the offcuts, not into the piece itself, sort of like sweating for metal; chatter on a curved surface is an end mill seating itself, so cut the channel slowly), clarified terminology that gets tossed around on the assumption that everyone understands it (pecking; collette vs. chuck; 300 stainless vs. carbon), and supplied some of the chemistry behind "x material does y" and "doing z has some risks." Additionally, I appreciated your explanations of things going on out of the range of the camera, such as standing on the brake pedal or reaching for a particular lever or block that does something specific to your machining set-up. This video alone makes appreciating the others fully exponentially easier. Thank you for taking the time and making the effort to create this. It's going into my permanently saved videos.
@k. Jespersen thanks, really appreciate the feedback. I want people to get a lot of information from me, and I like hearing that it wasn't confusing!
That's looking beautiful. Love the evenness of the ...poofs? Not sure what to call them.
Haha I don't know? Dab, ripple, bumpity do?
That's pretty cool. Would never have thought of needing so many to be cut in such a uniform manner at once, so now I'm curious: is there a pottery school or large batch art studio in your area that needed this?
I believe it's just to resell
Cool Bruh!!!!!!
Thank you for explaining what was going on and why, both before and during the process. I understand what I saw so much better, because of that. Your discussion of backing off the thread taps was particularly illuminating. I'd never have suspected the tightening offcut coil to be capable of such an opposing force, but it makes a great deal of sense upon consideration. Breaking that would become essential for any number of materials. Thank you for explaining it. Possibly a silly question, but the curiosity built through the video: what happens to the paste? Does it burn up? Does it have a reaction with the metal and become dust? Does it just stay in the bore and coat the threads? It never seemed to come out.
Thanks! Glad you understood it better. Appreciate the feedback
We need that done to ours!!!
Bring it on by! :)
That is awesome definitely beats any torch I’ve used or see
Thanks!
good stuff! ill be subscribing
Thank you!!
Definitely enjoying both the time-lapse and the close-up portions. The cutting and editing is definitely good. It would be nice to see some of the machines and parts you weld in use after your work, if possible. It's easy to see the necessity of the work you're doing, but a little difficult to visualize how the items you build and repair work in the larger context. (But, then, I don't get to see these sorts of machines, usually. Maybe your other viewers see them all the time and the clips I propose aren't that necessary.)
Good thinking! Thanks, I like that idea
That made a lot of sense. I came into the video knowing nothing about such a procedure, and, thanks to you, came out of it with a good understanding of what/why/how. Very cool. When the nuts that use the tube for attachment stripped it out like that, were they likely to have been damaged, too?
Glad that I was able to help you understand this! I love teaching and really enjoy feedback like this
So THAT'S how those work! Thank you, you've just demystified some items I inherited from a jumbled tool chest. Those will now be tremendously useful.
They are so useful, even if it's just for replacing rusted or stripped hardware!
@@weburnforaliving No kidding! Usually, I have to take the broken example of whatever to the hardware store and hold it up to things until I find what looks like a match. Once I get the labels put back on these gauges, it will be so nice to walk into the DIY and just open one drawer.
That was a great video! Thanks for including the explanations about your thought process and actions. Especially liked the "test"-- was wondering if I'd missed something, until you clarified. ^_^ Looks like a solid repair. Did it go through its paces well?
Still holding up well!
It takes MOXIE to weld in those sorts of confines. But kudos to you, from those vantages it looked like the welds ended up twice as strong or stronger than the original material ever was!
Thanks! Welds like this can be very interesting to say the least!
Awesomeeeee
Didn't even know these couplers existed, great find
They are awesome, right?!
Need more of this, keep up the good work
Thanks Brian! Much appreciated!
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Www.WeBurnForALiving.com
nice work
Thank you Mark!
best video!!!!! keep it up
Can't wait to do another!