Old school machining? That's an insult to old machinists!! And...that lathe is totally blown out. The chuck is wobbling visibly. That sure must make for some precision barrel boring...
Theres' no air feed on that torch, so its not even a plasma cutter- the fact they user a reghular oxyfuel torch on a pantograph is wild. They are getting really clean edges too, albeit lots of dross on the bottom side, as expected.
as long as he doesnt finger around the direkt flame, it is not that dangerous. and he uses his pincers to get even close to the flame. the small sparks do not hurt that much if some of them hit you. the only thing maby some uv eye protection if he does look that often all day long into that flame.
Bloody hell look at the radial run out on the headstock of that lathe! Starting around 6:00, the chuck on that lathe is visibly wobbling "up and down". A 9mm bore is probably about 11mm now 🙄🤣
Helps to clear the chips out the hole😛 its a 4 jaw chuck so as long as the spindle bearing is ok they can get away with it. Needs to be reamed and rifle cut anyway.
@@kenhukushi1637 3 jaw chuck works too- you just use soft jaws, clamp them down on someting and turn the inside of them to the diameter of what you want to hold and you can correct just about any runout in the spindle- sometimes cast iron mounting plates for the chuck will warp over time (at least shitty chinese and indian ones)
@@kenhukushi1637 True, true, assuming there's not too much run out I suppose...whatever "too much" turns out to be. Just have to laugh, and be impressed, at how much can be accomplished with old equipment in a dirt floor "factory". Any OSHA employees watching these videos would have a heart attack...
i really wonder about the quality of the steel after that heat. The steel is at least red hot and I am would guess that the surfaces are burnt. It the intended gun is blow back and will use low pressure cartridges, I guess all is well.
Most of the stress is concentrated in the barrel and absorbed within the moving parts of the piece. The 1911 may run with a polymer frame havent seen anyone go to that extent though because they are just perfect with a metal frame.
@@gLocksmith. I would like to have the model 1911 set up in polymer frame, a double column mag, 9mm, made as compact as possible, crisp 4 lb trigger, and the slide designed to accept the RMR foot print. Polymer frames are easier on felt recoil and are overall lighter. I will not hold my breathe for it to happen.
These guys can copy any firearm and reproduce it with a original. We got a kid in Afghanistan that was trying to sell us 1911's and you couldn't tell a real from a copy except they all had the same serial number. True craftsmen
Yeah, allaahu akbar alright. Say that before you shoot one of these pistols...it will either jam, explode or send the bullet about 4 feet to one side of your target...🤣
Worked in a shop that had a dual head tracer mill. You machined a pattern that the follower would run against and the mill heads made the same cut. Was a thing of beauty to watch.
It's called a magnetic follower, the pattern is steel and the arm has a magnetised follower attached it, which makes it trace out the design with the cutting torch.
HK has nothing on these guys. Seriously, this has precision and craftsmanship written all over. Who needs polymer frames when you got mild steel sheets from cutting out old cargo boats? And that oxy-acetilene laser is out of this world.
I would love to have these guys make me a collector piece just to have a gun built by these guys. Ingenuity at work. What happens if society falls and you need a gun made? These guys would be in charge well after everyone else was fighting with sticks.
@@MrRossi1805 Anytime something is spelled with a kn as in knife, it is often of old norse origin from the vikings. But the internet says it is perhaps of low german origin. knack (n.) mid-14c., "a deception, trick, device," a word of uncertain origin. Perhaps from or related to a Low German word meaning "a sharp sounding blow" (compare Middle English knak, late 14c.; German knacken "to crack;" also knap) and of imitative origin. Sense of "special skill" (in some specified activity) is first recorded 1580s, if this is in fact the same word. In old slang (mid-18c. to mid-19c.) nacky meant "full of knacks; ingenious, dexterous." For pronunciation, see kn-.
So, you don't know the difference between a "laser" and an oxy acetylene torch? ...hint, the red and green gas hoses. The setup is pretty impressive, looks a lot like the "workshops" in the Kyber pass.
All of these kinds of videos just reinforce my belief that Personal Protection Equipment just encourages risky behavior. Like when I got a pair of steel toe boots, I suddenly didn't think about my feet anymore and stuff started to fall on them.
Never saw a laser that was so like a oxi acetilene pantograph cutter, would like to see the rest of the production and the final result gun
The final product looks like Elmer fudd's gun
It’s good to see Hi-Point finally stepping their game up.
@@TroubledOnePaydirt that's their new 10 mm Yeet Cannon
@@fraomedinaii2095 😂😂😂
@@TroubledOnePaydirt Burn 😂
I would love to see the remainder milling process on that slide and frame...cool!
I'm still intrigued by the fact they can do this, but haven't figured out chairs yet
Muahahahahaha
Looks like its too hot for boots and pants, which would mean burns on your legs if you sat there with a chair
@@asadodsworth131 fair point
They're not like us, Lazy Westerners. Do you see any fat on them?😁
Lmfao!
