Repairing A Badly Worn, Obsolete Part for a Hay Baler - Manual Machine Shop
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 17 พ.ค. 2024
- This job is something that I am seeing more and more of. Customer brings a part and tells me that it is almost $3000.00 to replace, and no used ones exist. Can you fix it?
Absolutely, I can fix it. This job saved my customer a ton of money and a long lead time. He said the part would be about 2 months out from the dealer. He told me the New Holland equipment is being obsoleted in short order and parts are almost nonexistent. He can still source this, but not easily.
If you are interested in trying out Anchorlube, here is a link to their amazon store.
www.amazon.com/Anchorlube-All...
Topper Machine LLC is an entirely manual machine shop located in Spooner, WI. Our videos will highlight some of our shop work.
Thank you for watching!
Please Like, Subscribe, & Share.
toppermachine.com
Join this channel to get access to perks:
/ @toppermachinellc
For Official Topper Machine LLC merchandise, check out our Teespring shop.
toppermachinellc.creator-spri...
Support our channel, Paypal donations are greatly appreciated.
www.paypal.com/donate?hosted_...
#machineshop #machinistlife #manualmachinist - แนวปฏิบัติและการใช้ชีวิต
The method I normally use is to get frozen to the pin, get burned by the casting, jamb up the press, and then knock the whole setup on the floor.
Good finish on yours!!
Lol, fun fun.
HAHAHAHA that sounds like my method too! 😝
One shrink fit and half a keg of moonshine later we're golden ...very happy lol
It’s always best to heat the whole part in a something like an oven rather than localised heating. When heating with a torch the expanded material close the centre has nowhere to go since the outside of the part is still relatively cool this can sometimes make the bore smaller!. In this case it was the underside that must have had a heat induced taper. I love your videos and never see you make a mistake without explaining your reasons for/against afterwards.
I work for a UK based engineering company with 14 years tool based experience, just passing on some knowledge an old timer kindly/angrily gave to me
At the plant i worked at we did a LOT of shrink fit repairs.
They were all nail biters.
Some went wrong. That sucked because production was down on that machine.
I have had a pin like that upon cooling crack the bore. That sucked. It was a big repair.
I dont drink but i almost started that day. I was the shop supervisor and ALL eyes were on me.
I'm glad I'm retired.....LOL!
Cheers
Terry
As someone who owns an old baler, I liked this one.
Check your grease lines. Common problem on these.
You earned that "shot" for sure! Awesome work!
A good neighbor to your customers!
nice unintentional wave effect with combined rolling shutter and vibration.
I've never had one do that before. Actually aggravating when I saw it.
What technically caused that? Was it the frequency of the vibration with the slitting saw?
Yesterday was a major stressful day here at the shop (auto shop) so it was relaxing watching this today, Thanxx
Glad you enjoyed it!
That must have been scary when the pin got stuck. Great work rushing to the press to get it home.
It's always good to be able to repair expensive parts and save customers a fortune as opposed to them buying a new part. It also works when the part is no longer available, as it saves an old machine so they don't have to spend an even bigger fortune to replace an expensive machine.
Love you working on old parts!!!
Glad you like them!
Watching shrink fits gives me the hives. That moment when it suddenly won't budge any further and I fall off my chair. Glad it worked well, Josh. Good repair, as always.
Always scary.
I never saw a machinist run that fast before.
@@scottcates 😁
@@scottcates I have. Lol. When you gotta get to the bathroom, and needed to finish the finishing pass you were in. Saw a guy not make it in time and crapped himself.
Well, from this video, I learnt to be prepared for the worst when doing a shrink fit. When I have my next one to do, I think I’ll set it up in the press, just in case. Thanks for the lesson.
This one was exceptionally tight. Usually no more than 0.002/inch of diameter. I was just over that. Never want it to move.
I’ve had that same problem with press and shrink fits. Often the problem is not enough heat. I’ve almost switched completely to Loctite retaining compound now. Glad you got that sucker in there.
Yeah, good idea.
I learned to have a chaser after a press fit job 🍻
Those coax indicators are a pain to use. I always use the good old edge finder to find center. It works better and easier. Most people don’t know this, but it will find the edges of holes and pins just as accurately as it does linear edges. I use it all the time to find center by zeroing one side of the circular feature and the distance to the opposite side, then splitting the difference. It’s much easier if you have a DRO.
Well done Josh. Every machinist that I watch has a “Whew!” moment when the interference fit is done. Good to see your preparation and urgency for the s*** moment. Good job bringing us along in the moment.
Thanks for watching
Jeez I hated hay bailing when I was young. It would be fun to see the owner's reaction to his machine working quietly for the first time in forever.
