That happens to me too, so don’t feel bad - mistakes are part of the process! Enjoy your 33.33 cups of coffee. 😄 Keep it up, your videos are awesome! Greetings from Germany!
Hi Peter, Thank you very much for your donation to the tool destruction fund :) Nice to see a linuxCNC/youtube star dropping in :) I really appreciate your Mesa card videos. Have a happy new years. Mark
@@RotarySMP My worst one this year was a birds nest flailing out and grabbing the GoPro - taking my lovely (now dented) Noga arm with it across the workshop. Had to machine a new 'special' bolt for the arm but think it just about survived.
Don't you just HATE it when a print decides to lift off the bed and turn into mess of plastic "string"? So far, everything I've made has taken at least 3 attempts...
@alanclarke4646 I wish I could could share the picture of the devastation of my Ender 3's bed & hot end...Almost half the area curled up & gouged through to the heated sheet with a spaghetti ball on top! It did result in a Micro Swiss direct drive +Klipper & KAMP though, so every cloud has a silver lining.
Aww, don't feel so bad about the crashes. Remember, one man's CNC crash disaster, is 10,000 man's fun viewing experience... 😎 You're making the world a better place 👍 But seriously now, two things I got into the habit of doing with my own CNC are; 1. The first time cutting a part, use VERY gentle cut depth and feeds speeds. Max depth of maybe 5 to 10% of cutter diameter etc. (Yes this increases time and tool wear, but hopefully it will go well on the first part then you can dial in a more efficient cut depth on later parts.) 2. Air cutting. If the total cut time is only a few minutes, just run an air cut an inch above the part and watch it. That technique has saved me so many times! Especially when smashing a rapid move right through a clamp etc... Considering that there might be a couple hours already invested in the CAD/CAM, spending an extra few minutes doing an air cut doesnt increase the overall job time that much BUT will save your bacon.
I get all my machining urges covered by this channel. If a seasoned aircraft mechanic makes mistakes like these, I figure that I'd have lost both fingers and eyesight within one week of operating a mini lathe.
Aw man, thats a lot learning! And some groovy tunes .. thanks for taking the time to film and share your workshop adventures with us. Best wishes for the new year!
Thank you for sharing all of your nice videos. I enjoyed all of them. I have my own shop for 28 years now and off course made mistakes too. Especially trying new approaches or tools. I had one major CNC crash after using new CAM software for a few times. The software remembers your last input and uses that as a default for the next use of the routine. So my zero z-height wasn't zero but minus 7 and the new 25 mm cutter went in with G00. Stainless steel plate 600 x 300 x 25 was bolted on the table. The cutter was completely destroyed or it exploded on impact and knocked the complete part of the table taking my toolsetter with it. Everything could be saved but that made a lasting impression and since I've been able to only break drills, taps and cutters which you're supposed too if you want to be productive 🙏 Maybe a little advice for you buy a t-shirt which reads "It's only right, when it's really tight" as a reminder. I think it's your weak point... Humour! Thank you! All the best! Job
If you're not breaking tools, you're not making anything. Perversely, this makes me feel a whole lot better about my workshop adventures. 😁😁 Regards, Preso
Happy new year! Finally pulled the trigger in that bambu printer via the channel- hope you get a little something out of that and thanks for all the great videos. It’s a Sunday morning treat here in seattle
I've just realised that if someone GAVE me a CNC, I couldn't afford to run it. Some of it, you can probably see it's going to happen, and you simply cannot hit the big red button fast enough. I'm going to stick to manual machining, I break enough stuff doing that. And a very Happy NewYear to you Mark.
There sure is a strong motivation to run your generated toolpath G-code through a simulation software first, just to spot obvious failures. Not seeing any doesn't mean the machine can't still crash into something that isn't part of the simulation, but establishing that it all looks sane still helps a lot...
No, I did not like what I saw... But how you handle it all is a huge encouragement! And I do know how the focus on the cnc aspect can obscure the attention to the basic details of clamping etc... On a positive note, you have a tool sharpener! Ja, ein frohes neues Jahr!
