My wife bought canin canibus for her 12 year old English springer spaniel. It really mellows her out. She (the dog) really has taken a shine to Pink Floyd and Lead Zeppelin.
Hey Lyle! In my far younger times (of youth and ignorance) my favored brand of papers was O.C.B. That was the brand my grandparents used as well. Now, many decades tobacco free. Best regards, Ken
I grabbed some Zig Zag papers a while back. When I whipped out my micrometer to measure the thickness, the cashier laughed out loud. I was pretty excited. That MSDS sheet is pretty cool. I first ran into those doing SARA Title 3 work for LeTourneau in the late 80's. Nice start to a day in the shop. Thanks Professor Pete!
I've been watching you and several other TH-camrs on machining and wanted to thank you. I'm finally doing some things with my mini lathe and, as you can imagine, learning from lots of mistakes. Thanks to you and others, I'm learning from them and not making them twice and I'm avoiding danger as I do. Best regards, sir!
You know Mr. Pete if you can take a piece of your lathe to any paint store they can match the color quite amazingly! I did that with my lathe! (I took my belt door cover to have them match the color!)
Hi Mr. Pete. My Grandfather had a couple of swivel vice jaws that pivoted on what looked like a door hinge with a pivot pin down the center. I haven't thought about those for 50+ years. I helped him in his home machine shop until I left high school in 1966. Thanks for the memories.
The boss had tons of Zig-Zag rolling papers and we all had plenty of them in our toolboxes. We used as shims, especially on the surface grinder. When wet and under a steel block they were about. 0007" if I remember correctly. Thanks for the show.
When I worked for power king tractor company we had fixture devise nearly identical to the rose index. We used to set up shafts to index/clock keyways on the horizontal mill.
Kasenit forms Hydrogencyanide when you mix it with a strong acid. Thats probably why they classify it as hazardous. I found you can take a part of the machine to a paint shop or home depot and they have a machine that scans the color and they mix a color that matches this.
Also Sherwin-Williams has a phone app (ColorSnap) that will tell you the S-W paint colors that approximate the colors in a photograph. Obviously that's going to depend on the lighting in the photo, so it may not get very close
Love the cigarette paper story. I used to collect the bus passes that we'd get when travelling on the "city" buses on the Mexican Rivera Maya. BTW, I often use them to "touch off" on the mill. I thought that was standard practice, but I don't see it often.
Just a little sidenote, the cellophane wrapping on a pack of "tailermade" cigarettes is .0005" thick. Makes nice shim stock on the magnet for grinding the bow out of a parallel. Don't smoke a pack just for the wrapper, ask someone that does smoke, and watch them look at you like "huh"?
Little something about your bull dog Note the squared tipped ears That is a early version bulldog On the conventional trucks that what you used for pulling the hood open with Apparently the squared ears were hard on the operators hand so the next and current version have the ears rounded off so its easy on the hand Got my start at Peterbilt Motor Co after high school then went onto Mack Western Trucks then to Freightliner It was my metal shop and auto body shop classes that I contribute to my 37 year career and only 3 jobs in my working time Also spent 4 years teaching welding at our ROP and 4 years on the school districts teachers advisory board
Thank you for that information on the bulldogs ears. You had quite a career. It was very important for schools to have input from industry. In my area we call them advisory committees.
We both enjoyed your video on the heat treating you performed. We are proud to see you promoting an American made product and they these Rose Index tools look well made in your video. The o-rings were a good thought creativity is abundant. Just bought our first HT oven so thank you for the book recommendation. Lance & Patrick
My parents had a store in the fifties and sold cigarette papers labelled: Vogue, Macdonald, Zig-Zag, Chanteclaire and probably others, for ten cents a pack. Large packs of cigarettes (25) ready made sold for forty one cents, and small (20) were thirty-three cents. That's in Canadian funds, which traded higher than USF in the day.........such memories.
Hello Mr. Pete, look for Zig Zag, no pot emblems on those. And yes I only use them for setting end mill to part. Same Clausing as I have, any parts available?
The Peterbilt plac is supposed to be red around the lettering and gets places on the side of the engine hood. A smaller one is placed in the top front of the hood.
Prince Albert tobacco and Rizz+la papers in an orange book.. I wish I knew how many I saw my dad roll and smoke over 50 years ago.. Cheers from a grouchy old man in Louisiana....
