the difference between you and the others is your style wishes to teach and the others just wish to show. It makes a difference. thanks for the videos.
Exactly! And, it gives a more accurate time that it takes to do these things, safe work practices, and HOW to do it. I don't have a lot of tooling or experience, so by the time I work out how to do what needs to be done with what I have and then do it takes probably four times as long as someone with the gear and experience, I am not phased, I am having the time of my life doing it.
I don't care that I will never need or use this piece.its just fascinating to watch and listen to you .Thank you.for giving so many people so much pleasure and yes please do case harden the piece.
Lyle, PLEASE do not worry about your videos being too long. For those people with SHORT ATTENTION SPAN, they can always fast forward. I watch fully to the end as everything is so interesting. Keep up the good work. Regards from Australia.
Could you Rockwell test the case hardening, showing the hardness and different thickness depths? A test block added to your basket could be used. What if the first surface tested was surface ground .005" then retested, the second side ground .010" then tested, the third ground .025" then tested, the fourth .050", the fifth .100", the sixth .250" giving 7 difference hardnesses. I feel most don't realize the results of case hardened. Can anyone guess the differences hardnesses?
Lyle - Use the format that works for you - can't argue with success. I for one would like to see a video on case hardening as it is something I have never done so it would up the education level. Kepp up the good work.
Your videos put sunshine in my day. I love the detail. Not only do you show the project but more important to me as a beginner you teach the techniques needed for the project and for future work. At 72 I learn something new from every videos of yours I have watched. Keep up the great work!!!!
Thanks again. I just watched one of your very old videos where you chided me for wanting a nice car instead of buying a Bridgeport mill. You were right, btw.
Your right I’ll never need it or make it. The only precision machine I own is a hammer. The reason I’ve watched your videos since your earliest days on TH-cam is to get a glimpse of what my grandfather did for a living. He was a machinist for the L&N railroad. He worked in the roundhouse here in Louisville KY. That was his first job and only job he ever had. Almost 50 years working for the old reliable. Also I’m sure your dad would be very proud of your TH-cam career. Followed in the old mans footsteps. That’s got to make a father very happy!
I've been eagerly awaiting this video series and can't wait to watch the other parts. Thanks for the collaboration shout out! The detailed drawing by Mr. Ciampi is really great too!
Each creator has their own formula that works for them..I'd say yours works very well for you. Thanks for the upload and I'm looking forward to the other parts. :-)
I can't wait for all to be available! Even case hardening, water and oil forms. Waiting for this project to be posted at myheap to get the plans. Thank you for all of your time and effort putting up these videos ! 😇
I flipped the head of my Bridgeport 180 degrees for transportation, lowered the center of gravity as I was about to tow it on a trailer through downtown Austin, TX. Once set up at home, it has never been tilted. Trammed often, but never tilted. I remember it took me hours the first time.
I love the style and depth of your videos Tubalcain, seriously you rock. You give great explanations and demonstrations of the work you are performing, plus you always have great comments, especially when you are all fired up on 3 cups of coffee! Please keep up the good work, you are the shop teacher that so many of us wish we had.
Great project, Professor. I find your videos of optimal length. I listen and learn as though I were sitting in your workshop and you are explaining this to me. Thanks again for sharing your tremendous insights.
Thanks again for taking the time to show us. I was lucky enough to be on the last generation to have a full machine shop class in the local highschool. Now im using your videos to teach my son in my homeshop. Those projects are great. Thanks a million,👍👍 J.F.🇨🇦
Thank you Mr. Pete I thoroughly enjoy your teaching knowledge and instructions. Sense of humor is fantastic all the little quips you do are great. Very much appreciated . A class act! Thanks much Mark - Arvada Colorado
Lyle, I'm sure I'm not the only one who references your videos for the fact that you explain stuff. Taking that extra time from layout to setup & tool paths makes your content that much better. Having your other series' with your rants and loose talking may be more comedy at times, but they are also educational. Thank you very much. Stay safe and well :)
Hey Pete! Coming up with your method of making the 1/2"hole is an apparent problem that would leave most scratching their heads. Yours is a good solution. When I first saw the issue, I immediately thought, put both jaws back to back with a properly sized full length spacer between them, then simply drill, ream and c-bore the hole. Pull out of the vise, drop a 1/2" pin in the hole, and c- clamp the pieces together, remove the pin, and c- bore the opposite side. Another way to solve the problem if one lacks a milling machine. Thanks for sharing your knowledge and talent!
