This was a project, to say the least, I really hope you like it! Go to ground.news/uri for an objective, data-driven way to read the news. Save 50% on the Ground News unlimited access Vantage plan with my link.
I liked it a lot you are so close why can't u make a slide bed for the bottom of the lathe it seemed easy for u to make the small one for the bit holder
Have you ever done a piece about how you got started doing this and your education or apprenticeship as the case may be? I think that would be interesting.
Uri is an inventor, engineer, machinist, woodworker, etc. but he is, first and foremost, an artist. His art, however whimsical and abstract is always functional and that's what I's appreciates about him.
Uri you are part Rube Goldberg, Salvatore Dali and Frank Zappa all rolled into one! I love all that you do and even your "failures" are masterpieces! Keep up the good work!
Having watched an insane amount of Uri Tuchman videos/projects, I can't help but note the man's genius, talent and skill, but there's more, the animations, the singing, the oddball humour, the funny ticks and dropping things. I'm unwilling to call autism, but this is a level of artistic quirkiness the regular man cannot hope to reach. Truly one of God's own prototypes, we are blessed as a species to have him.
Levels of Madness. If setting up a workshop in your flat, building your own lathe, using your own lathe in your flat, getting into rose engines (and perhaps just buying one) is not enough.. heck why not just build one from scratch. Uri you are in the most positive way, the craziest madman in this "scene". A true artist but also a master of the craft. Everything you do makes me think of what it was like in the 18th century and the enlightenment, when scientists built their own instruments. During this time art, craft, science synergized into something bigger than life. It's the "figuring things out" nature of your projects, that makes this so authentic. You manage to make mechanical engineering fun in an absolute unique, beautiful way.
Is the machine the piece oft art or the workpiece? So impressive, I love the mix of components. Wood, modern industrial components the old machine parts, such an anarchistic approach, i love it.
So nice to see that master Stefan is watching maestro Tuchman. Both of you are on two ends of a spectrum that in a strange non euclidean way, aren't that far from each other.
I showed my girlfriend your astrolabe video and she said she wants an engraving kit, so I followed your engraving chisel video and made it, thanks Uri. By the way I used a steel rail from a CD drive to make the chisel and it seems to work fine
When Uri makes random noises it's charming. When I make random noises I get called into the boss' office for "being disruptive." Maybe I need to make the noises with a french accent?
An impressive effort in both project and video! Well done! Most of the attachments developed by Holtzapffel and others on OT lathes were intended to recreate the motion of a rose engine at a more economical price point for the time. In my experience, none of them work as smoothly as a proper rocking rose engine when they try to rely on the same cam motion of the rosette, but can achieve great results in their own right when they don't. The spiral apparatus and reciprocator are both very effective and you have made a lot of the parts for both in this project. The reciprocator produces a sine wave which is the main geometric component of many of the rose engines best patterns on the sides of cylinders. There are also historical examples of OT lathes converted into rose engines that offer a lot of ideas to the foolish such as myself. I've been lucky enough to work on many of the Holtzapffel attachments as well as a lot of time on proper rose engines and I would be happy to share what I know. Feel free to reach out!
Upthumb for the attempt, comment for the result. I was briefly concerned that it might Just Work; so relieved that we'll be seeing more of this in the future. A joy as always.
Uri, I just want you to know I really have noticed the increase in production quality and creativity 👌. Your videos have gotten so much more entertaining over the years. The music, animations, editing. Really top notch! Thank you Uri.
Watching Uri is probably like watching the pioneers of machining and watchmaking 200+ years ago. Absolutely marvelous. Edit: The madness is also an utter delight. I Wonder why machinists/mechanical engineers always are a bit crazy.
long ago, i came up with a theory about an algorithm that foretold of a correlation between "crazy" and "great". there is some relation there, i just cannot see it.
Holy shit, can we just appreciate how good the 80's style montags were? Uri, you are a genius. I'm always blown away by your videos, even from early days. My hats off to you!
Oh wow, that is a fun optical illusion. At 8:47 it looks like your lathe is cutting the work to make it wider, a move which is actually impossible. The optical illusion is formed by the lighting on the uncut rotating part, which appears narrower than it is, incorrectly.
More brass = more beautiful. Keep plugging away at it, Uri. We expect to see some more pigeons added, as well. Always worth a look at whatever you dream up. Thanks for taking us along.
So entertaining. You are living out the dreams of millions of engineers and artists. Speaking for myself, I'd be crushed to have put so much work into a project and not be happy with the result, but your good humour is a lesson to all. Thanks for brightening my day.