You have the Best video's!!!! Also, I am Very Glad to see you are clued up on the political situation! I watched a video where a KGB officer revealed their plan to demoralize this nation & Now, I see it everywhere!!!!!! People who do not know what gender they are, anti- rights & anti-freedom! Seems the political system is doing what the KGB set out to achieve. Sorry if its a touchy subject!!! I absolutely love your channel, content, & most importantly, Your wisdom!!!! Mr.Pete, your the Best!!!!!
Your rolling papers reminded me a friend who once went to a pharmacy for a douche, to blow dusts from his camera lenses... Two employees were shouting, one from the front and other from the back of the store a few times if they had a douche in stock.
I worked for a salt mine many years ago. Yellow Prussiate of Soda was used as an anti-caking compound for road salt. I'm sure it's still being used today.
Maybe this has been covered but all the Mack trucks we had with all Mack drivetrain had chrome Bulldogs. At least that’s how they were built in Ontario.
The university that i used to work for has an old garbage truck thats actually a volvo but still has a gold mac dog on the hood.. big ole volvo grill, rounded doors and a volvo engine but guess it was either a mac design or somebody put the thing on the hood themselves but the thing is attached with the screws that only go one way.. the flathead with raised portions only allowing you to tighten. Only other place ive seen those screws were on bathroom stalls.. but just had me questioning the truck...
A lot of people roll their own cigarettes (tobacco) here in England, so if you buy a pack of cigarette papers nobody thinks you're buying them for smoking illicit materials. When I was a smoker I nearly always rolled my own - for so many years that I could roll a cigarette with one hand. There are different weights available - I might have to buy them just to measure the thicknesses!
mrpete222 I have just been to my local supermarket which had three thicknesses of the most popular brand, although they produce 4 or 5 thicknesses. I bought a pack each of "medium thin", "thin" and "super thin". I'd be happy to send you a pack of each Mr Pete if you give me an address to send them to. I'll describe them as "paper shim stock" on the customs declaration! Stu McCabe.
Your correct about the engines in a Pete they NEVER made there own engine and the background is gold and the rest is chrome , that’s an anniversary name plate model #579 -75th Anniversary very hard to find !
Hi Mr Pete saw a video they used Kingsford crushed up and used as a compound for adding carbon to low carbon steel. i think they left it to soak for eight hours . They clamed it worked .
PACCAR started building engines in 2010 with the introduction of the MX engine. It is built in Columbus Mississippi. I believe they also manufacture transmissions.
Another great video Mr. Pete. Your drainge problem could probably be solved with a minimum of mess by using a brushing head in a demolition hammer. It is like a meat tendonizer for concrete. Some viewer close to you would probable be happy to hep you out.
yes the gold bull dog meant that it was Mack engine, transmission, and Mack rear axles as for the Peterbilt badge it was red Cloisonné substance around the script and believe the script was gold for the 50th anniversary around 1987
I found a thread on hobby-machinist titled "I found my Kasenit!" where the poster named "Alan H." provided the following info in one of the repleis (paraphrased for length): Alan said he read that the demise of Kasenit was due the difficulty in sourcing hydrogen cyanide (HCN), which is used to make the sodium ferrocyanide portion. The HCN manufacturers stopped or limited shipping the HCN due its toxicity and risk associated with moving it in cylinders and/or rail cars. So producers shifted to using the HCN to make derivative chemicals at the same site - DuPont for example did this in the 80s. Small volume chemicals like Kasenit had too low of a demand for the companies producing HCN to justify the cost in setting up facilities. Alan ended with saying to hang on to that old can of Kasenit, and that it is more valuable than that old can makes it appear. He also posted a couple photos of a can he shined up and restored
Assuming the above is mostly true: My guess is that Kasenite's business relied on converting cheaper HCN into Sodium Ferrocyanide, as the latter is still available for other purposes.
Hey Pete, great call on that cheapie optivisor! They are 12bucks on Fleabay and worth every penny. I've been buying them and passing them out to friends. Every now and then, the chinese actually get something right.