My first instinct would be to drill and ream a hole, and then cut the piece in half to end up with two jaws and two identical half-circles. Reamer makes it a known precise dimension, so turning that middle pin wouldn't be complicated either.
Yep, that would be another way to do it. It just goes to show there's many ways to do things. Could use a boring head too. But then you would have to saw them in half.
Saw your video the other week on doing the flat knurling, have had my Klopp 550 Shaper for 5 years or so, thought it was time I used it, so I knurled some scrap steel, I set my table auto feed to the maximum, and adjusted my depth of cut to suit, 20 thou gave the best results. and once you set up and work out the depth of cut etc it's FAST. Thanks for that video Mr Pete, and all of your others as well. Cheers from Australia.
Don't hurt old guys who have been doing it all their lives. - When you know everything it's time to cash in your chips. (and you right, "Silent" and even worse the ones with crappy music SUCK!)
Mate, take as long as you like and as many parts as you need. The short ones I may find entertaining however I find yours entertaining and an education. Thank you. From Inverell Australia.
Hi Lyle, Tilting sideways is nowhere near as bad as front to back. You could go wild and buy a 90° point cutter if you want to avoid the tilt. I hope your temperatures increase soon. Regards Dennis
I having been making videos for a living for decades. Your shot composition at 16:00 in...is an artsy shot. Well done... I know video art is not the focus of your channel. I just thought it might make you smile to point out the different shot:-). Love all your videos and learn so much.
It’s because you’re working on the Bridgeport in the background, while you are framed by the other tool to the right in the foreground. It’s sort of a shot within a shot, showing you working in part of your shop, in context with the rest of it. We’ve all seen shots of the US Capitol in the background framed by a flowering cherry tree branch overhanging it in the foreground. It’s sort of like that. If that makes sense? It is just a shot that I rarely see in any TH-cam videos, And I thought “well good for you” :-) I get a kick out of watching you trying new things as you develop your own unique video style As you shoot, edit, and speak :-)
Lyle, this is yet another of the projects you share that I will have to make for myself! In fact, I'll probably make 3-4 of them to fit different size vises, including a large one _without_ serrations for my (blacksmith) post vise to avoid marks on the red hot metal.
I made one of these (roughly similar, of course!) for woodworking a few years ago, to clamp leg or chair legs before drilling.. I just used a large hardwood dowel between two matching 1/3 drilled holes, in removable vise jaws. This is a much more elegant design! 👍
What a great little project. I'm often having to clamp on material that's out of square while I'm squaring it up on the mill so I'd get some use out of them. So much so I'll make a second set to use at work. As a bonus, nice little project for the shaper! Cold blue them and keep them with the obligatory 52 pc. clamping set hanging off the side of the mill.
Hi Mr. Pete. In answer to your question up front about what we prefer to see in your videos: I prefer to see the more detail you provide in your videos than a super short overview of a project. However I also find that I don’t feel I have enough time at one sitting to watch a video of more than 15 mins. So, please do 10-12 minute parts. Thanks!!
Great video once again! Always entertaining, great way to start my Saturday with a cup of coffee and a mr. Pete video!!! Case hardening or carbonizing would be neat to see.
You just keep giving us the details. - I have used dozens of things you have shown me and have figured why I do things that I do different then you. . It if far better to have and not need then it is to need and not have. ,,,, and that includes information! You are a professional teacher and you are WAY better qualified then any of us out her to say how long your "class" is. I have seen other videos made by amateurs that leave out more information them they put in. - You just keep up the way you think is best. You da man. Speaking of knowing why I do something different then you,,,,, I use a center drill to cut serrations when I need them ,,,,No tilt of the head here,,,and I even do have a couple of chamfering end mills somewhere around here.
yes, but you would need a much higher speed as you effectively reducing the diameter of the cutter to near zero. (it is done that way on small engraving machines)
Great tool, I will be making one. I picture V grooves to help with tapered round objects like the lathe center you showed, and magnets in the two sides at the pivot location to help hold it together during set up. Do not pander to the masses sir, leave a completed body of work that lives up to the high quality products you have created up to this point.
