Hi it’s Stacie! I love this video! Cute little parts there James! I feel that when I watch this channel I am pretty well informed about what’s going on and not only that you tell us what your using so that we get an idea of what you are thinking! Great video!
Just a suggestion, I'm going to buy that Starrett blade...you might as well link to the Amazon product. hobbyists are always looking for better suggestions are such things. I'm sold.
Nice video. What quick tool post do you have. I bought a BXA thinking that would fit my G0602. I was wrong. So now I have to sell BXA set and buy the correct size.
Just noticed that with the three jaw chuck, at the lathe, you loaded the drill rod with one jaw at 12 o'clock. Have you tried loading with one jaw at 6 oclock? Its easier.
If you are going to be doing a large amount of facing immediately followed by a chamfering tool get a square insert holder with a 45° offset. It will save you a lot of time. Instead of the rubber bands on the parallels pick up some coil springs.
Thanks a lot. I was interested in buying these, but when I modeled them in fusion 360 on my planned fixture I see that these do not coincide well with pitbulls. Pitbull will hold parts .100" above fixture these only .05" If I want goo bite ( .012") There is no way that the parts won't flip out of the fixture when the clamping Z leves are not the same. I will have to make these with the bottom slightly narrower or maybe the radius deeper/ lower. I just hope mine will be as hard as MItee bites.
I just uploaded the files this morning. I'll be doing a video about that bin and my other tool drawer organizers at some point. www.thingiverse.com/thing:2848955
@@fourtwo7612 I would face off the stock bar between every cut, then your cut part will already have a clean, square face and you only need to face the other end to length.
Well done! Good video.
Hi it’s Stacie! I love this video! Cute little parts there James! I feel that when I watch this channel I am pretty well informed about what’s going on and not only that you tell us what your using so that we get an idea of what you are thinking! Great video!
Your wallet says "this doesn't make sense"
Your soul says "I get to keep $100 AND spend time in the workshop? SOLD"
These are great vids, very clever little set-up techniques.
Just a suggestion, I'm going to buy that Starrett blade...you might as well link to the Amazon product. hobbyists are always looking for better suggestions are such things. I'm sold.
Nice video. What quick tool post do you have. I bought a BXA thinking that would fit my G0602. I was wrong. So now I have to sell BXA set and buy the correct size.
Where can I download that chart you used for the center drill? I need one of those!
Just noticed that with the three jaw chuck, at the lathe, you loaded the drill rod with one jaw at 12 o'clock. Have you tried loading with one jaw at 6 oclock? Its easier.
Great video James! Thanks for sharing :)
If you are going to be doing a large amount of facing immediately followed by a chamfering tool get a square insert holder with a 45° offset. It will save you a lot of time.
Instead of the rubber bands on the parallels pick up some coil springs.
Thanks a lot. I was interested in buying these, but when I modeled them in fusion 360 on my planned fixture I see that these do not coincide well with pitbulls. Pitbull will hold parts .100" above fixture these only .05" If I want goo bite ( .012") There is no way that the parts won't flip out of the fixture when the clamping Z leves are not the same. I will have to make these with the bottom slightly narrower or maybe the radius deeper/ lower. I just hope mine will be as hard as MItee bites.
Thanks For the vid! is that 3d printed parts bin @34:40 on thingiverse, by any chance?
I just uploaded the files this morning. I'll be doing a video about that bin and my other tool drawer organizers at some point.
www.thingiverse.com/thing:2848955
Awesome!
Surely it would be quicker to cut the drill rod for say 4 pieces and flatten in one set up?
Maybe. That would mean I would have to machine the ends after flattening and cutting instead of facing in the lathe while the pieces are still round
Clough42 True, but it should be possible to use a clamping setup that enabled the machining of more than one piece at a time.
@@fourtwo7612 I would face off the stock bar between every cut, then your cut part will already have a clean, square face and you only need to face the other end to length.
Can you share your speed chart?
Hey all, I'm making a fixture to hold material, but in order to make it, I'll need a fixture. It's fixtures all the way down!
I would really like to get a copy of you fusion files for this.......
I'm working on a location to share all of my models.
@@Clough42 Any progress on sharing you fusion files?
You keep wanting to do more work. 8, wait no, 7.
Too much work for me to do
Yeah. I built them because I wanted to see if I could. For lots of people, spending the $100 to buy a set is a more attractive option.