Something I discovered when milling countersink holes to avoid chatter marks is to place a small piece of "Cheesecloth" between what you are cutting and the mill it it absorbs any vibration and gives a smooth countersink finish easy peasy.
Excellent designing and machining on the fly. Another two things I learned from this,1) Wear safety glasses whilst watching the camera close ups are so real, 2) I won't be tasting aluminium after your recommendation😝
Old naval story: Signal 1: "The Admiral's woman will board at 13:00" Signal 2: "Correction to earlier signal - between 'Admiral' and 'woman' insert 'washer' ".
Another great vid. Just wondering this for a while. Why do you make these brakes so massive/thick/heavy ? U-brakes always where kind of bulky but you left them up to another level of bulkyness. Esthetically it doesn’t really fit slim elegant steel frames I think.
These brakes are off the Woznot, which is an Aluminum (Fat tubed...) front triangle. Back in 1988 I wanted to make the strongest front brake I could, which needed ungiving birth to the Brake Booster. Thanks for commenting...
It's a good solution when you need a lot of braking power, I had those on my 10 mountain bike care of the Scott Peterson self-energizing set that was on there. I got DeKerf to convert it to disc brakes by adding tabs to the forks and the rear frame plus a brace and some other extras
17:40 do you have to use a hand tool on a spinning lathe like that? isn't there a safer alternative? it's hard to watch. i know you probably did this all your life, but that is the exact story told about people after their accident
I’ve read in a lot of places that it’s not recommended to wear gloves in the band saw, so I was wondering what are your thoughts on gloves vs no gloves? (I see you’re always wearing them on the band saw). Do they protect you from other kinds of accidents?
I can’t speak for Paul, but for me, the bandsaw doesn’t have many “pinch points” that can actually grab a glove, and at worst the blade will just cut the glove. But a bandsaw does leave jagged edges so the gloves protect from those. In something like a lathe or mill, there are a lot more chances for the gloves to be caught, and also more opportunity to debur or file the parts before holding them, so gloves are a bigger risk there.
if you arent CLIMB milling, youre......... CONVENTIONAL milling- Thanks to the millions of Mr. Pete videos I've watched!
Well, I actually did a little bit of both!
When filing aluminum I rub a piece of chalk on the file. The chalk keeps the file teeth from loading up.
I got put this by Robyn Allen who was the master crossbow maker and an expert on archery both practical and historical.
Great job on the machining of those parts. It is all black magic to me. LOL.
I've been having my own milling machine conundrums so great to watch. The radius tool worked a treat. Thanks Paul and Mitch.
Thank you... Cheers!
A true Saturday treat.
Thank you Tom. Glad you enjoyed our video!
@@paulbrodie the measuring tip was handy , I had never actually thought to reset the zero , I just used calibration strip and did the maths .
just watching this as a local goes by on his brand new Brodie bike
I hope we get some highlights from the bike show in one of these videos.
Next video will be a brief rundown of my Bicycle Collection!
You say Chips I say Swarf 😊
At least we are talking about the same thing!!
Something I discovered when milling countersink holes to avoid chatter marks is to place a small piece of "Cheesecloth" between what you are cutting and the mill it it absorbs any vibration and gives a smooth countersink finish easy peasy.
Excellent work with the camera as well as the machining!
That's Teamwork! Thank you for commenting....
It is always a pleasure to watch you work . Thank you cheers from Nova Scotia !
Nova Scotia! Thanks for watching...
Excellent designing and machining on the fly. Another two things I learned from this,1) Wear safety glasses whilst watching the camera close ups are so real, 2) I won't be tasting aluminium after your recommendation😝
Thanks for the fantastic video, Paul and Mitch.
Thank you Mark...
A legend doing legendary work. !!!
Very kind, thank you!
Excellent video thank you much .
The Wizard of Metals 🤙🏻🤟🏻✌🏻
Masterful!
Creating functional works of art 👏👏👌
Cheers Chris
So much knowledge and passion for a brake....i'm flashed with it. Can't await to see the WOZTWO
The new bike will be different than the WOZNOT. It should be called the NOTWOZNOT
Nice work, thanks for sharing your videos. 👍
Thanks
Another great video, just love the way you work.
Old naval story:
Signal 1: "The Admiral's woman will board at 13:00"
Signal 2: "Correction to earlier signal - between 'Admiral' and 'woman' insert 'washer' ".
Not sure I get it, but thanks for watching!
@@paulbrodie , you need a slightly dirty mind.
@@Hertog_von_Berkshire I'm still lost.
Another great vid. Just wondering this for a while. Why do you make these brakes so massive/thick/heavy ? U-brakes always where kind of bulky but you left them up to another level of bulkyness. Esthetically it doesn’t really fit slim elegant steel frames I think.
These brakes are off the Woznot, which is an Aluminum (Fat tubed...) front triangle. Back in 1988 I wanted to make the strongest front brake I could, which needed ungiving birth to the Brake Booster. Thanks for commenting...
It's a good solution when you need a lot of braking power, I had those on my 10 mountain bike care of the Scott Peterson self-energizing set that was on there. I got DeKerf to convert it to disc brakes by adding tabs to the forks and the rear frame plus a brace and some other extras
Some might say you do to good a job after all its only a push bike ? But thats no excuse for not doing your best great job Paul 😁😁🤘🤘
17:40 do you have to use a hand tool on a spinning lathe like that? isn't there a safer alternative? it's hard to watch. i know you probably did this all your life, but that is the exact story told about people after their accident
This one could be called WozNotWoz...
What's up, Dog?
I’ve read in a lot of places that it’s not recommended to wear gloves in the band saw, so I was wondering what are your thoughts on gloves vs no gloves? (I see you’re always wearing them on the band saw). Do they protect you from other kinds of accidents?
I can’t speak for Paul, but for me, the bandsaw doesn’t have many “pinch points” that can actually grab a glove, and at worst the blade will just cut the glove. But a bandsaw does leave jagged edges so the gloves protect from those.
In something like a lathe or mill, there are a lot more chances for the gloves to be caught, and also more opportunity to debur or file the parts before holding them, so gloves are a bigger risk there.
What lights are you using on your mill?
👍👍👍👍
👍😎👍