Thanks Lyle , or teach as we in shop class would say. I wonder how those positioners compare to 5Cblocks hex n square and to rotary tables n indexers. They hold the work the others only set up.
the Pearson to ask, about your Peterbuild badge and the bulldog - he will tell you about engines also Warren- western truck and tractor repair, Kalamath .Oregon, CA
When I was in college I witnessed something that convinced me that marijuana did not interfere with motor control. My college had an independent activities period where one could work on their own projects or get together with others to study something informally. The two freshman in the room next to me spent the month stoned. That might have been the time I was trying to make lock picks -- regarded as a wholesome activity at this engineering school. I had this little puzzle with three pegs and three rings under a clear plastic dome. The idea was to get one ring on each peg. I figured this would amuse them for hours. I went next door, handed it to Gary and returned to my room. By the time I got there, Gary had handed it back to me with each ring on the matching colored peg. Two years later one of the room mates in that room had a bunch of druggy friends that would hang out there. Don't go there, they were all really nice and had great taste in music. Her boyfriend would practice juggling a lot. One time I heard "thud thud thud thud thud thud" through the wall. "Kevin, how many was that? Seven?". "No, nine" he replied.
Senior- I have rolled thousands of cigarettes with papers labeled “ Top, Zig Zag, “and many other brand names. Still available, as is tobacco. Just have to go to a cigar store.
I never put a mic on it, but there really isn’t too much difference between cigarette paper and straw wrapper paper, at least for practical purposes. . .
For your lathe color. One thing you could do is take a picture of it and upload to a site where you get a hex or other color id on it. Do it on different lighting levels and see which fits the original color the best. Hopefully that could work at ace or at the other place. I might be able to find a site or 2 which could be useful
@@mrpete222 so from your picture/video, its possible the color could be (the site I used was HTML Colors from images) #AFA697 RGB 175, 166, 151 and the name of it is Napa or something, from the Sherwin Willems ColorSnap thing, it came up with Diverse Beige RGB 197, 181, 167 #C5B5A7 or Avenue Tan RGB 188,176, 153 #BCB099 however thats from the video and the lighting from the shop could have an affect on it, not fully sure but I hope that helps
Funny thought about the shaper w/grinder. What if you could mount a small work piece to the arm and pass it over a grinder? Then there isn't 50lbs of motor and stone flopping around wearing out the ways. If you ever needed to that is. Thanks for all the brain food!
Hey Mr Pete I have a suggestion on your paint scheme although I do not have the number for your lathe one of the things that I have found that works well and doesn't cost a lot, is I like to use primer primer doesn't cost very much you can get it relatively cheap but then after I primer I use a clear coat right on top of the primer it leaves a nice color gray (depending on the primer that you choose) and it leaves it durable... I use this formula in the bowling machine business.. the Brunswick machines when they were built after world war II were used with military surplus so when they started mass producing the machines they would go to military auctions and buy 55 gallon drums of paint I have done this for years and depending on what you choose either clear gloss or matte you can get a pretty good color out of it. .. Just a suggestion..
Still laughing about the kleenix style rolling paper dispenser for those that are too stoned to roll one and then they are stuck sitting on the porch all day
7:53 If you want the perfect color but don't care if it's the original type of paint, is it possible to rent a color scanner for paint, it gives you the exact code that are necessary for getting the color within 1/16,000 color precision.
You’ll be relieved to hear that you don’t appear to be a pothead, you’re too much of a pragmatist and such a wholesome guy, you could be put into Gerber baby food. Anyway, my mind’s eye enjoyed your story to ostensibly buy candy and um.. rolling papers, along with a complimentary side-eye. I chuckled at your novelty description of unfolding tissue papers for marijuana that are difficult for stoners to manipulate on account of their thinness. Thanks for sharing.
As a young lad of about 13 and trying to show the world how growed up I was, I had me one of those Bugler tobacco kits and rolled my own version of a "Lucky". The rolling machine reminded me of a dime store windup toy for kids, but it worked well enough for its intended use. thumbs.worthpoint.com/zoom/images1/1/0313/31/vintage-bugler-thrift-kit-tobacco_1_e99778be1e25273aaf92c2038a8a2d89.jpg
The thing is simple for the shape grinder , the scale on the settings for the head to move are way to rough for a grinder , those are normaly operating in a thousands of an inch and even lower , if you now set it with the normal dial on the shaper the stone will crash into the material and explode and that is way to dangerous to the people who operate those things , if they had made a propper dial for the grinder to set it on its own it would have worked in my mind , but it would be also still pretty dangerous because if you are used to a machine you always grab the dials you're used to and set them what would be terrible too .
Mr. Pete I know that in the past you said don't tell me what to use for insomnia because nothing works for you but I'm gonna. If you haven't tried melatonin you should. It is used for people when they have shift changes. It should take about two weeks to change a person's sleep pattern. I know your situation is different but it can't hurt. It can be purchased over the counter and it's inexpensive. I hope that this helps.
