Oh, and the longest running joke! I worked at a dealership many years ago and one day tried to use my Snap On die grinder and it just would not have any torque and the roll lock disc would not spin to clean a surface. Well, I went to the Snap On truck a few weeks later and remembered to ask for a rebuild kit and the guy said I purchased a model that was being discontinued and there were no more.I took it apart to check it and it looked ok, just no power. Like all my air tools I had more than one so I took it home and put it in my other tool box.Over a decade later I pull the little red box out of my tool box and took it apart once again and after looking at it a while notice the inlet looked much larger than the outlet. Inlet pressure is way more than outlet pressure so I thought that the outlet should be the larger one.Come to find out some asswipe at the dealership took it apart while I was at lunch and turned the barrel around just to fuck with me. The bad part, it took me more than a decade to figure it out.The good part, I now have an as new Snap On die grinder.
I have 2 Snap on die grinders that match yours. Both are like new and work better now that I have properly rebuilt them than the crap they sell these days...
Dremels work at a very high RPM, they spin at speeds of 5000 to 35000 RPM. However most of them lack torque, especially in low RPMs and ESPECIALLY when it comes to battery powered dremels. So lets say you gotta drill a hole through a thick piece of steel, a dremel is likely to stop half way cos it lacks the power to go on. An air die grinder likely wont stop cos pneumatic tools have a lot more torque than electric tools. Correct me if I am wrong and feel free to add a better analogy.
I dunno man, would you call luthiers unmanly? Cos most of em use dremels and not die grinders. Dremels are finer tools. Yes, I understand your comment was at least semi sarcastic.
Jesus! A like on my comment from the skookumest of all manly men! And on a video that is 3 years old! You are on the ball, brother. Thank you for the videos too. You are a genuine inspiration and you really do improve the lives of your viewers with the knowledge that you pass on.
Listening to the start and thinking "Hey... I like my Dremel!"... but then came _all speed, no torque_ and well... "yup... yup... yup... OK fine." Good banter man!
Is yer Dremil still a choochin? Cause as we saw from the out of center spin and the gouging in the internals, even without the tapity, tap, crack this POS wasn't long for this world. I'm not some 1 guy dremil fanclub, but it sure seems the better tool wihen stacked up against exibit A here. :)
@@johnspencer3994 my uncle bought me a dremel for Christmas when I was a kid. Have had it for 20+ years. Use it all the time, it's great for sharpening chainsaw chains with the round stones. I have 9" die grinders for cutting/grinding if I need power, the dremel is great for little stuff.
+halleffect1 furlongs... ;^) I'm having to get away from using mil for 0.001" - too many metricificated types use mil as slang for sillymeter these days...
I love these videos. The best part of the video for me is the super brilliant way to measure RPM with oscilloscope. It is also one of the most cringe-worthy dangerous ways to do anything I have ever seen and I salute you! Good thing you had a safety board. If I had money I would give you some.
Defenitly miss the More informative less jokes these older videos compared to the new videos very refreshing to see the more normal Talking more care appreciate these older videos super entertaining asking us viewers questions and talking and showing the patrons is so nice to see @AvE
the more i watch these videos the more i want to have a few beers watching you make these videos at the shop good stuff sir i would have a blast being a fly on the wall !!!
I dont know why I am watching these reviews. I am slightly interested in the engineering/physics part but power tools are literally not of interest to me. Yet it is the second day in a row binge watching your videos.
MrEppart I'm with you. This has no practical application for me but damn do I love me some technical knowledge and expert commentary. Its just fun to learn how much there is to mechanical engineering.
On the fifth day every other channel will be futile and meaningless.. Oh, just realised the op's comment was from a year ago. Do you get withdrawls from not watching after that long?
I mitigate the hose drop by having small extra tanks around the shop by the main outlets ;-) helps a lot to get that initial big hit on the impact tools to loosen bolts and nuts. But then the pressure drops a bit if you go balls out for more than 3-4 seconds. It's also good for trapping moisture.
I know this is an older vid, but I enjoy your channel so much. I'm new to it, and I have my own youtube channel about Suzuki Samurais, and I like how in a few of your videos you talk about, " just make cool shit because you want to, not to make money or any of the usual BS, but because you enjoy doing." And that has helped remind me why I started my channel in the first place. Its funny that I started watching your videos because i like the tear down of tools and learning new terminology, but getting more into it your channel is also inspiring. Keep up the great work
I bought a $40 die grinder kit a few years back (el cheapo nastyo brando), and figured, yeah it'll be dead within a few months, but man its pretty skookum, just keeps on choochin. I've abused it pretty hard and ran 2 carbide burrs to death in it. The joys of keeping your air tools loobed!
That squealing of the air hose leak confused the hell out of my dog. He started turning his head left and right before walking over to me. It was pretty funny. Also, I can confirm that you're not having a stroke. My thought process completely jams up at times, sometimes in the middle of a sentence! I just get completely overloaded and everything shuts down, leaving me standing there, looking like an idiot before everything boots back up again and I continue on.
My husband (69 and semi-retired) worked on railroad equipment for years and used every type of grinder known. He loves the Dremel for fine work. The same argument could be made about the small 115 Volt wire welder he bought for the carbodies. He sure wouldn't have used it on a heavy bolster plate. I don't mind microns, but he uses thou and hates microns. Great vids!
