Mr. Pete, as I am sure I have said before, I was a teacher for 30yrs+ but I can only aspire to your level of professionalism and expertise. I am so happy I was around on planet earth during your life, a total privilege sir. Many thanks from a very sunny, hot Bonnie Scotland.
As we gain mastery of the different terms, it becomes our privilege to misuse them, I've found. I exercise that privilege on a daily basis, so no biggie at all :-) Thanks Mr. Pete.
Now I see said the blind man to his dear wife and picked up his hammer and saw. Yeah, old joke but after watching this I now understand how the milling attachment works. Thank you Mr. Pete.
A great instructional video as usual. Your influence is found in may places. Today Practical Renaissance uploaded a video where he cuts a triple thread like "mrPete" showed him how to do. When the only thing I had to cut a keyseat was the Craftsman lathe the only woodruff keyseat I needed to cut was on the shaft of one of the lathes drive pulleys. Catch 22. Keep on keeping on.
Thanks Mr. Pete. I just found an purchased a milling attachment for my 10 inch Atlas. I need to get a collet attachment or a tool holder I need to mill a t - nut for my new tool post.
Great segment Mr Pete. Although I think my reminder tag would have been .271 not .269. Even at my age of 66 years I would surely forgotten to add the .002 for the paper width.
good video again and nice demonstration....quickie for me in shop use cellophane from package of cigarettes as shim stock its made to a .001 thickness at factory...we quite a few smokers
It appears that the set screw would want to rock that woodruff key out of the slot on the unsupported end since it can not be placed fully under the pulley. Would a straight key be better for that particular application? Thanks, Chris
Nope... The key can't tip in the key slot, because the pulley's key way fits over it snugly. The key way in the pulley fits over pretty much the entire length of the key. He just doesn't show it that way at the end of this video. But go to the previous video (Shop Tips #283) where he shows it very well.
Thanks! I just went back to Shop Tips 283 and saw that that the slot was broached all the way through that pulley. In this video he only pushed it on halfway, and the base circle on the pulley seemed pretty small so i thought that it wasn't slotted all the way through. Thanks, Chris
In my humble opinion, Mr. Pete, I would say that you tightened the gib by adjusting the gib screw. Six of one, half a dozen the other. I love the full length explanations and, just sayin', I missed that miner faux pas until you mentioned it.
Agreed. I would even go further to say there was never any faux pas to begin with. How else do you tighten the gib other than by turning the gib screw?
Small video tip for you Mr. Peterson ... skip the 'interlaced' option when your compressing your footage. That's an old broadcasting method for analog tv signals, a format that was used for old CRT tv's and doesn't really play well with modern digital formats. In any case TH-cam doesn't 'broadcast' in the traditional sense so it serves no purpose ....... except to mess up otherwise good footage. Ahem. Forgive the criticism. I mean no disrespect :) *that's where those horizontal lines are coming from any time there's motion in the footage.
Mr. Pete, as I am sure I have said before, I was a teacher for 30yrs+ but I can only aspire to your level of professionalism and expertise. I am so happy I was around on planet earth during your life, a total privilege sir. Many thanks from a very sunny, hot Bonnie Scotland.
For an "attachment", that sure worked sweet. Once again, another great video. Thank you.
ONE MORE TIME YOU HAVE SHOWN ME SOMETHING I'VE NEVER SEEN DONE. YOU CAN TELL I'M A NOVICE. THANKS MR. PETE.
As we gain mastery of the different terms, it becomes our privilege to misuse them, I've found. I exercise that privilege on a daily basis, so no biggie at all :-) Thanks Mr. Pete.
Now I see said the blind man to his dear wife and picked up his hammer and saw. Yeah, old joke but after watching this I now understand how the milling attachment works. Thank you Mr. Pete.
I'll never use equipment like this, but its just a pure pleasure to watch you work. very entertaining.
Thank you. I have the milling attachment.
Cheers from Clint in Virginia.