@@mrpete222 I know it's an enberassing subject but maybe you should try marijuana if nothing else has helped. I have known a couple people that it has helped for different ailments. My brother in law started smoking a little bit about ten minutes before he goes to bed and it has helped him sleep. Gotta get back to watching Stagecoach.
Sodium ferrocyanide isn't nearly as dangerous as sodium cyanide. Still not something you'd want to eat! You could use that to make some Prussian blue on your own. You'd have to react with an iron salt of some sort, I think maybe ferric chloride? Nile Red makes it in one of his videos. There's about 50 books in that series with the heat treating book. Almost every one of them is really good. I especially liked the "Milling: A Complete Course" and "Lathework: A Complete Course". All of the books in the series by Harold Hill are quite good
One good thing about retiring is the snowflakes can't try to get you fired for honest opinions. Damned glad to be there and I'm laughing while agreeing with yours!!! My dad is a 90 year old retired woodshed teacher so I can agree him also. Keep it up!!!
"don't get me started" well I for one would be very interested to hear your unfiltered opinions. maybe you could make a video where you say what you really think and feel and upload it to an alternative platform where you didn't face sanctions for doing so.
@@mrpete222 glad you got a laugh and I'm greatly honoured you replied, but I was being deadly serious. I get the sense that you've got a lot more to share than just your metal working skills.
Sodium ferrocyanide is fairly safe as is, however it can make hydrogen cyanide gas with water, or even more so with acids. And hydrogen cyanide is probably one of the most dangerous cyanide compounds ever.
Mr. Pete doesn't get stoned. His mill table does.
under rated.
You win the Interwebz with this comment.
My wife bought canin canibus for her 12 year old English springer spaniel. It really mellows her out. She (the dog) really has taken a shine to Pink Floyd and Lead Zeppelin.
Love it when tubalcain gets opinionated. Interesting video.
I would be very much like to hear him get started and really let it all hang out.
hello Mr. Pete. That was the fastest 15 min I have witnessed. That implies that I must have enjoyed it too much. Yes I did.
lol
THANK YOU...for sharing. Watched and very much enjoyed.
There was an aftermarket bulldog with eyes that lit up too. I spent a lot of time looking at the rear end of a dog.
Hey Lyle!
In my far younger times (of youth and ignorance) my favored brand of papers was O.C.B. That was the brand my grandparents used as well. Now, many decades tobacco free.
Best regards,
Ken
Keep up the great work Lyle! This world needs more like you!
I like the peterbilt. It's a very apt and thoughtful gift for a Pete who builds.
I grabbed some Zig Zag papers a while back. When I whipped out my micrometer to measure the thickness, the cashier laughed out loud. I was pretty excited.
That MSDS sheet is pretty cool. I first ran into those doing SARA Title 3 work for LeTourneau in the late 80's.
Nice start to a day in the shop. Thanks Professor Pete!
I've been watching you and several other TH-camrs on machining and wanted to thank you. I'm finally doing some things with my mini lathe and, as you can imagine, learning from lots of mistakes. Thanks to you and others, I'm learning from them and not making them twice and I'm avoiding danger as I do. Best regards, sir!
Haw Haw... Mr Pete at HIS BEST !!! We love our Internet Shop Teacher
😀
Nice conglomerate of items today.
You know Mr. Pete if you can take a piece of your lathe to any paint store they can match the color quite amazingly! I did that with my lathe! (I took my belt door cover to have them match the color!)
I wish This & That lasted a hour. Loved the rolling paper story.
Thanks
Graduations. Rose-index is graduated in degrees. Very cool fixture. A lot of processes in building those.
Hi Mr. Pete. My Grandfather had a couple of swivel vice jaws that pivoted on what looked like a door hinge with a pivot pin down the center. I haven't thought about those for 50+ years. I helped him in his home machine shop until I left high school in 1966. Thanks for the memories.
👍👍
The boss had tons of Zig-Zag rolling papers and we all had plenty of them in our toolboxes. We used as shims, especially on the surface grinder. When wet and under a steel block they were about. 0007" if I remember correctly. Thanks for the show.
👍
When I worked for power king tractor company we had fixture devise nearly identical to the rose index. We used to set up shafts to index/clock keyways on the horizontal mill.
Loved the section on rolling papers, I probably laughed to much. Keep up the great content. I have learned alot from your videos.