I knew I heard that phrase before, my grandparents are Canadians and always said " keep your stick on the ice" then I heard you say your version. Lol. Ever hear of Sixx Select Brewing company? Amol Sixx? He owned Sixx Sellect Brewing during the probation. My grandpa was Executive Vice President. And he said that any man can afford a beer, even during the great depression. And he was right because my great grandparents used to have a huge ranch in Canada and Rockefeller used to sleep over in Indian Tee pees in the basement. My grandfather was in direct orders from Henry Kissinger to be an Embassor for Turkey in the 60's and 70' he had a shopsmith lol. Your videos bring great joy to me as I remember real men and you are certainly a real man. Thanks for sharing your knowledge, plus you have the vocabulary of the whole Funkin Wagnal dictionary, adverbs and all coagulatio
@AvE Solder won't flow or stick to fractured surfaces. If you want the silver solder to stick try grinding the fractured surface so that there are no crystalline edges. You still might not be able to fill it in properly but tip for the future; any crack or fracture has to be ground before soldering. Thanks for the videos I've learned a lot.
Nice trick with the coil and the magnet, and I'd be interested in knowing more about how you picked the particular coil and what kind it was. The last time I needed to do something like this, I used an optointerrupter mounted to one of those small radio shack boards and a bit of tape on the shaft of the motor that I was trying to measure (a sewing machine motor). It worked, and I didn't have to worry about anything flying off at me and changing the state of my eyeballs...
i have been meaning to set one of them cheap die grinders up with a co2 tank just to see how it handles 850 psi. or see how spectacularly it doesnt handle it i should say,
***** someone needs to try it. it would be amusing if nothing else. also, moosehead lager. i grew up on that shit. used to be brewed by where i grew up along with Alexander keiths
Another vote for JB Weld. I’ve used it to fill a hole in the side of an engine block, and fill in a ding on a hydraulic ram. Smoothed out the repair on a lathe & the ram worked beautifully afterwards.
Thou my friend. My IR die grinder broke. I bought a Harbour Fart 90 degree die grinder and the collet would spin out of round. Took it back and the next one would not hold a bit in the collet. Gave in and bought a Matco set and they worked and had mucho skookum. Thanks for the very cool/informative videos.
i paint cars for a living, we have these new airlines at work in the booths, the air lines normally wear from being dragged around the car, so the outer cover wears as well as the normal bit near the pcl coupling, the new airlines are like a very flexible silicone and mega light compared to the normal bitchumen covered canvas cast iron hooped fire hoses we had b4. You are right about using air pressure pep up the air tools, my cheap £10 ($1500 CAD) windy gun would only manage to adjust the volume knob on the car stereos at work, rather than wiz the wheel nuts off the cars, as we only had 8 bar of puff pressure. had to buy a swanky unobtanium bodied ingersoll randy windy gun. but at home when using my fridge compressor converted air compressor, running at 10 bar of goodness, it works like a $10 dollar crack whore.
Russell P Can't speak for anyone else's... I'm happy with mine. If you can get your hands on an old, cast iron refrigeration compressor, go for it. The thing I love most about mine is how insanely quiet it is... the loudest part is the check valve on the tank body. Today, most big box store compressors are incredibly LOUD... Mine's mounted to an 80 gallon tank with what I believe to be a ~2 HP 115 volt single phase motor running it. It runs everything I need it to... 1/2 impact, ratchets, die grinders, etc..
Firstly, thousandths is fine. For us machinists it's the perfect term. I've always said it's better just to be yourself. Then there's that cognitive stall. I call them a brain F.A.R.T. It's when your brain Fails And Restarts Totally... Good fun.
I have a suggestion for content item. I would love to see how a cold fogger works compared to a hot fogger. I have a basic understanding of the hot fogger however on the cold I am not sure if it's just a high-pressure mist or a true fog, whatever that means.
Tap Wasser? Youe getting real international there. (Btw. the tap water doesnt work for tapping very well, my parts start to rust). Those die grinders are kinda pain, but for that money? Hell, as a throwaway to run a carbide burr? Fine! Dont have to waste the good Biax grinder :)
***** I thougt you where all about maintenance of tools and machines ;) Btw, no one in the metric world that has some common sense would use "200 microns", except if he is a goof, as you mentioned. We would call that 2/10mm or a bit more fancy 20/100mm...but microns? We would send you straight out of the shop for using that :D
If I had a die grinder with too much runout, I would go to the box of dead grinders and pull out some collets and collet nuts, and see which combination has the least amount of runout. Works very well for me.
I clicked on this while I was doing something ..... kinda used it for background ..... when I started listening to it ,I noticed it's kind of funny how you work with stuff ..... yep , I subbed
When you started to talk about "thou" I went and learnt what exactly what that was, but switching to microns would just throw a wrench at my wee ol' head.
just getting into your videums and just to let you know I have been using my " power fist" die grinder for 5 years daily as a welder/fabricator. best $8.00 I could spend ( only got it cause it was cheap and wouldn't care so much if lost it. lol
Microns, thousands, milli inch, number x 10^-3 inches, it is all the same thing! Don't change a thing is what I am saying! Do it the way you see fit, because we all love your videos in the I&C shop at Diablo Canyon Power Plant here in sunny California!