Don't feel bad Mark I've experienced several of these myself at work this year too lol. The most recent one was a week ago, I was running the old K&T model 2K mill at work doing some gang drilling and while using a new brush that admittedly had bristles that were a tad too long to clear chips the ¾" drill grabbed the brush out my hand and spun it around a few times before flinging it clear across the shop and into the open top of a coworkers tool box. 😂
I would love to share but my friends don't know and don't care about machining and my co-workers don't speak English but at least you have a like and a comment! Happy new year and I hope that you feeds and speeds won't break a lot of tools in 2025!
With this much oopsies I gave it up a long time ago to watch this videos to learn something. It's just for entertaining 😉 Just kidding, we like you Mark. Mistakes are part of the journey... One year of shop-work compressed in 10min pure mistakes is hard, but its way better than hide them and pretend everything was going fine...
I do not want to see this, but I cannot stop watching. At least I do not feel as alone anymore. "No those pockets in the vise jaw are totally intentional".
My take aways.... 1. video OR machine, not both. 2. tighten everything 3 times ... tooling and work 3. don't rush. Thanks for the videos of 2024 looking forward to 2025....
God damn, if this isn't a showcase of how much you have been doing as well I don't know what is. Have a great new years, and looking forward to see what will happen in 2025
Happy New Year ! Look on the bright side , first you got to turn in into a video and second, it could be worse , the house that i'm sitting in was partially paid for from the service visits to correct the damage from the next stage of oops. you are doing fine😀.
@RotarySMP I think I have said it before but you make Sundays more enjoyable for me so thank you very much.Looking forward to next year's projects.Happy New year.Re Ken
@@RotarySMP No, I was asking myself "what are you doing" squinting thinking something will come lose and fly through my screen. 😆 I once had an adjustable boring head come apart while boring a part. It took almost a year to find all the bits as they flew past my head and landed, after ricochets, in various parts of my large busy basement.
@@vincei4252 Ouch. that reminds me to work out how to alter LinuxCNC to tie in tool number with spindle max speeds or inhibits, so I dont crank the Narex boring head to 4000 rpm.
I am not an aviation machinist, and doing aircraft maintenance is totally different environment. You have written procedures, always the correct tools, training etc.
Mark doesn't swear, Mark doesn't swear, Mark doesn't swear, Mark doesn't swear. Thanks for the reminders. Shudder. -- a guy that doesn't swear .. nudge, nudge, wink, wink 😜
i know the feeling, just today i smashed a brand new 20mm hrc roughing cutter, just because i forgot to thighten the wice properly after aligning it - so that was was about 150€ down the drain 😡
Hi Michel, yeah I am glad about that as well. I need to try and reduce error, so that this does not become an annual video. How is you arm feeling now? Cheer, Mark
Haha …! I didn’t broke anything or had any close call this year…! Well.. to be honest I didn’t do anything at all in the work shop… Hope it will change in 2025 ! Happy machining to you all ! 🤓
Happy to report that the only thing I have done in that nature through all my time was that I had the collet chuck pressure to high ones and collapsed a peace of hollow nylon tube ( yes you could see the negative impression of a F42 collet ) but the first was fine and the 3 one ( since the first was never clamped down on and for the 3 I had turned down the pressure ) For some reason 16mm od 12mm Id nylon tube don't like to be squeezed with 30 bar of hydrolic collet pressure. Who would had guessed xD
Most of my parts slipping in the lathe chuck were similar. I had been sandblasting, and left the Px regulator on 9 bar, when the Schaublin tail stock only needs about 3.
@@RotarySMPYou need a pressure regulator for the lathe air and maybe a pressure tank with a check valve, to keep the pneumatic system pressurized, even if you use air directly from the compressor for other purposes.
@@RotarySMP never had a part slip though and actually never used tail stock on a cnc lathe if im being honest ( i either used a diffrent strategy that allowed me to or had it in my program to only work at part of the part and then pull the part out as needed ( made a ø16x450mm part with lots of diffrent features on with that last methord ))
@@erik_dk842 well this was integrated close hydrolic mekanism ( the machine didnt use air to close or open the collet at all ) it only had air to blow to make sure the turet surface was clean when changing tool ( and i know cause i did try pulling out the air line to the machine and it still open and close the collet no problem but when i tried to change the tool position it whend into allarm and said "low air pressure" but could still open and close collet )
I can say one thing positive about this video. I is guaranteed to keep one's attention focused intently on the video lest we miss the next booboo! I'm watching thinking "what's going to happen next?" I'm afraid to look away!