“people are stoned when they are doing this” got to love mrpete
Thanks for sharing!
Wonderful as always Mr Pete, I trust you are doing well Sir
Unfortunately those Rose products do not ship internationally as of yet.
I love your videos and sense of humor so much! Thanks for what you do, Mr. Pete!
👍👍
Mr Pete your humor has me chuckling almost every episode. We think so much alike it should scare one of us.
lol
If you can take a piece of your lathe to Ace they have a camera device that can scan the color and come up with the formula.
Thanks
Loved this video. Thanks for sharing Mr. Pete!
👍
Thank you for posting.
Kasenit forms Hydrogencyanide when you mix it with a strong acid. Thats probably why they classify it as hazardous.
I found you can take a part of the machine to a paint shop or home depot and they have a machine that scans the color and they mix a color that matches this.
Also Sherwin-Williams has a phone app (ColorSnap) that will tell you the S-W paint colors that approximate the colors in a photograph.
Obviously that's going to depend on the lighting in the photo, so it may not get very close
Keep up the great work Lyle .
As always a very enjoyable video from Mr. Pete. Great Saturday morning video to watch with coffee.
Lecil Alexander
Love the cigarette paper story. I used to collect the bus passes that we'd get when travelling on the "city" buses on the Mexican Rivera Maya. BTW, I often use them to "touch off" on the mill. I thought that was standard practice, but I don't see it often.
Very good Mr. Pete. Look up Zig Zag, that is what you were referring to.
Just a little sidenote, the cellophane wrapping on a pack of "tailermade" cigarettes is .0005" thick. Makes nice shim stock on the magnet for grinding the bow out of a parallel. Don't smoke a pack just for the wrapper, ask someone that does smoke, and watch them look at you like "huh"?
Hi Lyle,
All the Mack dump trucks we bought had Mack engines and power train and did have the gold bulldog on the hood. You and the family stay safe.
Little something about your bull dog
Note the squared tipped ears
That is a early version bulldog
On the conventional trucks that what you used for pulling the hood open with
Apparently the squared ears were hard on the operators hand so the next and current version have the ears rounded off so its easy on the hand
Got my start at Peterbilt Motor Co after high school then went onto Mack Western Trucks then to Freightliner
It was my metal shop and auto body shop classes that I contribute to my 37 year career and only 3 jobs in my working time
Also spent 4 years teaching welding at our ROP and 4 years on the school districts teachers advisory board
Thank you for that information on the bulldogs ears. You had quite a career. It was very important for schools to have input from industry. In my area we call them advisory committees.
We both enjoyed your video on the heat treating you performed. We are proud to see you promoting an American made product and they these Rose Index tools look well made in your video. The o-rings were a good thought creativity is abundant. Just bought our first HT oven so thank you for the book recommendation. Lance & Patrick
Where have you guys been? You have not made a video in a long time. I miss you
@@mrpete222 We just put one up Thursday after 18 months, Patrick says hello MrPete and thank you Lyle.
I can’t wait to watch it
As you say the grinder attachment probably wasn't rigid enough and probably produced a lot of chatter. Like a lot of YT live feeds. :)
My parents had a store in the fifties and sold cigarette papers labelled: Vogue, Macdonald, Zig-Zag, Chanteclaire and probably others, for ten cents a pack. Large packs of cigarettes (25) ready made sold for forty one cents, and small (20) were thirty-three cents. That's in Canadian funds, which traded higher than USF in the day.........such memories.
it's been 2 years and the chinese didn't pick up on this tool. I couldn't find any tool like that on aliexpress
Hello Mr. Pete, look for Zig Zag, no pot emblems on those. And yes I only use them for setting end mill to part. Same Clausing as I have, any parts available?
The Peterbilt plac is supposed to be red around the lettering and gets places on the side of the engine hood. A smaller one is placed in the top front of the hood.
Prince Albert tobacco and Rizz+la papers in an orange book.. I wish I knew how many I saw my dad roll and smoke over 50 years ago.. Cheers from a grouchy old man in Louisiana....
You have the Best video's!!!! Also, I am Very Glad to see you are clued up on the political situation! I watched a video where a KGB officer revealed their plan to demoralize this nation & Now, I see it everywhere!!!!!! People who do not know what gender they are, anti- rights & anti-freedom! Seems the political system is doing what the KGB set out to achieve. Sorry if its a touchy subject!!! I absolutely love your channel, content, & most importantly, Your wisdom!!!! Mr.Pete, your the Best!!!!!