I approve your use of centrifugal force. if you use a stationary reference frame, there is no centrifugal force, but if you use a rotating reference frame, then centrifugal force becomes pretty clear.
25:50 Correct O-ring if it was a black one like the other it would freeze and break. The black one is there because it seals the opening on the warmer end of the valve, most likely would replace that with another clear O-ring when that one fails.
***** I just randomly found one of your videos, and now I am binge-watching them. I'm not real good with machinery and what-not, but I love watching your videos! I'm learning a ton and I'm being entertained by your inherent sense of humor! Keep up the good work, sir!
I laughed so hard when I saw the text at 11:30. My girlfriend says I get "stuck". I will sometimes get stuck while thinking then jump to a completely different topic. Me thinks that with intelligence comes a few mental abnormalities. Love your videos. Thank you for all the entertainment.
I do the same thing!!!!! look up absence seizures..... the medication Trileptal seems to make thoughts flow smoother.... take it for what its worth..... Love the videos....
At 11:25 you said you don't want people thinking you're having a stroke. It is a stroke...a stroke of fucking genius. That pause is natural, it allows the sound to catch up to your brain that's going faster than the speed of sound.
First world problem/constructive criticism...I double click at the end of the video to get out of full screen, and the abrupt ending of the video means youtube inserts 12 usually-stupid "you might like" links...Problem is that there is no blankspace at the end of the video, outtro or otherwise. Click to exit and end up loading another video only to have to come back, hit pause, THEN come comment :) Otherwise great teardown and description of this particular choocher.
aloha from Vancouver, BC! the air pressure you're measuring is high speed air flow and is low pressure vs what the compressor is seeing and what the tool sees in terms of work. that's why you see that drop in pressure, the "pressure" has become inertia, when it stalls out and returns to atmospheric pressure or returns that energy to work/pressure. it's called the Bernoulli principle, as the velocity increases the pressure decreases.
Definitely micron, since imperial measurements are just ridiculous. Alternatively you could go all fancy and say megapicometres or picomegametres. That'd surely rock the socks off every metric fan.
JB weld would've fixed it ;) I actually bought 2 of these years ago assuming that the one would crap out at 2 AM the night before a race at the worst possible time.Because I figured nobody would bother stealing a cheapo tool from the race trailer for their shop toolbox and they didnt.Now some 15+ years later the one is still kicking (in my home garage)although the backup died after getting dropped in the bay. We used to go through a lot of cheap shop tools (good ones too)so I learned early on to tear them apart and give them a good cleaning,debur and a shot of real grease before letting the shop monkeys at them.If I did that I got pretty much the same lifespan from most of the cheapo stuff in the hands of the monkeys as we did with the better quality stuff.Because the essentially tortured everything to death no matter what it was.
As a scientist, everything I do in lab is metric, all the field measurements I make are metric, and certainly all the measurements for molecular biology (fucking micrograms, nanoliters, femptograms!) are metric. As an agricultural scientist, all I do is work with farmers in the US of A, so no metric ever, everything is imperial. Fahrenheit, yards, fathoms, and thousandths of pounds. SO really i could give a rats ass what you use, i've got all my tables and conversion slide rules at the ready. Fuck i mean you should of seen the mess when i started my business making filament extruders the engineer worked in metric and the machinist was imperial, so all our drawings, assembly workflow do dads, and machines were just cobbles of metric imperial and square pegs in round holes. Personally I prefer cubits
I do the physics in metric, and the building in imperial. Converters are my best friend lol. I can't imagine doing physics in imperial measurements, the conversions would slow every thing down horribly. I get annoyed enough with nanometers, and micro meters Wow, I really got rambling on that one.
At my place of work, we use the gear style clamps on the soft sightglass tube for the hydraulic oil tank. We just put a piece of hardcore clear heat shrink over it.
Hey Ave, your hose clamps in the beginning reminded me of a debate ive been having with myself. Can you use hose clamps in high vibration conditions, such as coming off an engine? I have a remote oil filter and the lines to it are crimped on, but the fittings leak. I have replaced the part before, and they leaked again. Im considering replacing the crimp connectors with hose clamps. Would they work in the high vibration of the engine or would they come loose?
Units only matter when somebody else needs to use your numbers. In these vidayos that never happens with length measurements so if he would be saying picodaktyloi instead the message would stay exactly the same
Once again, it's an old vid, but it popped up and I hadn't watched it so you've given me some more laughs! Thank you! "Both barrels of Squeeky Wheel" your phraseology is fucking stupendous!
metalhead2508 I watched Apollo 17 videos and listened to the transmissions. They were using metric pretty much all the time. Can't even remember an imperial unit. you can watch apollo17.org if you are interested.
I cog-stall all the time! It helps if you write down chunks of data so you aren't holing too many things upstairs at the same time. I thought I was the only one!
We'd have to do some real critical analysis to determine which one of our black Carhartt jackets is more well-worn. Mine was a gift from my Dad in 1996 when he knew I'd follow him into the trades and it is still in the back of my truck. Sleeves all shredded to shit but the only rip it ever suffered was hand mended. Grease and sealant and blood all over it, but the inside is beautiful; like new but better because it was loved. Still fits well enough. And I see the wandering stitch pattern at your left sleeve. Respect.