Dude. Machining all those pieces to required precision is pretty impressive. However. Figuring out _how_ all those parts should look like is very impressive. HOWEVER. BOTH figuring everything out AND make all the parts is insanely impressive. People are usually good at none of them, a few are good at one, but exceptionally few can do both.
Mad lad. One of the few people on TH-cam actually crazy if to try it and has the skills to back it up. Not perfect by any means, but who needs perfection anyways. If it it was easy, we would all be doing it.
This video deserves all the thumbs up just for that opening animation sequence. You managed to give cinematic gravitas and a genuine sense of wonder to a series of MS Paint doodles. Bravo sir, well done.
bring in a lithe friction and never let any part become loose when turning, a brake on the spindle will keep all the gears without backlash. great job as always. you amaze me every build
Some people probably just find your humor silly or even embarrassing, but it totally resonates with me - I crack up so many times during your videos! That and the craftsmanship, the creativity in storytelling just makes this prime content! Awesome!
dude i have no clue how any of this works, you could say it was a success and i'd be like HELL YEAH coz i lost you during the first 30 seconds and im just impressed by how cool the machine looks
Damn, every few decades there's a handful of people who stand out from the rest of the world and really make their mark in history. I believe You are one of those very few people that will highlight Our Time and will be talked about and remembered decades perhaps centuries after Our Time...
One thing you can say about Uri Tuchman is that of every creator online, he is the one who is most...Uri. Keep on bringing us the wacky and most Tuchman-like stuff on youtube, you brilliant....whatever you are,.
Hey, That "driveshaft" with the two flexible joints should have the joints in each end facing 90 degrees from eachother. Or else you get uneven speed. Please look up driveshaft vibrations. This is a common issue on driveshafts in cars.
Uri seems to be descending into madness, but it makes for compulsive watching. The quality of the editing is superb, and those animations are just sublime!
Mr Uri, from all research that I’ve done, the cams were much bigger, and on the spindle like you said. A very interesting first attempt, and I hope you continue on with improvements. Rose engines have always been a fascinating machine to me.
In all honesty: every bit of what you share with us is beautiful art. The videos are beautiful and charming, your machines are always lovely and fascinating, your fine art painting and illustration - and ALL of your techniques - are genuinely refreshing and delightfully interdisciplinary. I don't know whether gallery shows are something which interest you at all, but the idea of traveling to Europe in order to see a multimedia gallery exhibit: "The Upside-Down Pigeon: Selected Works of Uri Tuchman" is one I think about from time to time. I have no way to know how to make this sort of thing happen, but if there is a way for your fans to help make it happen, I hope that you will let us know.
Wish I could double my thumbs up on your vids. Followed you from the start, never disappointed by the vids. Btw, I’m a cnc mill operator . And I love “analog” machining too. Cheers, Alistair
That was awesome. I used to be a machinist, so I can appreciate the difficulty of all of this, and the time spent. All while not making mistakes for the most part.
Thank you for that wonderfully inventive and creative intro. It did a great job of making my day slightly more surreal....i appreciate that. Oh...and thanks for another video. I always enjoy them.
Excellent video, Uri! I know your pain all too well, having built a rose engine myself a few years ago (I have a couple videos on my channel.) When it comes to engine turning/guilloche, mass and rigidity are super critical. The downfall of oscillating the cutter instead of the headstock is the sacrifice of rigidity, which often translates to chatter. But the upside is that you avoid the challenge of a constantly changing cutter center height as the headstock oscillates. Two of the most critical aspects of a rose engine are incorporating some form of leveling chuck and including a provision for setting the cutter height dead center with the spindle. The guide will only control depth consistently on a flat surface, and a cutter that isn't adjusted to center height will create wandering patterns.
Wow. What a madman. Love it. The film is a masterpiece. The machine is too, even though it didn't work as expected. You're a Clickspring and Bobby Duke mashup. The outtakes must be crazy. Take it easy. We love you!
Hi Uri, a brake or means to introduce drag may relive the effects of gear backlash, this will only work if torque only goes one way through the geartrain. Another method you could try is make the gear centres adjustable so you can bring them close together with a screwdriver or tool and take out all backlash, this will work with certain types of gears.
Use GT2 Belts - we use them for 3D printers and they can be made backlash free. You can also bend them around corners giving you cheap, quick and easy access to rotation any and everywhere.