Very ingenious manufacturing process old school machining at its best ,but very efficient
Old school machining? That's an insult to old machinists!! And...that lathe is totally blown out. The chuck is wobbling visibly. That sure must make for some precision barrel boring...
Theres' no air feed on that torch, so its not even a plasma cutter- the fact they user a reghular oxyfuel torch on a pantograph is wild. They are getting really clean edges too, albeit lots of dross on the bottom side, as expected.
"safety last"
good
Yes, I thought at least a set of boiler boots and maybe a face-shield would have helped especially around oxy-acetaylene.
First thing I thought Lol.
He's observing proper safety distance and he's only dangling one bare foot. There's a reason GAWD gave ya two!
as long as he doesnt finger around the direkt flame, it is not that dangerous. and he uses his pincers to get even close to the flame. the small sparks do not hurt that much if some of them hit you. the only thing maby some uv eye protection if he does look that often all day long into that flame.
I notice he still squats but keeps his feet off the ground with all those sparks around. Why do they always work in dirt and muck?????
Is called poverty.
@@marcoaurelio296 I would call it ignorance.
when you see modern factory sdttings its all due to economies of scald
Backwards and primitive.
@@АгронДепартье ignorant comment
notice the precision alignment of the barrel blank, with a 4-jaw chuck...must be building SIG pistols/?
Precision alignment with a wobbling head stock...chuck is visibly wobbling with radial run out...scary lack of precision.
Not a laser
Hmm ,a torc
Oxy acetylene
In a place where you build guns in sandals, that's a laser
Don't forget eye protection and in manjams.
Is this an oxy torch or a plasma cutter
Oxy
Also known as a profile cutter, you could fit it with plasma or laser.
Two hose, oxy-acetylene.
So quick - must be plazma
@@juhajuntunen7866 or propane , normally the pak produce there own acetylene in house rather than pre bottled gas .
Bloody hell look at the radial run out on the headstock of that lathe! Starting around 6:00, the chuck on that lathe is visibly wobbling "up and down". A 9mm bore is probably about 11mm now 🙄🤣
Helps to clear the chips out the hole😛 its a 4 jaw chuck so as long as the spindle bearing is ok they can get away with it. Needs to be reamed and rifle cut anyway.
@@kenhukushi1637 3 jaw chuck works too- you just use soft jaws, clamp them down on someting and turn the inside of them to the diameter of what you want to hold and you can correct just about any runout in the spindle- sometimes cast iron mounting plates for the chuck will warp over time (at least shitty chinese and indian ones)
@@kenhukushi1637 True, true, assuming there's not too much run out I suppose...whatever "too much" turns out to be. Just have to laugh, and be impressed, at how much can be accomplished with old equipment in a dirt floor "factory". Any OSHA employees watching these videos would have a heart attack...
Wobbling is necessary to form out the pits and lands.
i really wonder about the quality of the steel after that heat. The steel is at least red hot and I am would guess that the surfaces are burnt. It the intended gun is blow back and will use low pressure cartridges, I guess all is well.
Most of the stress is concentrated in the barrel and absorbed within the moving parts of the piece. The 1911 may run with a polymer frame havent seen anyone go to that extent though because they are just perfect with a metal frame.
@@gLocksmith. I would like to have the model 1911 set up in polymer frame, a double column mag, 9mm, made as compact as possible, crisp 4 lb trigger, and the slide designed to accept the RMR foot print.
Polymer frames are easier on felt recoil and are overall lighter. I will not hold my breathe for it to happen.
I wonder what model pistol they were cloning.
The Trashmaster model 69
That is an acetylene torch, not a laser. Nice follower setup.
These guys can copy any firearm and reproduce it with a original. We got a kid in Afghanistan that was trying to sell us 1911's and you couldn't tell a real from a copy except they all had the same serial number. True craftsmen
OSHA is foaming at the mouth after seeing this. 💰💸
That's Oxyacetylene, not a laser. oy! Kids today!
Too much of onething over and over . Only 2 processes shown . Not even an end result . Disliked the video.
what are the names of all these machines
Highest paid employee is the guy who test fires the guns.
I think these are top slides for a 1911 not barrels.
Think you are correct. That drill is about 16 mm diameter.
2000 meter effective range.. 😮😮
Bro it's Plasma cutter hai,laser cutter nahi.
plasma cutter?
Where is part 2?
Espectacular , toda de Acero !!
Great👌👌👌👌🌷🌷🌷🌷
co z aka intronik posiadasz go dalej?
Meny 2020 men ye factory visit ki thi
ALLAAHU AKBAR.
SALAM DARI JAKARTA INDONESIA.