+PoLoMoTo2534 A micron is a thousandth of a millimeter, not a thousandth of an inch and so is quite a bit smaller than a thou. Most people don't give a fuck but some machinists live to hunt perfection and give very much fucks. If they could make diameters and so on precise down to the nanometer they would. Don't hate on another man's OCD bro ..... OCD is the mother of all things good ;) haha
surprisingly the hose on the hose reel i bought from harbor freight has held up so far. its been in my garage over a year now, hooked up to a 60 gallon compressor hanging from the ceiling
Oh, and the longest running joke!
I worked at a dealership many years ago and one day tried to use my
Snap On die grinder and it just would not have any torque and the roll lock disc would not spin to clean a surface.
Well, I went to the Snap On truck a few weeks later and remembered to ask for a rebuild kit and the guy said
I purchased a model that was being discontinued and there were no more.I took it apart to check it and it looked ok, just no power.
Like all my air tools I had more than one so I took it home and put it in my other tool box.Over a decade later I pull the little
red box out of my tool box and took it apart once again and after
looking at it a while notice the inlet looked much larger than the outlet.
Inlet pressure is way more than outlet
pressure so I thought that the outlet should be the larger one.Come to find out some asswipe at the
dealership took it apart while I was at lunch and turned the barrel
around just to fuck with me.
The bad part, it took me more than a decade to figure it out.The good part, I now have an as new Snap On die grinder.
Nope, if you worked there you would know it was not simple "Shop Love".
archangel20031 Bummer
archangel20031 That's fricking priceless.
I have 2 Snap on die grinders that match yours. Both are like new and work better now that I have properly rebuilt them than the crap they sell these days...
Funniest thing "this isn't a Dremel because I'm not a 13-year-old boy " still laughing.
i dont get it, whats the joke?
"men" don't use dremels because they ain't cooching enough. Like he said, all speed no power.
kain0m i still dont get it
Dremels work at a very high RPM, they spin at speeds of 5000 to 35000 RPM. However most of them lack torque, especially in low RPMs and ESPECIALLY when it comes to battery powered dremels. So lets say you gotta drill a hole through a thick piece of steel, a dremel is likely to stop half way cos it lacks the power to go on. An air die grinder likely wont stop cos pneumatic tools have a lot more torque than electric tools.
Correct me if I am wrong and feel free to add a better analogy.
I dunno man, would you call luthiers unmanly? Cos most of em use dremels and not die grinders. Dremels are finer tools.
Yes, I understand your comment was at least semi sarcastic.
Cognitive stalls are normal. You posted this vid in '15 and I only just finished this comment. You're fine!!!
Jesus! A like on my comment from the skookumest of all manly men! And on a video that is 3 years old! You are on the ball, brother. Thank you for the videos too. You are a genuine inspiration and you really do improve the lives of your viewers with the knowledge that you pass on.
Daniel Beard, Ha! Well lookie here... I found another relative.
I got the stalls.
Listening to the start and thinking "Hey... I like my Dremel!"... but then came _all speed, no torque_ and well... "yup... yup... yup... OK fine."
Good banter man!
Is yer Dremil still a choochin? Cause as we saw from the out of center spin and the gouging in the internals, even without the tapity, tap, crack this POS wasn't long for this world.
I'm not some 1 guy dremil fanclub, but it sure seems the better tool wihen stacked up against exibit A here. :)
@@johnspencer3994 my uncle bought me a dremel for Christmas when I was a kid. Have had it for 20+ years. Use it all the time, it's great for sharpening chainsaw chains with the round stones. I have 9" die grinders for cutting/grinding if I need power, the dremel is great for little stuff.
you have a way with words, and I learn more about how electronics chooch on this channel than anywhere else. as for the cognitive stall, I
+AvE I uh... I
+AvE I find the enhliflirench quite skookum. in other news TH-cam has caught another case of herpegonasyphalaids.
micron? thou? i prefer fathoms
+halleffect1 furlongs... ;^)
I'm having to get away from using mil for 0.001" - too many metricificated types use mil as slang for sillymeter these days...
+chemech what is that in Megalithic yard's then ? :)
Leagues are also good. decileague, millileague, kiloleague.... i can go on.
+chemech Parsec my friend. Parsecs is how I measure my ego. :')
Personally I prefer Smoots, but I guess I'm a bit of a geek..
I love these videos.
The best part of the video for me is the super brilliant way to measure RPM with oscilloscope. It is also one of the most cringe-worthy dangerous ways to do anything I have ever seen and I salute you! Good thing you had a safety board. If I had money I would give you some.
Defenitly miss the More informative less jokes these older videos compared to the new videos very refreshing to see the more normal Talking more care appreciate these older videos super entertaining asking us viewers questions and talking and showing the patrons is so nice to see @AvE
no such thing as a broken tool, just an extra set of replacement parts for the next one you buy. :P
The trick with the Rigol blew my mind. That is one of the better examples of the good ol Army standby: Improvise, Adapt, and Overcome. Delightful.