I just love your videos!!! Your sense of humor is refreshing. You are a impressive machinist and engineer. I can't wait until you make your next video. Keep up the awesome work. A new Idea is to make your own laser engraver with X,Y and Z function for intragate engraving on jewelry. I am a Silversmith in America and just love engraved jewelry.
I just wonder if he is really the only person that does it all, the editing, animation... too much talent and the humor, yes! I can't watch your videos fast enough. Hope you get to 500k, 1M and above soon. Deserved. As some comment below, humanity needs humans like you.
You absolute mad lad. Well, you are a very significant fraction of the way to making a working rose engine. What that fraction is, I couldn't say, but there's no sense giving up now.
Bravo 👏👍I see you are using your pantograph as for more milling operations these days .a very versatile tool.i love mine .you indicated you thought you had failed,no you didn’t,you just reached a rung on the ladder to success/perfection. Regards. John🇦🇺🐈⬛😎
Great effort! It's always an issue when trying to reinvent something that has been working in a certain way for a long, long time, because you often realize why it is designed the way it is. I'm sure you can make a working Rose Engine! It is almost working as is.
This was a project, to say the least, I really hope you like it!
Go to ground.news/uri for an objective, data-driven way to read the news. Save 50% on the Ground News unlimited access Vantage plan with my link.
warte mal. produzierst du die Musik auch selbst? :o
you're nutty enough that maybe i could stomach you as a fren :>
I liked it a lot you are so close why can't u make a slide bed for the bottom of the lathe it seemed easy for u to make the small one for the bit holder
Have you ever done a piece about how you got started doing this and your education or apprenticeship as the case may be? I think that would be interesting.
its perfect you know you will make it work. 🙂 because of the awesome things it can do.
Uri is an inventor, engineer, machinist, woodworker, etc. but he is, first and foremost, an artist. His art, however whimsical and abstract is always functional and that's what I's appreciates about him.
A true renaissance man
Is THAT what you appreciates about him?
Thanks for your input, chatgpt!
@@TheAllAroundMan If I were a crappy genAI chatbot could I tell that you play OSRS incorrectly on a fundamental level? 😂🤣💀
@@jonanderson5137 Take about 20% off, there Squirrelly Jon.
I told my dad (a woodworker) about your lathe build - he immediately said "he'll be making a rose engine next." Can't wait to show him!
That's a really lucky guess considering Uri talks about his plans of making a rose engine next in that video.
This entire video was unhinged madness. I'm absolutely here for all of it.
Typical French.
This video demonstrates what is wrong with the world today.
Not enough Uri!
I am loving every minute of it.
I thought I saw several hinges.
Uri you are part Rube Goldberg, Salvatore Dali and Frank Zappa all rolled into one! I love all that you do and even your "failures" are masterpieces! Keep up the good work!
That has to be the best description of Uri I've ever read.
Here's for a little more brass.
If Clickspring buys one instead of making one, you know it's going to be a rough one. Loved the movie .
Having watched an insane amount of Uri Tuchman videos/projects, I can't help but note the man's genius, talent and skill, but there's more, the animations, the singing, the oddball humour, the funny ticks and dropping things. I'm unwilling to call autism, but this is a level of artistic quirkiness the regular man cannot hope to reach. Truly one of God's own prototypes, we are blessed as a species to have him.
Agree fully. I genuinely think there are elements of genius.
A high-powered mutant of some kind never even considered for mass production
Possibly a touch of insanity too 😂
One of my new favourite channels
Skill, humour, character and other traits are all too often attributed to a condition or defect. There's no indication of autism.
@@lerikhkl
Too weird to live, too rare to die.
Levels of Madness. If setting up a workshop in your flat, building your own lathe, using your own lathe in your flat, getting into rose engines (and perhaps just buying one) is not enough.. heck why not just build one from scratch.
Uri you are in the most positive way, the craziest madman in this "scene". A true artist but also a master of the craft. Everything you do makes me think of what it was like in the 18th century and the enlightenment, when scientists built their own instruments. During this time art, craft, science synergized into something bigger than life. It's the "figuring things out" nature of your projects, that makes this so authentic. You manage to make mechanical engineering fun in an absolute unique, beautiful way.
Is the machine the piece oft art or the workpiece? So impressive, I love the mix of components. Wood, modern industrial components the old machine parts, such an anarchistic approach, i love it.
Piece of art and workpiece are synonymous.