I enjoyed it. I agree. I'd love to know before and after sounds.
First time in forever, if ever. Probably the second owner (at least) and the first owner was the one who wore it to hell.
Hi Josh, Twin Sticks renovates old American trucks, I referenced him because of the beer comment you made, Kurtis however is a very good Aussie machinist and well worth a watch.
I had to quit watching Kurtis. Between the theatrics and sloppy workmanship I was seeing, I just can't respect him anymore. I'm happy for his success, but he is not as good as everyone thinks. If you want great Australian machinists, max Grant of the Swan Valley Machine Shop, and Matty's Workshop are both highly skilled and do amazing work. No theatrics, no sloppy work, just real good machinists.
I even needed a beer after that pin stuck! glad the press was handy and it worked!
So nice to see a true craftsman at work.
Cheers Josh, That shrinkfit gave me an adrenaline rush!
You and me both!
I love seeing these sort of repairs. It is good to see how you go about doing them and we learn a lot, thanks
Being able to make your own dry ice is nifty. Thanks for the video.
Nifty and essential to what I do here. Closest place to get dry ice is an hour drive away.
Great video Josh, you always do cool stuff. Takes me right back to my farming and boiler making days for steam trains, traction engines as well, in fact anything that needed a boiler.
Thanks for taking the time to post this, I always enjoy "repairs" ! Cheers
Thanks for watching!
congrats on the 100k, been here since like 5k if i remember correctly, thanks for the content, love the cool stuff like shrink fits and whatnot, cheers buddy
Awesome! Thank you! 👍
I love your content. You have really made me want to get back into machining. I might have to setup a little shop. That Bridgeport is top of my list.
Great work, and I'm surprised it only cost a few hundred $$! Great deal for the customer. I love that you repair things at a huge savings, and not to mention the value of the downtime you save your customers! Well done, as always.
Nice job, Josh. And nice save! Interference fits give me the jitters. Thanks and looking forward to your next video. Have a good weekend.
PHEW! That was close (to disaster). Nice job, Sir!
Ive had to redo a few before.
I enjoyed watching you work thru some problems
Refreshing and motivating to see a “true life repair” of a valuable piece of machinery. I guess I’ve watched too many videos of machinists making “tools and toys.” I have enjoyed most of those, but this is really what it is all about!
I really appreciated seeing a professional tackle one of the trickiest machining tasks there is.
I enjoy watching a machinist work. The machined metal looks good. An excellent job. I have a friend that has an automotive machine shop. I enjoy watching him as well. A great video sir. 😊
Thanks for the video. I know it takes extra effort to make the video while working. I am not a machinist, so watching your videos is like the first day of school for me. I know that there are different kinds and grades of steel but I do not know how to determine what it is unless it has a tag. I am glad that the shrink fit worked out. I sure do admire your skill. I am glad that you were able to help this guy and save him some money. It is always good to see you. I hope Rocky is doing good.
Thanks. The customer was super happy.
nice job Josh, glad its not just me that finds a coaxial easier to rotate by hand 👍
Awesome video! extremely cool shop! I had a part made in Detroit mi and got a tour of the shop blown away at what they could make. Machinists are so talented.
A cold one for you Josh. You earned it!!
Thanks for not skipping over routine metal working. Also, mentioning the type or class metal used for various jobs would help us novices better understand what metal holds up best for particular applications.
Always an education watching your videos.👍
Great job Josh! A well deserved beer!!
Thanks
I think we've all been there on the press fit..:).. Good job you had the press set up ready to go!
Great work! thank you for making this video
Morning Josh,
Wow, talk abt a coincidence.....the both of us are repairing a farm related item this week. Mine is turning and threading a piece of 4140 as the static bottom stub anchor shaft on a 3 point hitch for a 1963 JD 1010 cultivator tractor...its a part unobtanium any more....not one of my usual fixes but a friend needed one asap.....weather here is great, all except for the frigging black flies......and you know the saying.....Black Flies Matter...LOL.....nice fix....great work. Loved it !!!!!
Don
Great job keeping the farmers farming. It is a shame how quickly parts become obsolete, but a win for us. Thanks for sharing. I use my co-axial indicator the same way. manually turning speed, just nice not to be jumping behind the mill to read regular indicators.
be able to bring back in service an obsolete piece of machinery is priceless.
excellent job
3 thou interference on a such small diameter is in fact a tight shrink fit so it needs a dry ice cooled pin in a 500 degree F bore,
I had to a very similar assembly and to my experience, it is a good idea to increase as much as possible the bore temperature to gain a bit of lattitude in the assembly process.
excellent video
Nice job Jake!!!!