10:30 Immigrant Song by Led Zeppelin
i too was thinking that
Lolol
@@jwat2s Well spotted, that was funny!
the more i watch these videos the more i want to have a few beers watching you make these videos at the shop good stuff sir i would have a blast being a fly on the wall !!!
I dont know why I am watching these reviews.
I am slightly interested in the engineering/physics part but power tools are literally not of interest to me.
Yet it is the second day in a row binge watching your videos.
You're probably right
MrEppart I'm with you. This has no practical application for me but damn do I love me some technical knowledge and expert commentary. Its just fun to learn how much there is to mechanical engineering.
On the fifth day every other channel will be futile and meaningless..
Oh, just realised the op's comment was from a year ago.
Do you get withdrawls from not watching after that long?
Where is this guy from? Maine?
Lol I'm the opposite, interested in the tools but hardly any in the engineering of it, it's just damn entertaining
Just be yourself better that way.. more enjoyable too. I have taken apart my first hydraulic pump today all thanks to you videos.
I mitigate the hose drop by having small extra tanks around the shop by the main outlets ;-) helps a lot to get that initial big hit on the impact tools to loosen bolts and nuts. But then the pressure drops a bit if you go balls out for more than 3-4 seconds. It's also good for trapping moisture.
I know this is an older vid, but I enjoy your channel so much. I'm new to it, and I have my own youtube channel about Suzuki Samurais, and I like how in a few of your videos you talk about, " just make cool shit because you want to, not to make money or any of the usual BS, but because you enjoy doing." And that has helped remind me why I started my channel in the first place. Its funny that I started watching your videos because i like the tear down of tools and learning new terminology, but getting more into it your channel is also inspiring. Keep up the great work
Microns is for oil filters
And wtf is a inch anyway?!
@@ca5cad3xml7sx4 about 1 million millionths of an inch, 10thousand tenths, or 1 thousand thousandths.
@@ca5cad3xml7sx4 an inch is an imperial measurement equal to 1/6 of a north American penis
Easy either way
@@chrisrage5836 Hm, i thought it's 1/9th or 1/8th(in average) of eastern european. It is not the most important, though.
I only watch your videos to learn the language of my northern brethern. You do you buddy.
I bought a $40 die grinder kit a few years back (el cheapo nastyo brando), and figured, yeah it'll be dead within a few months, but man its pretty skookum, just keeps on choochin. I've abused it pretty hard and ran 2 carbide burrs to death in it. The joys of keeping your air tools loobed!
tigerpr0n As long as you keep it lubrimicated it will keep on choochn
$40 isn't cheap hahaha try a nice $12 horror freight one!!!! Yes they work just fine still albeit a teeny tiny touch louder 😂
That squealing of the air hose leak confused the hell out of my dog. He started turning his head left and right before walking over to me. It was pretty funny. Also, I can confirm that you're not having a stroke. My thought process completely jams up at times, sometimes in the middle of a sentence! I just get completely overloaded and everything shuts down, leaving me standing there, looking like an idiot before everything boots back up again and I continue on.
How's the weather up there in canuckland? I'm down here in Texas 143,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 microns away
Actually, it'd only be about 5 or 6 trillion microns away - (that's 6,000,000,000,000)...
LOL!
My husband (69 and semi-retired) worked on railroad equipment for years and used every type of grinder known. He loves the Dremel for fine work. The same argument could be made about the small 115 Volt wire welder he bought for the carbodies. He sure wouldn't have used it on a heavy bolster plate. I don't mind microns, but he uses thou and hates microns. Great vids!
Enjoyed as always! Where's my shot out?!
Good show ol boy---------- got a good bunch of laughs
Love it
Looks as though the tidal wave bounced back in your direction!👍
I knew I heard that phrase before, my grandparents are Canadians and always said " keep your stick on the ice" then I heard you say your version. Lol. Ever hear of Sixx Select Brewing company? Amol Sixx? He owned Sixx Sellect Brewing during the probation. My grandpa was Executive Vice President. And he said that any man can afford a beer, even during the great depression. And he was right because my great grandparents used to have a huge ranch in Canada and Rockefeller used to sleep over in Indian Tee pees in the basement. My grandfather was in direct orders from Henry Kissinger to be an Embassor for Turkey in the 60's and 70' he had a shopsmith lol. Your videos bring great joy to me as I remember real men and you are certainly a real man. Thanks for sharing your knowledge, plus you have the vocabulary of the whole Funkin Wagnal dictionary, adverbs and all coagulatio
When I need a good laugh, I watch your videos. Keep reviewing that Chinese junk!
Hilarious as always.
This is some mischievous senator somewhere paid too much to listen...
Kidding ;) love you Mr. FreakinPete!
I love the "Leitungs water without Kohlensäure" bottle around 18:13 .
Nice mixing of langwich.
@AvE Solder won't flow or stick to fractured surfaces. If you want the silver solder to stick try grinding the fractured surface so that there are no crystalline edges. You still might not be able to fill it in properly but tip for the future; any crack or fracture has to be ground before soldering.
Thanks for the videos I've learned a lot.