@StefanGotteswinter
Nice to see you appreciating his work. Your work on your own channel is inspiring. Hope you have seen his other work. 👍
So nice to see that master Stefan is watching maestro Tuchman. Both of you are on two ends of a spectrum that in a strange non euclidean way, aren't that far from each other.
Yes! You're so right 👍
Uri....I am a 70 years old tool maker and I do love your work....even if they do not work.....hats off for your ingenious ideas
Drilling into a random piece of wood and forgetting to clamp it down is so relatable. I love your whimsical editing style.
I showed my girlfriend your astrolabe video and she said she wants an engraving kit, so I followed your engraving chisel video and made it, thanks Uri.
By the way I used a steel rail from a CD drive to make the chisel and it seems to work fine
When Uri makes random noises it's charming. When I make random noises I get called into the boss' office for "being disruptive." Maybe I need to make the noises with a french accent?
That, or you're in the wrong line of employment! Bemused muttering is a career goal for me!
An impressive effort in both project and video! Well done!
Most of the attachments developed by Holtzapffel and others on OT lathes were intended to recreate the motion of a rose engine at a more economical price point for the time. In my experience, none of them work as smoothly as a proper rocking rose engine when they try to rely on the same cam motion of the rosette, but can achieve great results in their own right when they don't. The spiral apparatus and reciprocator are both very effective and you have made a lot of the parts for both in this project. The reciprocator produces a sine wave which is the main geometric component of many of the rose engines best patterns on the sides of cylinders. There are also historical examples of OT lathes converted into rose engines that offer a lot of ideas to the foolish such as myself. I've been lucky enough to work on many of the Holtzapffel attachments as well as a lot of time on proper rose engines and I would be happy to share what I know. Feel free to reach out!
Ive had a saved Ebay search for Rose Engine for over 10 years. Im rooting for you man.
19:55 seconds of watching a man go insane. It's glorious. Don't ever stop. I need this in my life.
man these intros get trippier every time
Upthumb for the attempt, comment for the result. I was briefly concerned that it might Just Work; so relieved that we'll be seeing more of this in the future. A joy as always.
Uri - I've said before and I'll say it again - Your videos are a breath of fresh air - Thank you
Uri, I just want you to know I really have noticed the increase in production quality and creativity 👌. Your videos have gotten so much more entertaining over the years. The music, animations, editing. Really top notch! Thank you Uri.
Thank you for keeping youtube animation alive
Watching Uri is probably like watching the pioneers of machining and watchmaking 200+ years ago. Absolutely marvelous.
Edit:
The madness is also an utter delight. I Wonder why machinists/mechanical engineers always are a bit crazy.
long ago, i came up with a theory about an algorithm that foretold of a correlation between "crazy" and "great". there is some relation there, i just cannot see it.
Holy shit, can we just appreciate how good the 80's style montags were?
Uri, you are a genius. I'm always blown away by your videos, even from early days. My hats off to you!
Oh wow, that is a fun optical illusion. At 8:47 it looks like your lathe is cutting the work to make it wider, a move which is actually impossible. The optical illusion is formed by the lighting on the uncut rotating part, which appears narrower than it is, incorrectly.
This channel is like a cross between Inheritance Machining and LSD.
I love it when someone appears too mad to know what they're doing, but when you see their work, it's clear they absolutely do know what they're doing.
More brass = more beautiful. Keep plugging away at it, Uri. We expect to see some more pigeons added, as well. Always worth a look at whatever you dream up. Thanks for taking us along.
Really great. I can relate to maximum effort followed by crushing disappointment .
I'm absolutely thrilled to witness Uri's transformation into an unstoppable force of chaos and whimsy. 10/10, no notes.
He’s the Explosions&Fire of craftsmanship
So entertaining. You are living out the dreams of millions of engineers and artists. Speaking for myself, I'd be crushed to have put so much work into a project and not be happy with the result, but your good humour is a lesson to all. Thanks for brightening my day.
I don't know why, but I love this kind of video. Keep up the good work man.
I HAVE BEEN WAITING FOR THIS FOR 87 YEARS
Dude. Machining all those pieces to required precision is pretty impressive.
However.
Figuring out _how_ all those parts should look like is very impressive.
HOWEVER.
BOTH figuring everything out AND make all the parts is insanely impressive.
People are usually good at none of them, a few are good at one, but exceptionally few can do both.
Mad lad. One of the few people on TH-cam actually crazy if to try it and has the skills to back it up. Not perfect by any means, but who needs perfection anyways. If it it was easy, we would all be doing it.
