In 1982 as a third year apprentice. I made a one inch square ball in a cage of aluminum on a elox edm sinker. It was published in the second edition of EDM digest. I got $20.00 lol.
Many years ago I had a bad accident. I had a Long partial recovery. My right hand was paralyzed. I carved the ball and cage from a piece of broom handle using a Bowie knife and my left hand. To kinda fine tune my left hand to takeover as my dominant hand
I had to make two of these as my final exam after my 3 year apprenticeship at MDonnell Aircraft in St. Louis. No CNC, just two rotary tables and a manual Bridgeport. The tables both had motors with stops set at beginning and end. Took forever. 125 finish required. There were no CNC machines. It was really good training. Too bad companies don't do this type of training anymore, except in places like China and Korea.
@@bingosunnoon9341 They did lmfao...When...when did this "leap frog" occur. Ive worked in machining basically my whole life, my father was an engineer and i would run CNC's for him when i was 14. ive been to some of the largest most advanced machining companies and shows in Canada there is no way at all at any time did China leap frog the west in terms of machining arts. Chinese labour is barely above slave labour the "high tech" they do have is 3rd rate knockoff garbage built with inferior materials and tolerances or shit they just straight up stole from wester countries. Chinese manufacturing for the most part is manual its not automated theyre using conventional equipment not CNC its like US 1950's still i China.
@@bingosunnoon9341 I don't know if I'd say they leapfrogged us. Companies prefer to send jobs there for cost savings. I'm not so nationalistic that I don't think China is incapable of making good parts (although many times corrupt places will try to get away with subpar materials and quality if they don't think they're going to get called on it, not that that is impossible elsewhere too.) But I don't know that they're better than the US in skill, however they may have more equipment/people capable of meeting certain levels of skill. there is still a lot of high quality high precision work being done in the states, it just isn't as obvious/common and all of the cheap stuff is done elsewhere.
When you can show this amount of skill in your knowledge of CAD/CAM/CNC then companies will pay you a lot of money for that. I would take that piece to any future interview as a testiment of my skill.
Gotta polish that ball until you can't see the different sections where it has been milled from different angles. If you polish it well enough you may even get rid of that horrible smiley.
I’m curious. Why is it necessary for ball’s diameter to be so much shorter than the cube’s length? It looks like the diameter is only around 60% of the length. Couldn’t one make a bigger ball, eg with 90%, and waste less material in the process?
theoretically possible but you would need a very thin and long cnc tool head to get the gap between the ball and frame as small as possible and the tool head will need many axis of movement to perfectly angle itself around to create a proper sphere. wire edm and SLS would be much more appropriate if minimum material wastage was the goal
not to mention a thin and long tool head would be extremely fragile the machining time would be incredibly long and the machine itself would be way more complex than the one we see here and therefore much much more expensive
Who cares about wasting material on a 4 inch block of metal. This part is simply for fun and to show skill. Our machine shop literally dumps hundreds if not thousands of pounds of metal chips per week. It's not wasted. It's scrapped for money to be recycled.
Also when you use smaller tools and shorter steppvers on toolpaths the files sizes become incredibly large and some CNC just aren't made for that type of work. Hell my machine can't hold more than 1mb 😂
I write these programs for a career. starting working in a tool and die shop when I was 17. now I'm 41. I once told my liberal chemistry teacher I was not going to a 4 year college and instead 2 yr tech college. he told me in front of the entire class I would never amount to anything.
Hy! Can you help me with some answers in private? I want to make a ball in a cage but I am stucked.Can you send me a message with your mail? Thank you very much!
Фигня, при нынешних технологиях металлообработки - легко. Меня поражает, когда слесарь-инструментальщик это делает всё только своими руками. Вот это то и есть искусство истинное...
you don't need a CNN and 10.000 $ to do a ball in cub....go see a rosy granite 35 m column carved and polished just with very simple tools.(old Egypt temples )...people get less talented with technology..
In 1982 as a third year apprentice. I made a one inch square ball in a cage of aluminum on a elox edm sinker. It was published in the second edition of EDM digest. I got $20.00 lol.
Hard luck 🔩
I have a feeling that this video will blow up in a few years and get recommended to people randomly.
It’s from titans of cnc yt channel
@@cheapgravy7137 He may have taken inspiration but it's not the same video that they did or even the same method.
i mean its already 10 years old lol
@@Astrojamus 10 years? 10 days xD
@R W bro i could of swore it sais 10 years last night lol
Old fashioned brain power and imagination linked to a good 5 axis vmc through software. I thank you for the chance to watch it come together.