Nice trick with the coil and the magnet, and I'd be interested in knowing more about how you picked the particular coil and what kind it was. The last time I needed to do something like this, I used an optointerrupter mounted to one of those small radio shack boards and a bit of tape on the shaft of the motor that I was trying to measure (a sewing machine motor). It worked, and I didn't have to worry about anything flying off at me and changing the state of my eyeballs...
i have been meaning to set one of them cheap die grinders up with a co2 tank just to see how it handles 850 psi. or see how spectacularly it doesnt handle it i should say,
***** someone needs to try it. it would be amusing if nothing else. also, moosehead lager. i grew up on that shit. used to be brewed by where i grew up along with Alexander keiths
Please record it.
OminousPineapple wear a bomb suite and diving helmet. lol
@@psirider f1 used nitrogen so with co2 wear a bulletproof shield lol and some really nice gloves because negative discharge temps arent fun
Another vote for JB Weld. I’ve used it to fill a hole in the side of an engine block, and fill in a ding on a hydraulic ram. Smoothed out the repair on a lathe & the ram worked beautifully afterwards.
When he said "ok. I grew my third arm" my phone thought I said "ok Google" and it activated Google assistant and searched for alarm. lol
Thou my friend. My IR die grinder broke. I bought a Harbour Fart 90 degree die grinder and the collet would spin out of round. Took it back and the next one would not hold a bit in the collet. Gave in and bought a Matco set and they worked and had mucho skookum. Thanks for the very cool/informative videos.
i paint cars for a living, we have these new airlines at work in the booths, the air lines normally wear from being dragged around the car, so the outer cover wears as well as the normal bit near the pcl coupling, the new airlines are like a very flexible silicone and mega light compared to the normal bitchumen covered canvas cast iron hooped fire hoses we had b4.
You are right about using air pressure pep up the air tools, my cheap £10 ($1500 CAD) windy gun would only manage to adjust the volume knob on the car stereos at work, rather than wiz the wheel nuts off the cars, as we only had 8 bar of puff pressure. had to buy a swanky unobtanium bodied ingersoll randy windy gun. but at home when using my fridge compressor converted air compressor, running at 10 bar of goodness, it works like a $10 dollar crack whore.
Fridge compressor air compressor crew unite...
jrmym2 is this something i should be building? heard of the idea before, guess i know what im searching after this!
Russell P Can't speak for anyone else's... I'm happy with mine. If you can get your hands on an old, cast iron refrigeration compressor, go for it. The thing I love most about mine is how insanely quiet it is... the loudest part is the check valve on the tank body. Today, most big box store compressors are incredibly LOUD... Mine's mounted to an 80 gallon tank with what I believe to be a ~2 HP 115 volt single phase motor running it. It runs everything I need it to... 1/2 impact, ratchets, die grinders, etc..
Wow. So I'm not the only one who is able to turn 1 project into 5.
There's a hole in my bucket, dear Liza...
Firstly, thousandths is fine. For us machinists it's the perfect term. I've always said it's better just to be yourself. Then there's that cognitive stall. I call them a brain F.A.R.T. It's when your brain Fails And Restarts Totally... Good fun.
mm is better
I have a suggestion for content item. I would love to see how a cold fogger works compared to a hot fogger. I have a basic understanding of the hot fogger however on the cold I am not sure if it's just a high-pressure mist or a true fog, whatever that means.
Tap Wasser? Youe getting real international there. (Btw. the tap water doesnt work for tapping very well, my parts start to rust).
Those die grinders are kinda pain, but for that money? Hell, as a throwaway to run a carbide burr? Fine! Dont have to waste the good Biax grinder :)
Yeah, people that have one dont give it away. And they fail only if you run them ten yours without any oil.. ;)
***** I thougt you where all about maintenance of tools and machines ;)
Btw, no one in the metric world that has some common sense would use "200 microns", except if he is a goof, as you mentioned. We would call that 2/10mm or a bit more fancy 20/100mm...but microns? We would send you straight out of the shop for using that :D
If I had a die grinder with too much runout, I would go to the box of dead grinders and pull out some collets and collet nuts, and see which combination has the least amount of runout. Works very well for me.
I clicked on this while I was doing something ..... kinda used it for background ..... when I started listening to it ,I noticed it's kind of funny how you work with stuff ..... yep , I subbed
When you started to talk about "thou" I went and learnt what exactly what that was, but switching to microns would just throw a wrench at my wee ol' head.
You, my friend are my new hero. One of the best vids I have seen from you so far as far as humour goes and calling guys and places out
just getting into your videums and just to let you know I have been using my " power fist" die grinder for 5 years daily as a welder/fabricator. best $8.00 I could spend ( only got it cause it was cheap and wouldn't care so much if lost it. lol
Busier than a dog with two dinks. I don't know how I've gone through life without hearing that one!
RPM = ARR - PEE - EM mate. Keep up the good videos. Greets from England
+AvE Yip, just like squiffitts, if you have a floor that's ten by ten, you have 100 squiffitts
+tr0n i just boke my honda 220k....coulda MAde 300k easy...but i do dumb shit sometimes
+amazingvidguyz "RPM" stands for "Rip'ems".... It's an industry term... ;)
Nice work creating your own ripems meter @9:35 @AvE
Keep to referring to your measurements as you normally would!