👍👍
Sometimes you only have access to one machine. When the job has to get done, it’s nice to know a few different ways to accomplish it. 👍
Great video! Cutting a woodruff key seat on a lathe, AMAZING! You are teaching me so much.
Thanks for watching
Thanks Mr Pete. Good info for that milling attachment I got.
Nice job Tubes.
you make it look
simple. I really
enjoyed this vid
thanks.
A great instructional video as usual. Your influence is found in may places. Today Practical Renaissance uploaded a video where he cuts a triple thread like "mrPete" showed him how to do. When the only thing I had to cut a keyseat was the Craftsman lathe the only woodruff keyseat I needed to cut was on the shaft of one of the lathes drive pulleys. Catch 22. Keep on keeping on.
Informative video, thank you for sharing!
Thank you for sharing. Great work and great instructions.
Thank you
great Video! thanks. some good tips there. i learnt a lot. thanks for taking the time to show us!
Mr Pete, I wish there was someone/thing around me where I could just go and learn how to do these things hands on.
Nice job very informative educational your a good teacher
Thank you very much
Good stuff. Even though I'd likely use my mill, it is always nice to know other methods.
Well done Sir..... Well done!
Thanks Mr. Pete. I just found an purchased a milling attachment for my 10 inch Atlas. I need to get a collet attachment or a tool holder I need to mill a t - nut for my new tool post.
es ist fantastisch -- danke, herr kaleun!!!
you are a great master machinist long live you with happiness and prosperity
Thanks
I love your videos cant wait for the next one!
thank you teacher
Great segment Mr Pete. Although I think my reminder tag would have been .271 not .269. Even at my age of 66 years I would surely forgotten to add the .002 for the paper width.
THANK YOU...for sharing.
I like your avatar.
Please do more myth breakers. Awesome video!
Very interesting wow very helpful
Thanks
good video again and nice demonstration....quickie for me in shop use cellophane from package of cigarettes as shim stock its made to a .001 thickness at factory...we quite a few smokers
I love using the milling attachement for flycutting and milling just because I have no room for a mill
❤I am very happy to see you okay
Thanks
It appears that the set screw would want to rock that woodruff key out of the slot on the unsupported end since it can not be placed fully under the pulley. Would a straight key be better for that particular application? Thanks, Chris
Nope... The key can't tip in the key slot, because the pulley's key way fits over it snugly. The key way in the pulley fits over pretty much the entire length of the key. He just doesn't show it that way at the end of this video. But go to the previous video (Shop Tips #283) where he shows it very well.
Thanks! I just went back to Shop Tips 283 and saw that that the slot was broached all the way through that pulley. In this video he only pushed it on halfway, and the base circle on the pulley seemed pretty small so i thought that it wasn't slotted all the way through. Thanks, Chris
you mentioned kerosene is that the same as paraffin? Thanks for video sir.....
Under the correct circumstances it wil both burn. So somewhat the same ;)
kerosene is jet fuel, paraffin as an oil is commonly sold as lamp oil, since it is odorless, unlike kerosene.
In my humble opinion, Mr. Pete, I would say that you tightened the gib by adjusting the gib screw. Six of one, half a dozen the other. I love the full length explanations and, just sayin', I missed that miner faux pas until you mentioned it.
Agreed. I would even go further to say there was never any faux pas to begin with. How else do you tighten the gib other than by turning the gib screw?
Small video tip for you Mr. Peterson ... skip the 'interlaced' option when your compressing your footage. That's an old broadcasting method for analog tv signals, a format that was used for old CRT tv's and doesn't really play well with modern digital formats. In any case TH-cam doesn't 'broadcast' in the traditional sense so it serves no purpose ....... except to mess up otherwise good footage. Ahem. Forgive the criticism. I mean no disrespect :)
*that's where those horizontal lines are coming from any time there's motion in the footage.
If you use metric it even would be easier
Z,X,Y.../Vs -XYZ ?
Imagine the lathe was turned 90 degrees (upright). All will become clear.