@@RotarySMPit’s a sagop if I am not zmistaken. There are a few different makes out there based on the same system the giveaway is both jaws are tapered at the back.
That happens to me too, so don’t feel bad - mistakes are part of the process! Enjoy your 33.33 cups of coffee. 😄 Keep it up, your videos are awesome! Greetings from Germany!
Hi Peter, Thank you very much for your donation to the tool destruction fund :) Nice to see a linuxCNC/youtube star dropping in :) I really appreciate your Mesa card videos.
Have a happy new years.
Mark
A man who never made a mistake, never made anything.
One of the best pieces of advice I received as an apprentice.
Thanks Philip, yeah, I would like to reduce that error amount a bit in the next year though :/
@@RotarySMP My worst one this year was a birds nest flailing out and grabbing the GoPro - taking my lovely (now dented) Noga arm with it across the workshop. Had to machine a new 'special' bolt for the arm but think it just about survived.
@@philip_fletcher Ouch. That is such a bad sinking feeling when that sort of thing happens.
Don't you just HATE it when a print decides to lift off the bed and turn into mess of plastic "string"? So far, everything I've made has taken at least 3 attempts...
@alanclarke4646 I wish I could could share the picture of the devastation of my Ender 3's bed & hot end...Almost half the area curled up & gouged through to the heated sheet with a spaghetti ball on top! It did result in a Micro Swiss direct drive +Klipper & KAMP though, so every cloud has a silver lining.
Easily the best reggae channel on YT!
Glad you enjoyed that :)
@@RotarySMP no machine no cry
Watching this video gives me the Dread as well!
I always break my tools manually. It must be nice to have CNC automate the process for you. Happy new year - Heather
Hi Heather. You are right their, you can produce far more scrap, more precisely and much faster with CNC :)
Aww, don't feel so bad about the crashes.
Remember, one man's CNC crash disaster,
is 10,000 man's fun viewing experience... 😎
You're making the world a better place 👍
But seriously now, two things I got into the habit of doing with my own CNC are;
1. The first time cutting a part, use VERY gentle cut depth and feeds speeds. Max depth of maybe 5 to 10% of cutter diameter etc. (Yes this increases time and tool wear, but hopefully it will go well on the first part then you can dial in a more efficient cut depth on later parts.)
2. Air cutting. If the total cut time is only a few minutes, just run an air cut an inch above the part and watch it. That technique has saved me so many times! Especially when smashing a rapid move right through a clamp etc... Considering that there might be a couple hours already invested in the CAD/CAM, spending an extra few minutes doing an air cut doesnt increase the overall job time that much BUT will save your bacon.
Thanks for the tips there. Most of my screw ups have been doing an MDI move with a F expecting G94, and having G95 set. Need to check that rigorously.
I did not crash a single tool this year, then again I also did not do anything in my workshop. Happy new year keep the video's alive!
Thanks, I will do.
I get all my machining urges covered by this channel. If a seasoned aircraft mechanic makes mistakes like these, I figure that I'd have lost both fingers and eyesight within one week of operating a mini lathe.
I did consider taking up knitting, but probably would have poked my eye out.
Aw man, thats a lot learning! And some groovy tunes .. thanks for taking the time to film and share your workshop adventures with us. Best wishes for the new year!
Thanks a lot. Happy new years.
Great video Mark always a relief to see it's not just me doing these things!
Yeah, it was a painful one.
It is truly gruesome to watch. You're a brave man.
Yeah, it was not much fun to do either :)
Thanks for your entertaining video's for the year Mark. Your channel is a favorite of mine.
Thanks a lot Steven. Happy new years.
Air cycle machine! The heart of ATA 21, thanks for the great videos this year, happy new year!
Thanks Ian. Pretty castings on the ACM too :) Happy new year.