It's fun trying to figure out which system you mean! :)
Microns, thousands, milli inch, number x 10^-3 inches, it is all the same thing! Don't change a thing is what I am saying! Do it the way you see fit, because we all love your videos in the I&C shop at Diablo Canyon Power Plant here in sunny California!
I watch because:
He's funny
He knows a hell of a lot about what's inside all those toys. Do you?
I approve your use of centrifugal force. if you use a stationary reference frame, there is no centrifugal force, but if you use a rotating reference frame, then centrifugal force becomes pretty clear.
I overload thinking about what I want to eat.
25:50 Correct O-ring if it was a black one like the other it would freeze and break. The black one is there because it seals the opening on the warmer end of the valve, most likely would replace that with another clear O-ring when that one fails.
Dude, i almost never leave comments but, whoa. You know a lot of stuff.
Enjoy your beer.
***** I just randomly found one of your videos, and now I am binge-watching them. I'm not real good with machinery and what-not, but I love watching your videos! I'm learning a ton and I'm being entertained by your inherent sense of humor! Keep up the good work, sir!
I laughed so hard when I saw the text at 11:30. My girlfriend says I get "stuck". I will sometimes get stuck while thinking then jump to a completely different topic. Me thinks that with intelligence comes a few mental abnormalities. Love your videos. Thank you for all the entertainment.
I'm a metric man, for some reason when it comes to small measurements i always speak in thousands, It's thousands and he's an old woman.
I do the same thing!!!!! look up absence seizures..... the medication Trileptal seems to make thoughts flow smoother.... take it for what its worth..... Love the videos....
+AvE - Please tell me, I've looked everywhere, what does Boltr mean? 😕
Yeah good question, I would like to know too please?
"Bored Of Lame Tool Reviews?"
Yeah thanks Jonathon, I only just saw your reply 😃
At 11:25 you said you don't want people thinking you're having a stroke.
It is a stroke...a stroke of fucking genius.
That pause is natural, it allows the sound to catch up to your brain that's going faster than the speed of sound.
First world problem/constructive criticism...I double click at the end of the video to get out of full screen, and the abrupt ending of the video means youtube inserts 12 usually-stupid "you might like" links...Problem is that there is no blankspace at the end of the video, outtro or otherwise. Click to exit and end up loading another video only to have to come back, hit pause, THEN come comment :)
Otherwise great teardown and description of this particular choocher.
frollard The Esc key is my bestest friend, as it is one of the best outside the letters at doing exactly what it says on its face.
OOZ662 not really. No matter how much I hit it I'm still stuck at the office.
aloha from Vancouver, BC! the air pressure you're measuring is high speed air flow and is low pressure vs what the compressor is seeing and what the tool sees in terms of work. that's why you see that drop in pressure, the "pressure" has become inertia, when it stalls out and returns to atmospheric pressure or returns that energy to work/pressure. it's called the Bernoulli principle, as the velocity increases the pressure decreases.
Definitely micron, since imperial measurements are just ridiculous. Alternatively you could go all fancy and say megapicometres or picomegametres. That'd surely rock the socks off every metric fan.
JB weld would've fixed it ;)
I actually bought 2 of these years ago assuming that the one would crap out at 2 AM the night before a race at the worst possible time.Because I figured nobody would bother stealing a cheapo tool from the race trailer for their shop toolbox and they didnt.Now some 15+ years later the one is still kicking (in my home garage)although the backup died after getting dropped in the bay.
We used to go through a lot of cheap shop tools (good ones too)so I learned early on to tear them apart and give them a good cleaning,debur and a shot of real grease before letting the shop monkeys at them.If I did that I got pretty much the same lifespan from most of the cheapo stuff in the hands of the monkeys as we did with the better quality stuff.Because the essentially tortured everything to death no matter what it was.
I stopped talking in my videos, due to cognitive stalls; which aren't stalls, per se, but wonderful tangental excursions.
I just forwarded this video to Snapon. I'm sure it's already been done but reminders never hurt.
As a scientist, everything I do in lab is metric, all the field measurements I make are metric, and certainly all the measurements for molecular biology (fucking micrograms, nanoliters, femptograms!) are metric.
As an agricultural scientist, all I do is work with farmers in the US of A, so no metric ever, everything is imperial. Fahrenheit, yards, fathoms, and thousandths of pounds.
SO really i could give a rats ass what you use, i've got all my tables and conversion slide rules at the ready. Fuck i mean you should of seen the mess when i started my business making filament extruders the engineer worked in metric and the machinist was imperial, so all our drawings, assembly workflow do dads, and machines were just cobbles of metric imperial and square pegs in round holes.
Personally I prefer cubits
I do the physics in metric, and the building in imperial. Converters are my best friend lol. I can't imagine doing physics in imperial measurements, the conversions would slow every thing down horribly. I get annoyed enough with nanometers, and micro meters
Wow, I really got rambling on that one.
That valve you removed at about 23:10 is an adjustment for speed. Turn the inner screw for rpm adjustments. Just found out
That was very enjoyable
Can you mitigate line loss running pipe to your work benches and then short runs of hoses (2' max) from there?
I prefer metric, coz I'm from Europe and I have no grasp whatsoever of the inch and its intricate web of relatives
Alexandru Moise Its, not it's
Mad Monty MN I know, I just didn't bother
Mad Monty MN You forgot to use ending punctuation.