I like your long videos. Perfect pace and narration. Been following you for a couple of years now and enjoy every video. I actually might have to make such vice jaws. I have a rock solid German vice that I often clamp non parallell parts in. Most often I use wood in between but it usually split when I put any force into the part. With these jaws I don't have to tighten the vice until I turn blue.
Your videos are slow and I play them at 1.5x but I value what you have to teach and always feel I've learned a lot. Sometimes I'll watch 4 or 5 of your videos back to back so don't apologize for your style.
I made a similar item years back; instead of the center pin, it has a large center ball bearing so the swivel can pivot in more than one direction. The the two halves are kept together by springs in tension. Only used it a few times, but it worked well.
Hi, thanks for your videos. I am just introducing myself at my 45 year to the lathe and machinery world. Just more for hobby and or small projects. I have been doing Mechanic most of my life. Will be a nice improvement or Idea you can do in the vise jaws is keep the round center in one of the jaws by a centre bolt that hold the pin and allows 15° of movement side to side The comment is because I lose any small tool lol.
This is certainly a nice project. Maybe you should get a Grizzly tilting table to go on your mill. Then you would not have to tilt the head. Thanks for the video.
Who you kidding, Afternoons work !!!!!. Will take that long to set up to mill the diamonds on the parts and RETRAM the BP head, unless you have one of those expensive double dial tramming devices.
Why do I imagine Mr. Pete having a shop Christmas Tree this year, made up out of a (Bridgeport shaped) whipping post with a pair of cat-of-nine-tails draped over the top?
the so-called long videos are part of the great thing about your channel. Sure, there are youtubers like Tommygunn where it's all done in a staggering 7 or 8 minutes, but there are a lot of ways to skin a cat.
Those people that don't explain anything make video's for people that have no interest in learning. As we all know you never stop leaning, keep teaching and being Lyle Peterson.
Good morning Mer. Pete, Nice project. If any complains about tilting the mill head why have it and not use it? Its is there to make jobs easier. Keep up the good work.
I think your video style is awesome those other type you mentioned are cool but they're basically just watching someone make something which is fine for people that just wanna watch or folks that have the skills to do the same but for people starting or people that wanna learn or even folks that have skills your videos are great at teaching folks how and why and help folks learn or get better keep doing what you're doing it's great and really appreciated by many many folks of all skill levels 👍👍👍
went to myheap, I don't see the plans there yet. I actually think this is a valuable asset. I'll probably build this, and put in a v down the length in the middle for holding round stock if ever needed. Just a slight V.
Please dont change how you do your videos. I have used a wood wedge at times. Didnt know this was something that had been made and something I needed. Sure, probably not used often but dang, a tool that pays for itself the first time you need it just like many other specialty tools.
Interesting project. I'll figure out a way to do it "my way". Adjusting the angle of the head, the spindle, on my hobby mill will likely end up in a bang and 90 degrees of cutting angle..... and the headache, how to get it back to 90 degrees vertical again... Need to figure out an alternative way....
the difference between you and the others is your style wishes to teach and the others just wish to show. It makes a difference.
thanks for the videos.
Exactly! And, it gives a more accurate time that it takes to do these things, safe work practices, and HOW to do it.
I don't have a lot of tooling or experience, so by the time I work out how to do what needs to be done with what I have and then do it takes probably four times as long as someone with the gear and experience, I am not phased, I am having the time of my life doing it.
Thank you very much
Just do what you do, that’s what makes you great to watch
Instablaster.
I don't care that I will never need or use this piece.its just fascinating to watch and listen to you .Thank you.for giving so many people so much pleasure and yes please do case harden the piece.
Amen
Lyle, PLEASE do not worry about your videos being too long. For those people with SHORT ATTENTION SPAN, they can always fast forward. I watch fully to the end as everything is so interesting. Keep up the good work. Regards from Australia.