Thank you for sharing all of your nice videos. I enjoyed all of them. I have my own shop for 28 years now and off course made mistakes too. Especially trying new approaches or tools. I had one major CNC crash after using new CAM software for a few times. The software remembers your last input and uses that as a default for the next use of the routine. So my zero z-height wasn't zero but minus 7 and the new 25 mm cutter went in with G00. Stainless steel plate 600 x 300 x 25 was bolted on the table. The cutter was completely destroyed or it exploded on impact and knocked the complete part of the table taking my toolsetter with it. Everything could be saved but that made a lasting impression and since I've been able to only break drills, taps and cutters which you're supposed too if you want to be productive 🙏 Maybe a little advice for you buy a t-shirt which reads "It's only right, when it's really tight" as a reminder. I think it's your weak point... Humour! Thank you! All the best! Job
Thanks a lot Job, you are right on the shirt :)
Sunday night horror flick!
It is that for sure, Tom.
I just wish I hadn't done a lot of these myself, and with non-cnc tools
@@timbergel8147 Yeah, machining is pretty hard on tools :)
The first one hurt the most! At least for me.
Thanks for sharing and for your videos this year!
Yeah, me too. Luckily the tool shank rotated in the tool holder, preventing worse damage.
Happy new year. Looking forward to your projects next year. Had a good laugh at your automating tool breaking 🤣
Thanks Steve. Resolution for 2025. Make no content for the 2025 edition of this video.
If you're not breaking tools, you're not making anything. Perversely, this makes me feel a whole lot better about my workshop adventures. 😁😁
Regards,
Preso
Hi Mark. My resolution for 2025 is to generate zero content for next years crash video :)
Happy new year! Finally pulled the trigger in that bambu printer via the channel- hope you get a little something out of that and thanks for all the great videos. It’s a Sunday morning treat here in seattle
Thanks for using my link. I hope you are as happy with yours as I am with it. Very handy tool.
I've just realised that if someone GAVE me a CNC, I couldn't afford to run it.
Some of it, you can probably see it's going to happen, and you simply cannot hit the big red button fast enough. I'm going to stick to manual machining, I break enough stuff doing that.
And a very Happy NewYear to you Mark.
Hi Bill. Yep, that is the root cause of the pucker factor you feel with CNC. And these are very slow by modern standards.
Prime motivation to make more money, so you CAN!
There sure is a strong motivation to run your generated toolpath G-code through a simulation software first, just to spot obvious failures. Not seeing any doesn't mean the machine can't still crash into something that isn't part of the simulation, but establishing that it all looks sane still helps a lot...
If I had a mill and a lathe I am sure I would be up there on tool crashes and quite likely cuts and breaks. Happy New Year Mark and yours.
Hi John, my resolution for 2025 is to generate no content for the 2025 edition of this video.
Happy new year.
No, I did not like what I saw... But how you handle it all is a huge encouragement! And I do know how the focus on the cnc aspect can obscure the attention to the basic details of clamping etc... On a positive note, you have a tool sharpener!
Ja, ein frohes neues Jahr!
Danke Johannes, unf frohes neues Jahr.
Happy new year mate, thanks for sharing the real world with us. Cheers.
I hope to improve my real world in 2025 :)
It is nice to know that I am not the only one wasting tools and materials.
You are not, William :)
@@RotarySMP I certainly am.
Thanks for the memories Mark. 2024 was a terrific year. Can’t wait to see what 2025 will bring. 👍👍😎👍👍
Hi Joell, Happy new year to you as well.
Welcome to the club. I'm also a dues paying member in good standing. I have a lifetime membership.
Thanks Jody. I hope next year there will not be a repeat of this video :/
Don't feel bad Mark I've experienced several of these myself at work this year too lol.
The most recent one was a week ago, I was running the old K&T model 2K mill at work doing some gang drilling and while using a new brush that admittedly had bristles that were a tad too long to clear chips the ¾" drill grabbed the brush out my hand and spun it around a few times before flinging it clear across the shop and into the open top of a coworkers tool box. 😂
Glad it didn't take a finger with it.
A very Happy and successful New Year Mark. I'm looking forward to sharing the coming adventures with you.
Thanks and happy new years.
It's always a treat to see someone else scrap parts and tools. That would never ever🤥happen to me. 😉
Thanks Michael :)
Glad it's not just me! I hope you had a good Xmas and have a happy new year (with fewer crashes)
Thanks Murray, happy new years, and lets make fewer crashes the plan.
I would love to share but my friends don't know and don't care about machining and my co-workers don't speak English but at least you have a like and a comment!
Happy new year and I hope that you feeds and speeds won't break a lot of tools in 2025!