Thank you very much, I am glad you agree with me
Your rolling papers reminded me a friend who once went to a pharmacy for a douche, to blow dusts from his camera lenses... Two employees were shouting, one from the front and other from the back of the store a few times if they had a douche in stock.
lol
MR. PETERSON, I MISS YOUR VIDEOS !
It may not help you sleep better, but I hear it would make a Hershey bar extremely appealing. :-)
lol. I already like a nice cold Hershey with almonds
And there was his mistake: he fit the profile. He got some munchies and rolling paper. Definitely a pot head.
@@stxrynn :-)
I worked for a salt mine many years ago. Yellow Prussiate of Soda was used as an anti-caking compound for road salt. I'm sure it's still being used today.
When you talked about Bull Durham Tobacco, I thought of my dearly Departed Father. He always carry a poke of Bull Durham in his chest pocket.
lol
Informative as always, thank you sir!
Old machinist never die, they just get a new Peterbilt.
🤣👍👍🤣
LOL
Yes the field of the Peterbilt hood emblem is red.
Pete didn't make engine/driveline parts, only frames and cabs.
👍Always informative and most times Mr Pete makes me laugh. Thanks for helping w/ the dang depression & fact that I'm slowly losing my vision👀👍✌️
👍👍👍
Thank you.
Maybe this has been covered but all the Mack trucks we had with all Mack drivetrain had chrome Bulldogs. At least that’s how they were built in Ontario.
The university that i used to work for has an old garbage truck thats actually a volvo but still has a gold mac dog on the hood.. big ole volvo grill, rounded doors and a volvo engine but guess it was either a mac design or somebody put the thing on the hood themselves but the thing is attached with the screws that only go one way.. the flathead with raised portions only allowing you to tighten. Only other place ive seen those screws were on bathroom stalls.. but just had me questioning the truck...
Thanks
A lot of people roll their own cigarettes (tobacco) here in England, so if you buy a pack of cigarette papers nobody thinks you're buying them for smoking illicit materials. When I was a smoker I nearly always rolled my own - for so many years that I could roll a cigarette with one hand. There are different weights available - I might have to buy them just to measure the thicknesses!
I did not know there were different thicknesses
In large parts of America they are no longer illicit materials.
mrpete222 I have just been to my local supermarket which had three thicknesses of the most popular brand, although they produce 4 or 5 thicknesses. I bought a pack each of "medium thin", "thin" and "super thin". I'd be happy to send you a pack of each Mr Pete if you give me an address to send them to. I'll describe them as "paper shim stock" on the customs declaration! Stu McCabe.
Mr. Pete, the cellophane on cigarette packs was also .001 thick. Might even be able to use the cello you find on tea bag boxes etc. as well.
Your correct about the engines in a Pete they NEVER made there own engine and the background is gold and the rest is chrome , that’s an anniversary name plate model #579 -75th Anniversary very hard to find !
Hi Mr Pete saw a video they used Kingsford crushed up and used as a compound for adding carbon to low carbon steel. i think they left it to soak for eight hours . They clamed it worked .
Thank you, I saw that one
i bought those rose index in steel . i like them
👍👍
I bought those after seeing it by M.Pete
PACCAR started building engines in 2010 with the introduction of the MX engine. It is built in Columbus Mississippi. I believe they also manufacture transmissions.
Thanks
Another great video Mr. Pete. Your drainge problem could probably be solved with a minimum of mess by using a brushing head in a demolition hammer. It is like a meat tendonizer for concrete. Some viewer close to you would probable be happy to hep you out.
yes the gold bull dog meant that it was Mack engine, transmission, and Mack rear axles as for the Peterbilt badge it was red Cloisonné substance around the script and believe the script was gold for the 50th anniversary around 1987
Mr. Pete can you please do an experimental video on producing case hardening compounds. You teased us in the hardening video lol
Yes Pete logo should be a cherry metalflake color. Petes could be ordered with any brand engine you desireed.
Thanks
I found a thread on hobby-machinist titled "I found my Kasenit!" where the poster named "Alan H." provided the following info in one of the repleis (paraphrased for length):
Alan said he read that the demise of Kasenit was due the difficulty in sourcing hydrogen cyanide (HCN), which is used to make the sodium ferrocyanide portion. The HCN manufacturers stopped or limited shipping the HCN due its toxicity and risk associated with moving it in cylinders and/or rail cars. So producers shifted to using the HCN to make derivative chemicals at the same site - DuPont for example did this in the 80s. Small volume chemicals like Kasenit had too low of a demand for the companies producing HCN to justify the cost in setting up facilities.