Thank you for putting all the effort into your videos tubalcain. I would love to see case hardening
Could you Rockwell test the case hardening, showing the hardness and different thickness depths? A test block added to your basket could be used. What if the first surface tested was surface ground .005" then retested, the second side ground .010" then tested, the third ground .025" then tested, the fourth .050", the fifth .100", the sixth .250" giving 7 difference hardnesses.
I feel most don't realize the results of case hardened. Can anyone guess the differences hardnesses?
I prefer your longer videos. They help me learn how to do machining.
Lyle - Use the format that works for you - can't argue with success. I for one would like to see a video on case hardening as it is something I have never done so it would up the education level. Kepp up the good work.
Thanks for explaining the backstory on how you got the project idea and giving credit to your co-conspirators...
The collaboration for this project reinforces that Mr. Pete's TH-cam channel is really a community rather than just a collection of viewers.
@@DavidKutzler Well said
Amen to this.
Your videos put sunshine in my day. I love the detail. Not only do you show the project but more important to me as a beginner you teach the techniques needed for the project and for future work. At 72 I learn something new from every videos of yours I have watched. Keep up the great work!!!!
Thank you very much
What a great way to start off a Saturday morning👍
That it is!!!
Thanks again. I just watched one of your very old videos where you chided me for wanting a nice car instead of buying a Bridgeport mill. You were right, btw.
lol
You would have still had the mill.
Thanks for being a shop teacher. and really teaching me.
👍
Good Morning, Mr Peterson ☕. I apologize for being late to class🕣👩🔧🙋♀️
Your right I’ll never need it or make it. The only precision machine I own is a hammer. The reason I’ve watched your videos since your earliest days on TH-cam is to get a glimpse of what my grandfather did for a living. He was a machinist for the L&N railroad. He worked in the roundhouse here in Louisville KY. That was his first job and only job he ever had. Almost 50 years working for the old reliable.
Also I’m sure your dad would be very proud of your TH-cam career. Followed in the old mans footsteps. That’s got to make a father very happy!
Thank you very much for a great comment
I've been eagerly awaiting this video series and can't wait to watch the other parts. Thanks for the collaboration shout out! The detailed drawing by Mr. Ciampi is really great too!
I'm certainly going to make this Mr Pete, I much prefer your long and highly detailed videos, thank you for sharing Sir
Thanks
Hello Mr. Peterson,
I have been waiting with interest for this build to start... Looking forward to part 2.
Take care.
Paul,,
I’m very happy for you to keep ya vids just how they are... fantastic!
Great video,that's a neat part to make ,thanks for sharing the dimensions to make it,😁
👍
Don’t worry Mr.Pete we love your vids as they are.. 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Each creator has their own formula that works for them..I'd say yours works very well for you. Thanks for the upload and I'm looking forward to the other parts. :-)
I love watching your videos, irrespective of the time it takes to watch.
Mr. Pete, don't change your format or style we are happy with the way you do things especially your RANTS.
Glad your back. Missed you last week. Good video.
😀
I can't wait for all to be available! Even case hardening, water and oil forms. Waiting for this project to be posted at myheap to get the plans. Thank you for all of your time and effort putting up these videos ! 😇
Lyle, you are the best. You break the old adage that those who can't, teach. You can do, and you can teach. Love your videos. Thank you sir.
Thank you very much
I flipped the head of my Bridgeport 180 degrees for transportation, lowered the center of gravity as I was about to tow it on a trailer through downtown Austin, TX. Once set up at home, it has never been tilted. Trammed often, but never tilted. I remember it took me hours the first time.
Watch for Mr. Pete's coming videos on tramming a Bridgeport head the easy way.
I appreciate the time and effort You spend to share projects with us.
Thank You Lyle.
Love your videos Mr. P! BTW I loathe and despise videos where people don't talk, I usually give them thumbs down and shut them off!
I love the style and depth of your videos Tubalcain, seriously you rock. You give great explanations and demonstrations of the work you are performing, plus you always have great comments, especially when you are all fired up on 3 cups of coffee! Please keep up the good work, you are the shop teacher that so many of us wish we had.
I appreciate that!