Thanks Maxim :) Yeah that is my new years resolution..
CNC stands for Crashes Numerically Computed, doesn't it?
Thanks for all the great videos and happy new year!
It does when I do it :)
That’ll buff out. Happy New Year Mark! 😄
Hi Doric, thanks and happy new years to you an your family as well.
Cheers,
Mark
With this much oopsies I gave it up a long time ago to watch this videos to learn something. It's just for entertaining 😉
Just kidding, we like you Mark. Mistakes are part of the journey...
One year of shop-work compressed in 10min pure mistakes is hard, but its way better than hide them and pretend everything was going fine...
Thanks a lot. Hopefully 2025 wont produce a sequel of this video.
every machinist youtuber should be required to do these videos
My resolution for 2025 is to generate zero footage for next years video. :)
Thanks for the entertainmen Mark, so glad none of these have ever happened to me😂😂. All the best for 2025
Thanks a lot. Happy new year.
"Been there, done that!" All too often! Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!
Happy New year.
😱 😢 🤯 that's a real horror story. Hope you have a happy new year. 👍
I hope for better in 2025 Chris. Happy new years to you as well.
Heck, I had a couple of those happen to be last weekend. I guess I am with good company!
Thanks Don. I make them too regularly.
I do not want to see this, but I cannot stop watching. At least I do not feel as alone anymore. "No those pockets in the vise jaw are totally intentional".
Thanks Tim, good to know I am not alone :)
Thanks for a festive compilation! 😊
You are welcome. Thanks for watching.
My take aways....
1. video OR machine, not both.
2. tighten everything 3 times ... tooling and work
3. don't rush.
Thanks for the videos of 2024 looking forward to 2025....
Yeah., all good points.
Look at it this way, you only had nine minutes and fourteen seconds' worth of fails in an entire year. That's pretty good. 🙂
Thanks Stuart
Good reggae and the Green Magic woMAHO, whats not to like:-) Happy New Year and thank you for videos in 2024. Best regards from Denmark.
Thanks and happy new year!
No worries. We all gotta start somewhere 😂. Always keep your vice jaws well lubricatet.
I hope this will not be an annual special.
God damn, if this isn't a showcase of how much you have been doing as well I don't know what is.
Have a great new years, and looking forward to see what will happen in 2025
Thanks for that. Hopefully no repeat of this video in 2025.
5:48 Be careful, please! Tools&jigs are replaceable, not limbs!
Yeah, if should have left it to bounce around, it is scrap anyway.
I never crashed anything. I just watch everybody else do it. Happy New Year
good policy
Damn, your video was only 9 minutes long.... I convinced myself I do this work for a living.
I am sure doing it full time, real machinists make way fewer errors per hour.
Drehbank hat eine sehr "tolle" futter.... oder ? - und immer vor start alles festziehen... :) :) Mann o meter
Ja hat es. Aber hích habe die Pneumatic Druck zurückzustellen nachdem ich zwecks Sandstrahlen aufgedreht habe.
@@RotarySMP sollte es nicht mit d.luft nur es offenen ? wie am Maho CNC.... ?
Happy New Year ! Look on the bright side , first you got to turn in into a video and second, it could be worse , the house that i'm sitting in was partially paid for
from the service visits to correct the damage from the next stage of oops. you are doing fine😀.
Hi Steve, yeah, it is annoying to do so many screw ups, but most of them were pretty harmless. And only tools got hurt. Happy New years.
Thanks for sharing your hiccups. Happy new year to you and yours.
Thanks a lot. Happy new year.
I feel seen. Happy New Year !
Alles Gute zum neuen Jahr !
Thanks Doug. Frohes neues Jahr!
To your credit you do not edit out your mistakes proving that we are all idiots at sometime in our lives and making us all feel better.👍👍
Hi Ken. Thanks. If I edited out all the stuff which doesn't right, there would not be much left over :)
@RotarySMP I think I have said it before but you make Sundays more enjoyable for me so thank you very much.Looking forward to next year's projects.Happy New year.Re Ken
@@kenthesparky178 Thanks for your kind feedback Ken. Happy new years.
Just to make me nervous. As the boss walked by he mentioned 'that's a $5000 barrel. Try to not screw it up.
That raises the blood pressure.