I can see Uri returning to this project once again in a future video. It was so close, you can do it Sir, we believe in you.
This video deserves all the thumbs up just for that opening animation sequence. You managed to give cinematic gravitas and a genuine sense of wonder to a series of MS Paint doodles. Bravo sir, well done.
*CAN YOU MAKE A 2 HOUR VERSION OF THIS...???* I would love way more detail on how you made it
bring in a lithe friction and never let any part become loose when turning, a brake on the spindle will keep all the gears without backlash. great job as always. you amaze me every build
Some people probably just find your humor silly or even embarrassing, but it totally resonates with me - I crack up so many times during your videos!
That and the craftsmanship, the creativity in storytelling just makes this prime content! Awesome!
Always an adventure with Uri. No hype, just workmanship and a fantastic journey to make something wonderful. Bravo, sir.
dude i have no clue how any of this works, you could say it was a success and i'd be like HELL YEAH coz i lost you during the first 30 seconds and im just impressed by how cool the machine looks
Damn, every few decades there's a handful of people who stand out from the rest of the world and really make their mark in history. I believe You are one of those very few people that will highlight Our Time and will be talked about and remembered decades perhaps centuries after Our Time...
Dear Uri, you are an inspiration to mankind!!
One thing you can say about Uri Tuchman is that of every creator online, he is the one who is most...Uri.
Keep on bringing us the wacky and most Tuchman-like stuff on youtube, you brilliant....whatever you are,.
These are getting better and better the more you put them out. The side animations I mean, it's delightful.
the humor in this video is top tier. Subtle, quirky and actually funny. i enjoy your editing style immensely.
You learn far more from failures than successes, and the amount of fun is about the same. Great job. You got an identifiable result!
I always love watching you make machines. Even if they fail they are beautiful.
The oddness grows with the skill and it’s a fantastic journey.
Hey, That "driveshaft" with the two flexible joints should have the joints in each end facing 90 degrees from eachother. Or else you get uneven speed. Please look up driveshaft vibrations. This is a common issue on driveshafts in cars.
Uri seems to be descending into madness, but it makes for compulsive watching. The quality of the editing is superb, and those animations are just sublime!
to me you're the best Maker on TH-cam Uri, please don't stop
Failure or not, its a beautiful machine! You are a very good machinist. I love the old school oilier on top. What a beautiful build.
Mr Uri, from all research that I’ve done, the cams were much bigger, and on the spindle like you said.
A very interesting first attempt, and I hope you continue on with improvements.
Rose engines have always been a fascinating machine to me.
In all honesty: every bit of what you share with us is beautiful art.
The videos are beautiful and charming, your machines are always lovely and fascinating, your fine art painting and illustration - and ALL of your techniques - are genuinely refreshing and delightfully interdisciplinary.
I don't know whether gallery shows are something which interest you at all, but the idea of traveling to Europe in order to see a multimedia gallery exhibit: "The Upside-Down Pigeon: Selected Works of Uri Tuchman" is one I think about from time to time. I have no way to know how to make this sort of thing happen, but if there is a way for your fans to help make it happen, I hope that you will let us know.
0:25 Using this view and my unparalleled skill at geoguesser, i can confidently say this man lives in Antarctica
Dont ever change Sir !!! I think that beautiful machine is actually a recreation of your brain ....stunning :)
Danke!
I love this machine. It's beautiful and so close! I'd love to see it fully realized
Uri, I'm inspired by your art and work. Thank you for entertaining me and educating me. I'm humbled by your spirit and work.
A good try is never a failure, it's just another starting point. Nice work. Keep it up.
You are an amazing craftsman, Uri. I love how you just go at it and make it happen. Your sense of humor is clever and funny!
I love this man so much. His style and humour helps me get through depression ❤
I am blown away by how much work you did to make this! Thanks for all your hard work. Very entertaining.
Wish I could double my thumbs up on your vids. Followed you from the start, never disappointed by the vids. Btw, I’m a cnc mill operator . And I love “analog” machining too. Cheers, Alistair
Your editing is awesome Uri! Love the toy piano to emphasize the cheesy synths
That was awesome. I used to be a machinist, so I can appreciate the difficulty of all of this, and the time spent. All while not making mistakes for the most part.
Du grand Uri Tuchman!
Merci de nous partager ton savoir faire, ton génie, ta passion et ta folie.
Ça fais du bien!
Lâche pas la patate!