Great project, Professor. I find your videos of optimal length. I listen and learn as though I were sitting in your workshop and you are explaining this to me. Thanks again for sharing your tremendous insights.
Thank you very much
Please continue to talk and explain. I find seeing what you are doing while you verbally explain is extremely helpful for learning.
Thanks again for taking the time to show us. I was lucky enough to be on the last generation to have a full machine shop class in the local highschool. Now im using your videos to teach my son in my homeshop. Those projects are great.
Thanks a million,👍👍
J.F.🇨🇦
Keep up the GREAT videos @mrpete222!!
Thank you so much. Can't tell you how grateful, as a home machinist, I am for your content.
👍👍
Thanks for sharing!
Morning, Lyle. Overslept this morning.
I saw the previous 2 videos and I am sure glad that I get to see this series.
Mr Pete, please don't change your videos in any way, we all love them just as they are. Really looking forward to this series. Cheers, Alan.
What else would I be doing if I wasn't watching your videos?
Make them as long as possible 😃.
Thank you Mr. Pete I thoroughly enjoy your teaching knowledge and instructions. Sense of humor is fantastic all the little quips you do are great. Very much appreciated . A class act!
Thanks much
Mark - Arvada Colorado
Thanks
Lyle, I'm sure I'm not the only one who references your videos for the fact that you explain stuff. Taking that extra time from layout to setup & tool paths makes your content that much better.
Having your other series' with your rants and loose talking may be more comedy at times, but they are also educational. Thank you very much. Stay safe and well :)
Thanks
Hey Pete! Coming up with your method of making the 1/2"hole is an apparent problem that would leave most scratching their heads. Yours is a good solution. When I first saw the issue, I immediately thought, put both jaws back to back with a properly sized full length spacer between them, then simply drill, ream and c-bore the hole. Pull out of the vise, drop a 1/2" pin in the hole, and c- clamp the pieces together, remove the pin, and c- bore the opposite side. Another way to solve the problem if one lacks a milling machine. Thanks for sharing your knowledge and talent!
My first instinct would be to drill and ream a hole, and then cut the piece in half to end up with two jaws and two identical half-circles. Reamer makes it a known precise dimension, so turning that middle pin wouldn't be complicated either.
Yep, that would be another way to do it. It just goes to show there's many ways to do things. Could use a boring head too. But then you would have to saw them in half.
@@fall22123 ...not necessarily-(!)
@@daleburrell6273 Good point. Just clamp 2 pieces together.
@@fall22123 ...EXACTLY-(!)
Saw your video the other week on doing the flat knurling, have had my Klopp 550 Shaper for 5 years or so, thought it was time I used it, so I knurled some scrap steel, I set my table auto feed to the maximum, and adjusted my depth of cut to suit, 20 thou gave the best results. and once you set up and work out the depth of cut etc it's FAST.
Thanks for that video Mr Pete, and all of your others as well.
Cheers from Australia.
Mr Pete, please dont do the "silent" videos. The explanations are so helpful to those of us who are not real machinists/
Don't hurt old guys who have been doing it all their lives. - When you know everything it's time to cash in your chips. (and you right, "Silent" and even worse the ones with crappy music SUCK!)
That music kills me
Mate, take as long as you like and as many parts as you need. The short ones I may find entertaining however I find yours entertaining and an education. Thank you. From Inverell Australia.
Thanks
Hi Lyle,
Tilting sideways is nowhere near as bad as front to back.
You could go wild and buy a 90° point cutter if you want to avoid the tilt.
I hope your temperatures increase soon.
Regards Dennis
On the day Lyle Petersen was born, the Doctor look at his mother and said "It's a machinist."
...you're probably RIGHT-!!
Between his work, my grandfather's and some of mine it's all in the name
LOL
I having been making videos for a living for decades. Your shot composition at 16:00 in...is an artsy shot. Well done... I know video art is not the focus of your channel. I just thought it might make you smile to point out the different shot:-). Love all your videos and learn so much.