Three words every machinist knows: oops, xxxx and xxxx! 😎👍 The last two are too emotionally charged to be printed.
Yep, I used them this year.
Am I the only one that watched this whole thing squinting? I just asked myself "what are you doing?"
You mean, what was I doing to post this? OR what was I doing to screw up so much , Vince?
@@RotarySMP No, I was asking myself "what are you doing" squinting thinking something will come lose and fly through my screen. 😆
I once had an adjustable boring head come apart while boring a part. It took almost a year to find all the bits as they flew past my head and landed, after ricochets, in various parts of my large busy basement.
@@vincei4252 Ouch. that reminds me to work out how to alter LinuxCNC to tie in tool number with spindle max speeds or inhibits, so I dont crank the Narex boring head to 4000 rpm.
Happy New York to ya 2!
Thanks, Same to you!
Luckily I don’t film my work, so most of my bloopers are easy to forget. Happy New years.
Good idea Greg, maybe I should stop filming :)
I wish I could say I didn't have my own collection of machining brain spasms, but I do.
I think we all do. I just make the mistake of filming them :)
I just learned so many things not to do once I start making chips :)
Hi JC. Yeah, basically watch what I do and then do the opposite :) My resolution for 2025 is to make no content for another edition of this video.
Kind of unsettling to think of all of these kinds of oopsies applied to aircraft repair and maintenance ... 😧
I am not an aviation machinist, and doing aircraft maintenance is totally different environment. You have written procedures, always the correct tools, training etc.
Computers and fuck up´s, an eternal combination.
Yeah, CNC makes it much easier to produce precise scrap :)
I've only watched the intro crash, saw that tool explode in slow motion! Will I make it to the end?!?
You will. I did. :)
@@RotarySMP Yup I made it! 🤣
Thanks for the great videos Mark, and a Happy New Year to you!!
@@theromihs Happy. new year !
Happy new year, and remember: sparks count as fireworks, no matter where they originate.
Yeah, how true. :)
That was painful to watch. Been there, done that, on many of those.
Thanks John.
You aren't a Clickspring, but I still enjoyed this video all the same.
Chris's videos are amazing.
Happy new year :-)
Thanks, too you as well.
Mark doesn't swear, Mark doesn't swear, Mark doesn't swear, Mark doesn't swear. Thanks for the reminders. Shudder.
-- a guy that doesn't swear .. nudge, nudge, wink, wink 😜
Oh come on...I am from down under. Those are not swear words, they are half of the cultural heritage :)
Must have been hard to edit all those fubars, like a walk of shame on steroids!
Hi Dougal, yeah, it was painful. Made for a good NY resolution. Generate no footage for a 2025 crash video.
i know the feeling, just today i smashed a brand new 20mm hrc roughing cutter, just because i forgot to thighten the wice properly after aligning it - so that was was about 150€ down the drain 😡
Ouch, I know that feeling Hedning.
Happy new year.
Well, s**t happens.
Good thing you still have all your fingers :)
Hi Michel, yeah I am glad about that as well. I need to try and reduce error, so that this does not become an annual video.
How is you arm feeling now?
Cheer,
Mark
@@RotarySMP Getting better. Thanks.
@@Rustinox Glad yo hear that. Happy new years.
Haha …! I didn’t broke anything or had any close call this year…! Well.. to be honest I didn’t do anything at all in the work shop… Hope it will change in 2025 ! Happy machining to you all ! 🤓
Happy to report that the only thing I have done in that nature through all my time was that I had the collet chuck pressure to high ones and collapsed a peace of hollow nylon tube ( yes you could see the negative impression of a F42 collet ) but the first was fine and the 3 one ( since the first was never clamped down on and for the 3 I had turned down the pressure )
For some reason 16mm od 12mm Id nylon tube don't like to be squeezed with 30 bar of hydrolic collet pressure. Who would had guessed xD
Most of my parts slipping in the lathe chuck were similar. I had been sandblasting, and left the Px regulator on 9 bar, when the Schaublin tail stock only needs about 3.
@@RotarySMPYou need a pressure regulator for the lathe air and maybe a pressure tank with a check valve, to keep the pneumatic system pressurized, even if you use air directly from the compressor for other purposes.
@@erik_dk842 Unfortunately the valve module leaks a bit.