I’m with you on a beer after a narrow miss!!!
Happy days Josh, turned out lovely, hope you didn't feel too pressed 😂 cheers buddy, a shot well earned
Good job, Josh. I mainly work for farmers and get jobs like this all the time, repairing something not available or very costly. Enjoy watching your videos.
For a second I thought you were not going to get it seated. The boring bar extending out may have also gave you a very small taper for that last depth. Was fun back in the day for rebuilding the variable speed sheave with worn pin and holes for a combine.
Thank you Josh!
Very good metal work !
Hi Josh & it's is Randy and i like yours video is cool & Thanks Josh & Friends Randy
I enjoyed watching this repair. My best experience with a precision shrink fit was on the cutter head for an asphalt milling machine. It was 3-15/16 dia. And about 5” long. The interference was 5-1/2 thou so I specified dry ice and heat to 300 deg. F. Because of the bore length we set the parts up in a 30-ton press just in case, which turned out to be good thinking. There was definitely a bit of pucker factor as temperatures try to equalize quickly. Those dry ice fits sometimes make interesting sounds when seating. Thanks for sharing this one.
I used to do some similar sized ones. Since LN2 is not readily available here,dry ice is the best bet. We always went to 400° for safety. Needed the press one time.
Nice work!!
Hey Josh, not a machinist but enjoy and respect your work!
Hey, thanks!
Beautiful Job Josh.
Thank you!
Congratulations on 100k. Good job on the part too.
Thank you so much 😀
Case and IH are now one,Ford and New Holland are also now one company,but not case New Holland. Nice work BTW.
I learned to put the heated part on the press table, then try to put the cold part in. Sometimes the press is not needed, but JIC.
A rewarding repair!
Nice job Josh. Quality fix. That aint never coming out ! By the way, my co-axial indicator was the best investment i ever made. It has saved me SO much time over the years. They are expensive but worth it. Cheers from Canada.
They are a great tool for any shop. So convenient.
That went great actually. I thought 3 thou was a pretty heavy interference when you were talking through the parts - but the beauty is that it isn’t ever coming out of there. Handy to have the press close by. ✌️👍
We did a similar one at work and unfortunately got stuck half way. The bastage wasn’t going in or out, so we had to start over and machine the pin out. Bummer.
Ive had that happen before. Makes for a terrible day.
Good one Josh . Plan B is always the press , preferably close by ! I like that boring head , although it is completely different to the D'Andrea i used to use . That had 3 speed feed & rapid return traverse . Cheers 👍
I'm having a hard time finding this thing. I know there was a unit just like it that I thought was D'Andrea. I could be wrong.
Given that the baler was still working with a shaft chewed up that much, finding the center at 1/1000th is a bit excessive :)
~ I HAD A COUPLE OF SHOTS OF CROWN JUST AS YOU FIRED UP THE HEAT...CAUSE I ALSO KNOW HOW THAT COULD HAVE WENT......PERFECT JOB DONE !!!
Lol, yup.
Reminded me of my school days when I was a teenager in the 1960s - we made dry ice that way in physics lessons.
The small one man (person)shop was always the backbone of the machining industry.
Hahaha- could tell when the oh
sh!! - moment hit, when it stuck on you, and you got that adrenaline rush, and ran to the press, you had to yank on it pretty hard, but she went, glad it worked out. Another amazing job, and a very happy customer I’m sure for that savings!!!! 👏👏👏
One beer?? For that save, at least a six pack!! lol
Great video love it
He certainly loves the job!
Hey man - well done.
One of these days I need to pick up a lathe and a mill, I don’t do anything nasa precision, but I need the ability to turn rotors, drums, cut wheel centers, mill heads, bore cylinders and cases on atvs. Luckily all those tasks have a higher tolerance for small inaccuracies. The biggest problem is finding a used lathe with at least a 14” swing that isn’t 12’ long
Real good fix
Like the idea with the beer
Nice work
I never had a use for the coaxial indicators as I can do it faster with an indicol and interapid. But when I bought a cnc lathe they do work great for aligning drills. Also the slitting saw I wouldn't have thought of. I would have just used a couple drills to remove that. But that saw was fast.
Nice machining. Hi from Eastern Texas.
Hey, thanks!