Thank you for that wonderfully inventive and creative intro. It did a great job of making my day slightly more surreal....i appreciate that. Oh...and thanks for another video. I always enjoy them.
The effort put into not just the project but also to make such a video! Thank you Uri!
Plate the brass surfaces that slide one on another in nickel as it's stronger than brass. It's also a good indicator for wear.
Excellent video, Uri! I know your pain all too well, having built a rose engine myself a few years ago (I have a couple videos on my channel.) When it comes to engine turning/guilloche, mass and rigidity are super critical. The downfall of oscillating the cutter instead of the headstock is the sacrifice of rigidity, which often translates to chatter. But the upside is that you avoid the challenge of a constantly changing cutter center height as the headstock oscillates.
Two of the most critical aspects of a rose engine are incorporating some form of leveling chuck and including a provision for setting the cutter height dead center with the spindle. The guide will only control depth consistently on a flat surface, and a cutter that isn't adjusted to center height will create wandering patterns.
I’m a hobbyist woodturner, and I want a rose engine so badly! Watching you make your own stuff like this is inspiring!
Wow. What a madman. Love it. The film is a masterpiece. The machine is too, even though it didn't work as expected. You're a Clickspring and Bobby Duke mashup. The outtakes must be crazy. Take it easy. We love you!
Hi Uri, a brake or means to introduce drag may relive the effects of gear backlash, this will only work if torque only goes one way through the geartrain. Another method you could try is make the gear centres adjustable so you can bring them close together with a screwdriver or tool and take out all backlash, this will work with certain types of gears.
I’ve said it before but I gotta say it agin,Uri you are the most creative person on TH-cam. Thanks for sharing a glimpse inside your crazy mind!
You make me nervous every time you thread a hole !
Amazing job👍😉
Inspirational! Can’t imagine how much effort you put into this video. You keep outdoing yourself in every video you make.
Use GT2 Belts - we use them for 3D printers and they can be made backlash free. You can also bend them around corners giving you cheap, quick and easy access to rotation any and everywhere.
I just love your videos!!! Your sense of humor is refreshing. You are a impressive machinist and engineer. I can't wait until you make your next video. Keep up the awesome work. A new Idea is to make your own laser engraver with X,Y and Z function for intragate engraving on jewelry. I am a Silversmith in America and just love engraved jewelry.
I was appreciating your animations before you mentioned them. Your artistry and humor are what keeps me coming back to your videos.
Uri, Uri, Uri, you made a Beautiful Machine! You proved the concept. I'm jealous of your knowledge, your tools and your ability.
Fun as always, interesting as always! You haven’t failed. You just have not yet reached your originally desired endpoint.
Gloriously, geniously and crazily beautiful. I just love your haphazardly improvised processes and astounding results ❤️
I would call it a successful job. You learned from it, had fun and made an entertaining, artful, machine.
You always make such beautiful things, and remember it is NOT a failure, it is a work in progressssssssss. Thanks for the video.
You are such an inspirational Maker/Inventor and artist, thank you so much for sharing these adventures with us!
I love this video. Watching something being made that has some flaws is inspiring in a way I didn't know I needed.
squeee! my first metal lathe is arriving tomorrow!!!!!! also this video and project is fabulous!
I just wonder if he is really the only person that does it all, the editing, animation... too much talent and the humor, yes! I can't watch your videos fast enough. Hope you get to 500k, 1M and above soon. Deserved. As some comment below, humanity needs humans like you.
You absolute mad lad. Well, you are a very significant fraction of the way to making a working rose engine. What that fraction is, I couldn't say, but there's no sense giving up now.
You make great content. I love your attitude! I never regret watching a Uri Tuchman video. Thanks Uri!
The instrumental disco music is killer. Oh, and good machining. Best wishes from sunny Tasmania.
Its all trail & improvement Uri. So as usual, Hi functioning entertainment and education
So you decide to tackle one of the most complicated machine tools of the past.. I genuinely amazed at how good it is on your first machine!
This was a hell of an accomplishment Uri, dont sell yourself short.
Bravo 👏👍I see you are using your pantograph as for more milling operations these days .a very versatile tool.i love mine .you indicated you thought you had failed,no you didn’t,you just reached a rung on the ladder to success/perfection. Regards. John🇦🇺🐈⬛😎
Great effort! It's always an issue when trying to reinvent something that has been working in a certain way for a long, long time, because you often realize why it is designed the way it is. I'm sure you can make a working Rose Engine! It is almost working as is.