Alan ended with saying to hang on to that old can of Kasenit, and that it is more valuable than that old can makes it appear. He also posted a couple photos of a can he shined up and restored
Assuming the above is mostly true: My guess is that Kasenite's business relied on converting cheaper HCN into Sodium Ferrocyanide, as the latter is still available for other purposes.
Thank you, very interesting
Hey Pete, great call on that cheapie optivisor! They are 12bucks on Fleabay and worth every penny. I've been buying them and passing them out to friends. Every now and then, the chinese actually get something right.
Yes
Thanks Lyle , or teach as we in shop class would say. I wonder how those positioners compare to 5Cblocks hex n square and to rotary tables n indexers. They hold the work the others only set up.
Rolling papers come in different thicknesses; I think the ones made for mj are usually thinner than tobacco cigarette papers. Did you measure them?
Spoken like a pro. LMAO! Puff Puff give!
the Pearson to ask, about your Peterbuild badge and the bulldog - he will tell you about engines also
Warren- western truck and tractor repair, Kalamath .Oregon, CA
When I was in college I witnessed something that convinced me that marijuana did not interfere with motor control.
My college had an independent activities period where one could work on their own projects or get together with others to study something informally. The two freshman in the room next to me spent the month stoned. That might have been the time I was trying to make lock picks -- regarded as a wholesome activity at this engineering school.
I had this little puzzle with three pegs and three rings under a clear plastic dome. The idea was to get one ring on each peg. I figured this would amuse them for hours. I went next door, handed it to Gary and returned to my room. By the time I got there, Gary had handed it back to me with each ring on the matching colored peg.
Two years later one of the room mates in that room had a bunch of druggy friends that would hang out there. Don't go there, they were all really nice and had great taste in music. Her boyfriend would practice juggling a lot. One time I heard "thud thud thud thud thud thud" through the wall. "Kevin, how many was that? Seven?". "No, nine" he replied.
That really surprises me
Senior- I have rolled thousands of cigarettes with papers labeled “ Top, Zig Zag, “and many other brand names. Still available, as is tobacco. Just have to go to a cigar store.
If you can get a chip of the old original paint, most paint stores should be able to match it with their paint color computer.
I never put a mic on it, but there really isn’t too much difference between cigarette paper and straw wrapper paper, at least for practical purposes. . .
For your lathe color. One thing you could do is take a picture of it and upload to a site where you get a hex or other color id on it. Do it on different lighting levels and see which fits the original color the best. Hopefully that could work at ace or at the other place. I might be able to find a site or 2 which could be useful
Thanks
@@mrpete222 so from your picture/video, its possible the color could be (the site I used was HTML Colors from images)
#AFA697
RGB 175, 166, 151
and the name of it is Napa or something,
from the Sherwin Willems ColorSnap thing, it came up with
Diverse Beige
RGB 197, 181, 167
#C5B5A7
or
Avenue Tan
RGB 188,176, 153
#BCB099
however thats from the video and the lighting from the shop could have an affect on it, not fully sure but I hope that helps
Yes red
Funny thought about the shaper w/grinder. What if you could mount a small work piece to the arm and pass it over a grinder? Then there isn't 50lbs of motor and stone flopping around wearing out the ways. If you ever needed to that is. Thanks for all the brain food!
Never thought of that
Hey Mr Pete I have a suggestion on your paint scheme although I do not have the number for your lathe one of the things that I have found that works well and doesn't cost a lot, is I like to use primer primer doesn't cost very much you can get it relatively cheap but then after I primer I use a clear coat right on top of the primer it leaves a nice color gray (depending on the primer that you choose) and it leaves it durable... I use this formula in the bowling machine business.. the Brunswick machines when they were built after world war II were used with military surplus so when they started mass producing the machines they would go to military auctions and buy 55 gallon drums of paint I have done this for years and depending on what you choose either clear gloss or matte you can get a pretty good color out of it. .. Just a suggestion..
Thank you. That is interesting about the bowling machines
Still laughing about the kleenix style rolling paper dispenser for those that are too stoned to roll one and then they are stuck sitting on the porch all day
lol
Back then Pete did not make there own engines but they do now. Called MX engine
I believe Kasenit is still available under a different name, red somethingorother. I think Mcmaster has it.