Many years ago I had a bad accident. I had a Long partial recovery. My right hand was paralyzed. I carved the ball and cage from a piece of broom handle using a Bowie knife and my left hand. To kinda fine tune my left hand to takeover as my dominant hand
My grandpa used to make wooden balls in a box with a Oldtimer, 1 homemade chisel and sandpaper.
I had to make two of these as my final exam after my 3 year apprenticeship at MDonnell Aircraft in St. Louis. No CNC, just two rotary tables and a manual Bridgeport. The tables both had motors with stops set at beginning and end. Took forever. 125 finish required. There were no CNC machines. It was really good training. Too bad companies don't do this type of training anymore, except in places like China and Korea.
You think they do that training in China lol?
@@toddpick8007 Yes. That is the only way to explain how they leapfrogged us in the machine arts.
@@bingosunnoon9341 They did lmfao...When...when did this "leap frog" occur. Ive worked in machining basically my whole life, my father was an engineer and i would run CNC's for him when i was 14. ive been to some of the largest most advanced machining companies and shows in Canada there is no way at all at any time did China leap frog the west in terms of machining arts. Chinese labour is barely above slave labour the "high tech" they do have is 3rd rate knockoff garbage built with inferior materials and tolerances or shit they just straight up stole from wester countries. Chinese manufacturing for the most part is manual its not automated theyre using conventional equipment not CNC its like US 1950's still i China.
They just undercut the cost of business but long-term its bad strategy to value your peoples labor as nothing@@bingosunnoon9341
@@bingosunnoon9341 I don't know if I'd say they leapfrogged us. Companies prefer to send jobs there for cost savings. I'm not so nationalistic that I don't think China is incapable of making good parts (although many times corrupt places will try to get away with subpar materials and quality if they don't think they're going to get called on it, not that that is impossible elsewhere too.) But I don't know that they're better than the US in skill, however they may have more equipment/people capable of meeting certain levels of skill. there is still a lot of high quality high precision work being done in the states, it just isn't as obvious/common and all of the cheap stuff is done elsewhere.
Damn ! Nice job! Stunning
Wow beautiful works, Today technology is very smart. Its machineries.
A perfect example of an incredibly fantastic, wonderful, full of ideas, not needed by anyone work.... Oh, such a show - "look what I can do"...
When you can show this amount of skill in your knowledge of CAD/CAM/CNC then companies will pay you a lot of money for that. I would take that piece to any future interview as a testiment of my skill.
Very nicely done, thank you for sharing. Charles
A great CNC programmer work
That looks great
This is amazing work!
this dude knows what hes doing 😀
yes - but does not know why 😀
This video will go viral for sure
Great videos, keep going!!
Nice vise setup bro.
So satisfying.
Absolutely Amazing !
اس کام کیلئے بجلی کیوں ضائع کی ہے؟
Awesome 🤘🤘🤘
Now we know what the sphere within a cube seen by those Navy pilots really are.
Intressant ! Bra jobbat, tack !
It's amazing ...
Litteraly thinking inside the box!
I want it. So I can put it on my desk in my room.
....and some engineered grips for the vice! 👍
i was wondering how he could possibly cut out the last face til i saw the vice jaws and i felt so silly coz it’s so obvious
Do you sell the ball in the box?
Sep4th2024: Starting my journey on learning how to machine a ball in a box on a 3 axis mill using Mastercam wish me luck
Con máy cắt cnc áp lưc cao.cho ra sản phẩm hoan hảo .bạn là người vận hành được nó cũng phải nghe được nó nói chuyện mới siêu
Студенты ПТУ №56 города Омска такую штуку еще в 80-х изготовили , только ещё одну фигуру внутри шара выточили. В итоге получилось 3 элемента.
Nice!
Where can I buy the finished item ?
You need to finish it yourself. This dude didn't square the corners or polish anything.
Is this steel or aluminium?
Похоже на сталь
Yes
1000th like!
Perfekt.
very cool
Шикарно.
Gotta polish that ball until you can't see the different sections where it has been milled from different angles. If you polish it well enough you may even get rid of that horrible smiley.
The ball is too happy to realize it’s in jail for eternity.
One thing. The water the machine produces will contain a lot of metal components inside. Does it recycles or just dumps away?
I believe it's an Oil that is filtered and reused, not water.
How much for it?
I'm a machinist and this is absolutely fu#%in' amazing.