Alexandru Moise
i prefer metric because i only learned the term "thou" in the last year or so
+Mad Monty MN it's is used in cases where 'it is' could also be used so it's was correct usage.
Been crazy watching ur channel grow man, thanks for your videos man
TAP WASSER OHNE GAZ ... lmao (con gaz is common for Italy... never seen that in a german mash up) damn you must have spend 2 much time over here lol
For the gear clamp on the hose, put heat shrink over it. Works well.
Does Bill Nye seriously watch Ave?!
He has to learn SOMEWHERE, doesn't he? It isn't as though he's a genuine scientist or anything.
@@chuckschillingvideos He isn't. He's a tv hack with zero credentials. He's no more a scientist than Neil Patrick Harris was an actual doctor
At my place of work, we use the gear style clamps on the soft sightglass tube for the hydraulic oil tank. We just put a piece of hardcore clear heat shrink over it.
... ever walk into a room and completely forget why you went in there? scary.
Hey Ave, your hose clamps in the beginning reminded me of a debate ive been having with myself. Can you use hose clamps in high vibration conditions, such as coming off an engine?
I have a remote oil filter and the lines to it are crimped on, but the fittings leak. I have replaced the part before, and they leaked again. Im considering replacing the crimp connectors with hose clamps. Would they work in the high vibration of the engine or would they come loose?
I prefer you use thousands of an inch, good video bud
+AvE I wonder if the rush of air past the Tee is making for inaccurate gauge readings thanks to Mr. Bernoulli?
Thousandths, take the microns and shove it.
Units only matter when somebody else needs to use your numbers. In these vidayos that never happens with length measurements so if he would be saying picodaktyloi instead the message would stay exactly the same
John Warden microns are millionths, that's a thousandth time more better than thous.
Can I be the wanker that points out that the inch has been a metric unit since the 1960’s, so it’s a win for the metric system either way?
Thanks.
Once again, it's an old vid, but it popped up and I hadn't watched it so you've given me some more laughs! Thank you!
"Both barrels of Squeeky Wheel" your phraseology is fucking stupendous!
What the fuck is a micron?
bearing clearance in an engine is thou!
+archangel20031 only in one country on the planet earth it is
+metalhead2508 And the country that invented cheese in a can.
metalhead2508 I watched Apollo 17 videos and listened to the transmissions. They were using metric pretty much all the time. Can't even remember an imperial unit. you can watch apollo17.org if you are interested.
I cog-stall all the time! It helps if you write down chunks of data so you aren't holing too many things upstairs at the same time. I thought I was the only one!
+AvE Immigrant Song at 10:28 = \m/
I totally heard that too!
We'd have to do some real critical analysis to determine which one of our black Carhartt jackets is more well-worn. Mine was a gift from my Dad in 1996 when he knew I'd follow him into the trades and it is still in the back of my truck. Sleeves all shredded to shit but the only rip it ever suffered was hand mended. Grease and sealant and blood all over it, but the inside is beautiful; like new but better because it was loved. Still fits well enough. And I see the wandering stitch pattern at your left sleeve. Respect.
Cognitive Stall. At least you have an intelligent sounding name for it. I'd just been calling it 'derping' when I do it.
Derping is probably the modern term, my Granpappy called it having a Condor Moment
@@philcourteney4328 It's just a temporary brain freeze.
Thousands is more universal then Microns don't matter to me what measurements you use great information as always no matter what @AvE
Use thousands....
A bearing marked with a single z is a double decker type ,with a higher load rating. 1z 2 z or zz indicates metal shielding on one or both sides :)
Micron or thou? How about who gives a fuck? Clearly someones taking things way too seriously....
+PoLoMoTo2534 I'm completely and utterly with you!
+PoLoMoTo2534, +wibbledee Me too..
+PoLoMoTo2534 A micron is a thousandth of a millimeter, not a thousandth of an inch and so is quite a bit smaller than a thou. Most people don't give a fuck but some machinists live to hunt perfection and give very much fucks. If they could make diameters and so on precise down to the nanometer they would. Don't hate on another man's OCD bro ..... OCD is the mother of all things good ;) haha
If the spec says thou, then thou it is, otherwise it's microns, interchange them just not on the same project!
Awesome vejazles mate. Interested in the same stuff and the way you do them is comical. Keep up the good work fella.
thousandths please. noone likes conversions.
I just love your "technical" terms!
thousandths please
wonder what sort of bench grinder you could make from an air motor?
A very air hungry one. Most likely need at least 15 cfm at 90 psi to keep up
Definintely microns. Much more useful.
surprisingly the hose on the hose reel i bought from harbor freight has held up so far. its been in my garage over a year now, hooked up to a 60 gallon compressor hanging from the ceiling
How do you remove the bearing to get into the round part with the blades ?
So, would you happen to port one of those pneumatic tools in the same way that one might port a turbo for ricer points?
2:55 i only had these shits, so i used zip ties, very strong ones though. Bad idea?
Most of the time I find your vids funny and informative. I would prefer Microns over Thouh. (unsure of spelling).
Please never stop making videos!
this is a really late post.. but could you do this with 2 magnets to counter balance? and just divide by 2?