Thank you very much. I just looked at it again.. In my opinion it is an OK shot. What makes it artsy?? I would like to know so I could do more of it
It’s because you’re working on the Bridgeport in the background, while you are framed by the other tool to the right in the foreground. It’s sort of a shot within a shot, showing you working in part of your shop, in context with the rest of it. We’ve all seen shots of the US Capitol in the background framed by a flowering cherry tree branch overhanging it in the foreground. It’s sort of like that. If that makes sense? It is just a shot that I rarely see in any TH-cam videos, And I thought “well good for you” :-) I get a kick out of watching you trying new things as you develop your own unique video style As you shoot, edit, and speak :-)
I also agree. The longer videos explain it better for me as well. Thanks Mr Pete.
Lyle, this is yet another of the projects you share that I will have to make for myself! In fact, I'll probably make 3-4 of them to fit different size vises, including a large one _without_ serrations for my (blacksmith) post vise to avoid marks on the red hot metal.
Sir we watch your videos because we love your videos. Just keep doing you sir we will continue to follow your knowledge
I made one of these (roughly similar, of course!) for woodworking a few years ago, to clamp leg or chair legs before drilling..
I just used a large hardwood dowel between two matching 1/3 drilled holes, in removable vise jaws.
This is a much more elegant design!
👍
What a great little project. I'm often having to clamp on material that's out of square while I'm squaring it up on the mill so I'd get some use out of them. So much so I'll make a second set to use at work. As a bonus, nice little project for the shaper! Cold blue them and keep them with the obligatory 52 pc. clamping set hanging off the side of the mill.
Another wonderful Peterson product to add to my list of what to make next.
Yes I'll make it and use it. great watching you Lyle
Got my popcorn and setting back, so let's watch the video.
I like your videos and narration, and vlogs Lyle
Hi Mr. Pete. In answer to your question up front about what we prefer to see in your videos: I prefer to see the more detail you provide in your videos than a super short overview of a project. However I also find that I don’t feel I have enough time at one sitting to watch a video of more than 15 mins. So, please do 10-12 minute parts. Thanks!!
Great video once again! Always entertaining, great way to start my Saturday with a cup of coffee and a mr. Pete video!!! Case hardening or carbonizing would be neat to see.
You just keep giving us the details. - I have used dozens of things you have shown me and have figured why I do things that I do different then you. . It if far better to have and not need then it is to need and not have. ,,,, and that includes information! You are a professional teacher and you are WAY better qualified then any of us out her to say how long your "class" is. I have seen other videos made by amateurs that leave out more information them they put in. - You just keep up the way you think is best. You da man.
Speaking of knowing why I do something different then you,,,,, I use a center drill to cut serrations when I need them ,,,,No tilt of the head here,,,and I even do have a couple of chamfering end mills somewhere around here.
Thank you very much
Could the serrations be done using a “V” shaped mill cutter? Could save aligning the mill head. Thanks for the videos.
yes, but you would need a much higher speed as you effectively reducing the diameter of the cutter to near zero. (it is done that way on small engraving machines)
@@heronvontremonia9975 Works just fine, even with a center drill. I have done it that way since I was in High School (and I'm 74 now)
Very nice work there old timer ,they are very handy vise jaws that's for sure. Very nice.
Mate. You are a legend and a pleasure to watch. Keep it up Tublicain
Thank you very much
Great tool, I will be making one. I picture V grooves to help with tapered round objects like the lathe center you showed, and magnets in the two sides at the pivot location to help hold it together during set up. Do not pander to the masses sir, leave a completed body of work that lives up to the high quality products you have created up to this point.
Thanks
Love how you do your project vids showing how it is done.
Thanks
Great project, and nice clear drawing,,thx for showing this, Bear
Another great video. I think I would like to make a pair for myself. Thank you Sir for sharing this with all of us. Dan
You do a very nice job with video length. Your videos tend to keep my attention from start to end. Please note I also always watch the extra credit.
Thanks
Yes I do need one of these for my shop, longer videos are just fine as I'm impatient and like to start and finish a project as fast as I can.😀
Could make one jaw serrated and the other smooth to prevent nicking. (Have the best of both worlds and save some work at the same time.)
Good idea, never thought of it
I agree. Thank you Mr Pete!
I like your long videos. Perfect pace and narration. Been following you for a couple of years now and enjoy every video.