Regardless, that design of boring/facing head is pretty cool. I has to be more rigid than the typical R-8 style head being clamped to the quill like that. Probably an indicator to move the tool out on the final cuts would make it pretty accurate. I don't recall ever seeing one like that used on a bridgey. Cool. Nice ice maker! And great repair....Beer is good! cheers 🍻
I wish it was more accurate on the dial. Great concept, but poorly executed
Just a note about sawing off the pin with a slitting saw, slitting saws are pricey but my favorite alternative nowadays is the 8 inch carbide tip blades they sell for metal cutting skilsaw type saws. They are cheap like 40 bucks and less kerf, I have one on an R8 arbor I use all the time for cutting down pieces too short to hold in the bandsaw, slotting, or even have used it in the angle head for cutting plate clamped down to the table. Works great and in 4 years now I am still on the first saw blade of the 2 pack I bought!
Nice. Great idea, I'll be using this.
@@TopperMachineLLC
Specs please .. Brand name, tooth count, RPM's, feed speed and depths, lube type, etc ..
This could be a great video with a chalk talk about the blade and how to figure out the right settings for different materials.
I wonder if any blade companies are brave enough to sponsor it with their product featured in the action shots
Nice one josh for a big guy you can move pretty fast 👍👍👍👍
When I have to.
Fine work!
Thank you! Cheers!
Good solution
Just run across your channel. Great content.Great repair!
Thanks and welcome
Hi Josh, nice video, Kurtis says that shrink-fitting pins/bushes always give him an anxious moment, and Mark at Twin Sticks Garage always has a Coors beer at the end of his job to help him relax.
I don't watch either of those channels. But I'll have to look up Twin Sticks Garage. I'm always looking for good machinists to watch and work with.
I used to watch CEE, but it got too fake and sloppy for my liking. There are a lot of great smaller channels out there that do amazing quality work without all the extra BS.
You wouldn't believe the bazaar shape pins wore into underneath the road on railway crossing, wish I'd kept some (btw, this is mechanically operated railway crossing driven by a hand wheel in the signal box)
I've done a few sweat fits with the fire extinguisher dry ice method. They are pretty uneventful when they go right, and quite frantic when they dont 😂
Absolutely.
5:13 Really cool camera effect, part doing the hula!
I used my little Chinee Bailey lathe the other day to make some handles for a mod to another Chinee machine. Was fun but 20 minutes on the lathe and an hour to clean it up.
You’re doing it right if you are looking for a good reason for whisky neat before you go to plan B or C.
Big thing about using dry ice vs LN2 is -109 degree F vs -320 degree F, you only get about one-third of the shrink; gotta keep that in mind. With LN2, the part probably would have dropped right in (at the expense of 2 hours driving to get the stuff).
Anyway, nice job there, it's always interesting to see how people approach a problem and get it done.
It would have been 2 hours of driving for dry ice, that is why I make it. LN2 would be 3-4 hours of drive time, making that unacceptable. I can't bill for time and materials to get supplies for a simple job. I wish I could get LN2, it just can't happen here, too depressed of a region.
That was a high stress moment... averted..
Better to set up the press-shrink fit in the press with the press ready to press before heating the part while the stud is cooling off in dry ice. If the stud is even a tiny bit off axis even with a few thousands of clearance the stud will likely get stuck on the way down the hole. More often than not, the press I needed to avert a Oooops and not fun at ll re-do..
There is a tendency for metal to stick when they are close together, this is why clearance alone is not enough. Some means of mechanical aid (force) is often needed to over come this tendency for separate metal parts to wanna cling together.
hi there nice job john
Great job Josh. But of a betty swollocks time with that pin. But, turned out perfect 👍.
Thanks 👍
The workpiece setup is also interesting, with those machinist’s jacks that you don’t often use, we’ll catch them in another video, I guess.. 🙂
I should have talked about the setup. They were there to help cut vibration.
You introduced a few great new tools today... (At least that I don't recall seeing before).... the coaxial indicator, and the boring and facing head. Both look very useful in these applications!
If that pin had've locked in the wrong place before it was set.... what then? I assume that you would have to machine the entire pin out and remake the pin again?
I've had them get stuck and yes,bore it out and start over. It's never fun.
Nice to have that press nearby!
Always be prepared
Shot and a beer, AKA Boilermaker nice touch!
My father was doing plumbing in a commercial kitchen and someone knocked over a large oxygen tank and broke off the stem which than it became a torpedo. No one was hurt as it went through a wall thank God . Please chain up your bottles. I was just watching random videos enjoyed yours but noticed your gas bottles not secured.
You gotta give yourself more credit.👍
I'm glad I'm not the only one who always goes the wrong way first with coaxial indicator.
Good stuff
I love prototyping and the company I work for has purchased its second 3D printer. A number of my fellow techs have been purchasing plastic and metal 3D printing machines. I am approximately 10 seconds into the video and have very high hopes. I also have a cat standing on me.