No problem to get a 1 thou feeler gauge when you have 2 thou brass.
Just divide the thickens into two and you'll have a 1 thou😁
7:53 If you want the perfect color but don't care if it's the original type of paint, is it possible to rent a color scanner for paint, it gives you the exact code that are necessary for getting the color within 1/16,000 color precision.
You’ll be relieved to hear that you don’t appear to be a pothead, you’re too much of a pragmatist and such a wholesome guy, you could be put into Gerber baby food. Anyway, my mind’s eye enjoyed your story to ostensibly buy candy and um.. rolling papers, along with a complimentary side-eye. I chuckled at your novelty description of unfolding tissue papers for marijuana that are difficult for stoners to manipulate on account of their thinness. Thanks for sharing.
👍👍👍
Brown noise helps me with my sleep.
I’ll be looking for the book
As a young lad of about 13 and trying to show the world how growed up I was, I had me one of those Bugler tobacco kits and rolled my own version of a "Lucky". The rolling machine reminded me of a dime store windup toy for kids, but it worked well enough for its intended use.
thumbs.worthpoint.com/zoom/images1/1/0313/31/vintage-bugler-thrift-kit-tobacco_1_e99778be1e25273aaf92c2038a8a2d89.jpg
The thing is simple for the shape grinder , the scale on the settings for the head to move are way to rough for a grinder , those are normaly operating in a thousands of an inch and even lower , if you now set it with the normal dial on the shaper the stone will crash into the material and explode and that is way to dangerous to the people who operate those things , if they had made a propper dial for the grinder to set it on its own it would have worked in my mind , but it would be also still pretty dangerous because if you are used to a machine you always grab the dials you're used to and set them what would be terrible too .
I ordered your book from eBay. Thanks!!!
I am not the author
@@mrpete222 Outside of the Bible, I thought you were the only Tubal Cain.
Mr. Pete I know that in the past you said don't tell me what to use for insomnia because nothing works for you but I'm gonna. If you haven't tried melatonin you should. It is used for people when they have shift changes. It should take about two weeks to change a person's sleep pattern. I know your situation is different but it can't hurt. It can be purchased over the counter and it's inexpensive. I hope that this helps.
I have tried that several times, absolutely no effect.
@@mrpete222 I know it's an enberassing subject but maybe you should try marijuana if nothing else has helped. I have known a couple people that it has helped for different ailments. My brother in law started smoking a little bit about ten minutes before he goes to bed and it has helped him sleep. Gotta get back to watching Stagecoach.
Nothing wrong with sigarette paper. I use it all the time.
Sodium ferrocyanide isn't nearly as dangerous as sodium cyanide. Still not something you'd want to eat!
You could use that to make some Prussian blue on your own. You'd have to react with an iron salt of some sort, I think maybe ferric chloride? Nile Red makes it in one of his videos.
There's about 50 books in that series with the heat treating book. Almost every one of them is really good. I especially liked the "Milling: A Complete Course" and "Lathework: A Complete Course". All of the books in the series by Harold Hill are quite good
Thanks
One good thing about retiring is the snowflakes can't try to get you fired for honest opinions. Damned glad to be there and I'm laughing while agreeing with yours!!! My dad is a 90 year old retired woodshed teacher so I can agree him also. Keep it up!!!
👍
"don't get me started"
well I for one would be very interested to hear your unfiltered opinions.
maybe you could make a video where you say what you really think and feel and upload it to an alternative platform where you didn't face sanctions for doing so.
lol
@@mrpete222 glad you got a laugh and I'm greatly honoured you replied, but I was being deadly serious.
I get the sense that you've got a lot more to share than just your metal working skills.
Whoa.
I thought you were going to measure the paper thickness with callipers or a micrometer.
I meant to do that and forgot. But I did it off-camera immediately after I purchased this contraband. And it was exactly 1000 th
@@mrpete222 Stack 1000 of them together then compare with a gauge block. (in the interest of metrology of course)
Mr pete stoned would be something else to watch, get your wife to bake you the "special" cup cakes
Sodium ferrocyanide is fairly safe as is, however it can make hydrogen cyanide gas with water, or even more so with acids. And hydrogen cyanide is probably one of the most dangerous cyanide compounds ever.
Mr Pete....goes to Pot....lol
Started to watch here then I saw the note from you saying to follow you on Rumble so I stopped the video and waiting to see if this posts there. Keith
Not yet