I actually might have to make such vice jaws. I have a rock solid German vice that I often clamp non parallell parts in. Most often I use wood in between but it usually split when I put any force into the part.
With these jaws I don't have to tighten the vice until I turn blue.
👍👍
Amazing video as always! Thanks for your effort into these videos!
I am looking forward to the entire series and the case hardening! Please show how to case harden.
I have my Dad's swivel jaws...he was a shaper hand at Gm's "Fleetwood" plant in Detroit...😀
Your videos are slow and I play them at 1.5x but I value what you have to teach and always feel I've learned a lot. Sometimes I'll watch 4 or 5 of your videos back to back so don't apologize for your style.
I made a similar item years back; instead of the center pin, it has a large center ball bearing so the swivel can pivot in more than one direction. The the two halves are kept together by springs in tension. Only used it a few times, but it worked well.
I plan on making a mock up of the vise jaws With a ball. Several people have mentioned this
Hi, thanks for your videos.
I am just introducing myself at my 45 year to the lathe and machinery world.
Just more for hobby and or small projects. I have been doing Mechanic most of my life.
Will be a nice improvement or Idea you can do in the vise jaws is keep the round center in one of the jaws by a centre bolt that hold the pin and allows 15° of movement side to side The comment is because I lose any small tool lol.
Thank you, I talk a little bit about that in part four.
This is certainly a nice project. Maybe you should get a Grizzly tilting table to go on your mill. Then you would not have to tilt the head. Thanks for the video.
Great Video, Not sure how I missed it but should be a great series, Thanks
I would like to see the case hardened video
Nice afternoon project. Nice pointer.
Who you kidding, Afternoons work !!!!!. Will take that long to set up to mill the diamonds on the parts and RETRAM the BP head, unless you have one of those expensive double dial tramming devices.
@@daveticehurst4191 Thank you Dave. I do have one.
Why do I imagine Mr. Pete having a shop Christmas Tree this year, made up out of a (Bridgeport shaped) whipping post with a pair of cat-of-nine-tails draped over the top?
the so-called long videos are part of the great thing about your channel. Sure, there are youtubers like Tommygunn where it's all done in a staggering 7 or 8 minutes, but there are a lot of ways to skin a cat.
Those people that don't explain anything make video's for people that have no interest in learning. As we all know you never stop leaning, keep teaching and being Lyle Peterson.
👍👍👍
THANK YOU...for sharing. Enjoyed.
Well done Mr Pete.
Cheers
Peter
I was looking forward to this one . That will work nice in die work & model steam engine work thank you
Good morning Mer. Pete, Nice project. If any complains about tilting the mill head why have it and not use it? Its is there to make jobs easier. Keep up the good work.
I think your video style is awesome those other type you mentioned are cool but they're basically just watching someone make something which is fine for people that just wanna watch or folks that have the skills to do the same but for people starting or people that wanna learn or even folks that have skills your videos are great at teaching folks how and why and help folks learn or get better keep doing what you're doing it's great and really appreciated by many many folks of all skill levels 👍👍👍
Thank you very much
went to myheap, I don't see the plans there yet. I actually think this is a valuable asset. I'll probably build this, and put in a v down the length in the middle for holding round stock if ever needed. Just a slight V.
I have actually needed tapered jaws quite often. But I don't have them and haven't taken the time to make some. Yet.
Please dont change how you do your videos. I have used a wood wedge at times. Didnt know this was something that had been made and something I needed. Sure, probably not used often but dang, a tool that pays for itself the first time you need it just like many other specialty tools.
👍👍
Please consider case hardening the parts using that Kasenite shown at 17:38. Regards.
Long but we like it
"what you gona learn by making this .... " ....here is your like my friend.I am glad that you didnt say " what you gona have when you make this".
Interesting project. I'll figure out a way to do it "my way".
Adjusting the angle of the head, the spindle, on my hobby mill will likely end up in a bang and 90 degrees of cutting angle..... and the headache, how to get it back to 90 degrees vertical again... Need to figure out an alternative way....
Yes Mr Pete 20 minutes is long enough for a video.I will make the vice jaw and I cannot think of use for it either.