It is easier to finish the ball first and then finish the outside. I made these fifty years ago before there were CNC machines.
How exactly?
Cap
А у нас на производстве до сих пор напильники, ломы, и гаечные ключи, на которые приваривают трубу для создания большего усилия.
Now let's make the circle bigger than the cube.
nice
Material?
Yea,but whadda ya do with it?
Bring it to your job interview
super kool
And another shot made for the apocalypse cannon.
Hello, can you give me the .step please ?
Thanks
Вот бы это показать 50 лет назад, наверное бы не поверили
Our ancestors did it in granite. I still. Wonder how they did it
Which post processor do u used in this case
5 axis for whatever CAM software he uses and what operating system the machine uses.
Grymt cool
good
*Making the ball in the box from Titans of CNC!
Can any one program to dehusk only the endocorp of a coconut
It's could be done lol
I like how you showed the tool path in parts. I'd love to see the mfg part of the design.
and if that isnt specialized fixturing, nothing is
So nice metal work. 😉😉
Lol. The labor alone, cost 10x more than the actual metal ball!
I’m curious. Why is it necessary for ball’s diameter to be so much shorter than the cube’s length? It looks like the diameter is only around 60% of the length. Couldn’t one make a bigger ball, eg with 90%, and waste less material in the process?
theoretically possible but you would need a very thin and long cnc tool head to get the gap between the ball and frame as small as possible and the tool head will need many axis of movement to perfectly angle itself around to create a proper sphere. wire edm and SLS would be much more appropriate if minimum material wastage was the goal
not to mention a thin and long tool head would be extremely fragile the machining time would be incredibly long and the machine itself would be way more complex than the one we see here and therefore much much more expensive
@@ipodtouchiscoollol Thanks for letting me know. Fascinating stuff.
Who cares about wasting material on a 4 inch block of metal. This part is simply for fun and to show skill. Our machine shop literally dumps hundreds if not thousands of pounds of metal chips per week. It's not wasted. It's scrapped for money to be recycled.
Also when you use smaller tools and shorter steppvers on toolpaths the files sizes become incredibly large and some CNC just aren't made for that type of work. Hell my machine can't hold more than 1mb 😂
И что с этим будешь делать?
すごーい
I write these programs for a career. starting working in a tool and die shop when I was 17. now I'm 41. I once told my liberal chemistry teacher I was not going to a 4 year college and instead 2 yr tech college. he told me in front of the entire class I would never amount to anything.
Now do it old school
最初水の力だけで削ってると思って、今こんなことが出来るのかとびっくりしてしまった。
Прикольно. Уп не поделитесь?
I need a G code for this .
CAM one
Fränt,Säljer du??🙂
Make a HONDA k24 engine into a V8 or inline 6 .
Внутри шара забыл сделать еще один куб.
Titans of CNC basically just did this. A ball in a box inside of another ball. Look it up.
Manual and semiautomatic operators how can😢😢😢
You dont
We'll
You can see in meenakshi temble in madhure thousand years ago hand made boll in the tiger mouth
Hy! Can you help me with some answers in private? I want to make a ball in a cage but I am stucked.Can you send me a message with your mail? Thank you very much!
What do you need to know? The hardest part is camming the part and second creating the fixture for the final cut.
В это прорыв
cool, it cost only $9999
If you work at a shop it's practically free.
Wilson cast away.
Why bother? Seems like a lot of work for not much outcome.
.001 tolerance? 😮
Jk
オーパーツとか騒がれてるクリスタルスカルもこんな風に造られてたりして
Ну да. Половина населения скоро будет не нужна. Не зря ковид запустили.
Скоро начнут говорить, что долгая жизнь неэтична и вредит экологии.
Фигня, при нынешних технологиях металлообработки - легко. Меня поражает, когда слесарь-инструментальщик это делает всё только своими руками. Вот это то и есть искусство истинное...
Complimenti
ma così è un pò più complicatoth-cam.com/video/dAIhIVkjPXk/w-d-xo.html
you don't need a CNN and 10.000 $ to do a ball in cub....go see a rosy granite 35 m column carved and polished just with very simple tools.(old Egypt temples )...people get less talented with technology..
Thousands liter of water wasted for a ball in a cube.. Great!
You don’t think the fluid is filtered and used again? How much water do you waste taking a shower or washing your car?? 🖕🏻off.
Recycled coolant
You clearly have no clue how CNC machines work 😂
I can make a ball in a box on a manual lathe, and have more fun.
CAP
Good!
И что?
Nice!!
good