@@RotarySMP never had a part slip though and actually never used tail stock on a cnc lathe if im being honest ( i either used a diffrent strategy that allowed me to or had it in my program to only work at part of the part and then pull the part out as needed ( made a ø16x450mm part with lots of diffrent features on with that last methord ))
@@erik_dk842 well this was integrated close hydrolic mekanism ( the machine didnt use air to close or open the collet at all ) it only had air to blow to make sure the turet surface was clean when changing tool ( and i know cause i did try pulling out the air line to the machine and it still open and close the collet no problem but when i tried to change the tool position it whend into allarm and said "low air pressure" but could still open and close collet )
The only way to not make a mistake is never do anything!
Thanks Jerry. I would be happy with fewer in 2025 :)
rethinking cnc modding my lathe!! 😁
Yeah, things happen fast, even on pretty slow machines.
Makes me glad I'm not filming my mishaps.
Probably something to do with filming as well.
Competing priorities.
Hi Brendan, yeah there is that aspect.
@RotarySMP what ratio?
Last comment: Plunging into the Maho's bed with the 20mm endmill, was that in 2023?
Yep, that was in 2023... or maybe even 2022?
Looks all pretty normal for me.
Glad to hear that.
Holy heck I’ll probably just stick to my manual machines for now.
Yeah, CNC gives little time to react.
It looks like to got to use all your words this past year.
Yeah really. :)
So, A typical Tuesday...
Yeah, pretty much, David. :)
you do good work bud!
Thanks Mike. This was not by best :/
That's why I don't video my work...
"Perfection is sterile, error can be fertile". Forgot who said that.
I understand that sentiment :)
I'm glad I don't screw up like that. (That's a joke)
Yeah, my new years resolution is not to make this video in 2025 :)
I can say one thing positive about this video. I is guaranteed to keep one's attention focused intently on the video lest we miss the next booboo! I'm watching thinking "what's going to happen next?" I'm afraid to look away!
Thanks. My resolution for 2025, produce no content for the next edition of this video.
@@RotarySMP 🤣🤣
Abnormally but... normally! 😊
Yeah. :)
Happy Crashing!
**New Year!
Thanks Brian, happy new years.
Do you have a rough number of victims? 🤔
A few inserts, a few scars in tool holders, a couple parts I had to redo. Nothing too serious.
@@RotarySMP Have fun and keep safe, I'll keep waiting for more,
Happy new year for you and your family
@@Hichamhasan Thanks, Happy new years to you and yours as well.
Hey, if you didn't destroy a $8,000 dollar hydraulic fronted power chuck on a 50 yr old machine, you did pretty good man. LOL.
Thanks Sean. Ouch.... that must have left a sinking feeling. Happy new year.
Not sure if I’ll be able to watch it all
Yeah, a bit of a horror show.
@@RotarySMP Not too bad i think you need a better vice :)
@@LCalleja I do. What is the name of that French one you have again. I watch Kleinanzeigen for them for a while but need to set a auto search.
@@RotarySMPit’s a sagop if I am not zmistaken. There are a few different makes out there based on the same system the giveaway is both jaws are tapered at the back.
I apreciate your honesty, but but, nothing but crashes for a whole video is too much for me!
It was nit my best year for machining for sure.
That looked like an expensive video to make…
True John, I hope I don't make it an annual video.
Awful, but useful and instructive through 😅
I hope I learned something. 2025 will show if I did.
On the bright side, you still have most of your fingers and toes, right? atleast the ones that matter. =D
Yep, that is the bright side. All still there.
Normalerweise tut es weh, wenn ich es anschaue. 😒
Es war mich auch schmerzhaft zusammenzustellen. :)
Music sure is loud
I had it down at -15dB, with the voice at -6 and the machines at -24db, which is where I normally place the audio levels.
Woops! Happy New Year! In 2025 it will be better! 😂 Maybe...
I will make that my new years resolution. Generate no footage for a 2025 crash video.
shits happens
Yep. Sure does. Have a happy new year.
@@RotarySMP thank, to you too
I can't watch this past 1:00. You should have your tools taken off you till you retrain from the basics up.
Or maybe you should take up taxi driving.
I was thinking knitting, but would probably stab myself in the eye.
Those were Good! Been there and Done That! HaHa!
Thank Joe. Good to know I am not alone.