Yeah, allaahu akbar alright. Say that before you shoot one of these pistols...it will either jam, explode or send the bullet about 4 feet to one side of your target...🤣
Good show guys, The OSHA inspector would Lose his mind at this shop. Good to see Kimber busy. You make due with what you have, Been there.
Very nice video 👍👍
Welcome
Shoots twice! The first and last bullet😂😂😂
How many blanks without eye protection before going blind?
DEFINITELY NOT a laser
I never understood how they work sit....
This guy will be called "Wink" in the future
Garbage in Garbage out !
Was that just hot roll mild steel? Flame cut??? Drilled with a twist bit? Holy shit NO!
That's exactly what it is!
Its 1000x’s better than anything you can buy in canada these days
@@bustedford That depends on where you look...
@@johnnicol8598 so if you get killed by that pistol does it still count????
What's the name of that machine type? I really wanna know how this follower works :o
Worked in a shop that had a dual head tracer mill. You machined a pattern that the follower would run against and the mill heads made the same cut. Was a thing of beauty to watch.
It's called a magnetic follower, the pattern is steel and the arm has a magnetised follower attached it, which makes it trace out the design with the cutting torch.
Probably higher quality than Bear Creek Arsenal and PSA. 😂
HK has nothing on these guys.
Seriously, this has precision and craftsmanship written all over.
Who needs polymer frames when you got mild steel sheets from cutting out old cargo boats?
And that oxy-acetilene laser is out of this world.
Thats a gas cutter
I love visiting this place..
Machine name?
Khybore HMP W3
I have a laser like that. Lol
I would love to have these guys make me a collector piece just to have a gun built by these guys. Ingenuity at work. What happens if society falls and you need a gun made? These guys would be in charge well after everyone else was fighting with sticks.
Obviously oxyacet torch! See the two flex pipes for oxy and acet delivery
Bihar mai bhi aise hi banta hai
Katty banty han wha beta yha Ak47 modren gun banti hn
That is an oscillating sonic screwdriver, not a laser. 🙄😒🤣
Si possono avere dei singoli progetti perfare unapistola plis
Laser? That's an oxyfuel torch
Just HAVE to work in filth and never clean anything
like cutting keys 👍
Laser?? Is a joke? They are using a simple oxi-acetilene torch. And an old and worn lathe. Nothing but poor quality will get of that!
Perhaps in India and likely in Jamalpur.
and they think they are going to stop this ! ha ha ha ! you guys are the bomb ! keep up the good work !
👍👍👍
Beautiful
Safety glasses. Safety glasses? We don't need no steenkeen safety glasses. And we gots fireproof feet.
Evidemment, pas de gants, pas de lunettes, et des savates dans les copeaux de métal...
Forged? Cast? Nah, bro, fuckin burnt.
Definitely not a laser.
#titansofcnc
That’s not a laser cutter
Health and safety officers having daily heart attacks in this place
Autogenes welding!
Hi-Point factory?
What about the weight? loading with bullets etc. That's why the north american defeated the Taliban, it all these pistol " laser made "
Mohammad Asif Wesson
Would seem these boys got the knack for there work,great video
Hi, I don’t know this expression (I‘m German).
May you translate it for me, please.
@@MrRossi1805 hi they are good at there work,very good
@@MrRossi1805 Anytime something is spelled with a kn as in knife, it is often of old norse origin from the vikings. But the internet says it is perhaps of low german origin.
knack (n.)
mid-14c., "a deception, trick, device," a word of uncertain origin. Perhaps from or related to a Low German word meaning "a sharp sounding blow" (compare Middle English knak, late 14c.; German knacken "to crack;" also knap) and of imitative origin. Sense of "special skill" (in some specified activity) is first recorded 1580s, if this is in fact the same word. In old slang (mid-18c. to mid-19c.) nacky meant "full of knacks; ingenious, dexterous." For pronunciation, see kn-.
@@loquat44-40 DANKE ❗❗❗
No they don't have OSHA in Pakistan
So, you don't know the difference between a "laser" and an oxy acetylene torch? ...hint, the red and green gas hoses. The setup is pretty impressive, looks a lot like the "workshops" in the Kyber pass.
Laser??? LoL 😂 nothing but a pattern torch with a magnetic wheel tracing a template!!
Accetilen torch you call laser,joker.
Oxy/Acetylene profile cutter.
who else is getting tony stark vibes?
Laser...i think not.
He'll be blind in two years
All of these kinds of videos just reinforce my belief that Personal Protection Equipment just encourages risky behavior.
Like when I got a pair of steel toe boots, I suddenly didn't think about my feet anymore and stuff started to fall on them.
Very very small pistol factory. Very small.
Laser 😂😂😂 wondering how the operator gonna live his old age, if any
Where is the rest of the production video? And it's not a laser
Plasma cutter
WhatsApp number dedho bhaiyya