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Yep, could make it no prob. But on a Friday afternoon, finished working for the man, it's sure nice to watch someone else do it with a beer in My hand! Nice job though... That'll do the job perfectly. 'Hi' to the Giggler and Hommy, of course.
In these awful times we’re living through Kurtis, you and Homey and Karen are such a wonderful break every Thursday night 🥰 I hope you know how much joy you bring to your fans, and how much you are all loved. Be well guys.
Well said, Kurtis, Karen, and Homeless are highlights of my week. In a world going crazy, it's nice to see people who haven't gone "Bananas"...or have they? :) Love you guys.
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering It is so satisfying to see someone make a tool that is the best they can design rather than design to some bean counter's price point and have it last exactly a week past the warranty period.
Agree and if I am not mistaken this is the first time we have a side by side images from two cameras synced. Nice new technique for the channel. Nice work.
I've been a tool and die maker for almost 30 years and there is just something impressive about how you do things and the workmanship for the size material you do , I can understand why you are busy and can appreciate how guys like you make a go of it all on your own, well done I am a true fan and have learned alot following along .
The reamer delivering an ID of exactly 40.00mm was so satisfying. Glad you guys were okay with the floods, great vid as always! Thanks Kurtis and Karen
@@gregorteply9034 that were my thoughts exactly I'm thinking to myself why is he measuring all this with calipers they're so inaccurate. You can put enough pressure in your measurement to make it read whatever you want it to read. At least use telescoping gauges. If it needed to be accurate I wouldn't use a 40 millimeter hardenerd pin
My wife and I try not to miss anything you put out, we are a couple of oldies but as a retired serviceman, mechanic & tinkerer inventor your segments are a breath of fresh air compared to so many others out there. We just love homeless & I love watching the funny interplay between yourself and giggles. Please don't stress over how you look and what you are saying because when it all boils down it's obvious you know what you are doing and there lies the difference between your stuff and that of so many others. Keep up the great entertainment guys- just love watching.
My Dad always told me that the best tools he had were the ones he made. They never failed because he used the right materials to make them. If you have to buy them you never know if they will last. Great to see you guys are ok and the water did not get to your shop. Hope that your area will recover soon from the flooding....
If I was still a young man,I'd be asking you for an apprenticeship. It amazes me as to how much you know and how unbelievably good you are at it. So enjoy watching your videos.
Kurtis, how is it that your keep beating me to these jobs? Last week was the dipper arm, I just put one up on the boring mill the morning your video came out. Now it's line boring tooling, I have a video coming up in a few weeks with a new line boring bar I made. I guess great minds think alike. Love the videos, keep up the good work!
Such ingenuity. My wife always wondered how I could spend hours making a jig for woodworking. It’s because the next job I use it for will take minutes! Thanks for the videos and shots of the safety officer.
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering Time to make some casting moulds, and make CEE shaving epoxy coasters. Those should sell well, as you have enough chips to work it. That way you can have a sideline with Karen doing the odd batch of them.
I really appreciate your explanations for 1. identifying the problem, 2. why the current tool can't be modified to 'fix' it, 3. what your solution is, and 4. how and why it's better. Being great at explaining stuff is a really valuable skill, mate. Respect👍
SHOULD HAVE SENT THE 3 OLD BLUE POINT TAP HANDLES MY BROTHER SENT ME LAST CHRISTMAS EARLIER AS i HAVE MEANT TO BUT KEPT FORGETTING TO DO SO. Each time i would remember they were at the shop. Every time I saw you take out that old beater I remember every time you would take that pc of old, tired dime store one I would just shake my head in wonder. Nice one that until someone uses it f for who knows it will be there for your shop for a very long time. Thanks bud.
This is the correct procedure, generally your pilot hole should be just a little bigger than the web of the drill you're using. Slowly stepping up the sizes means you are only using the cutting edges on the outer corners of the drill, which are the weakest part of the drill and also have the sharpest rake angle, leading to a danger of the drill grabbing and pulling in.
The three of you are so much fun to watch and you constantly show every step of your jobs and explain them so people can understand what you do. Never remove the ending part of your videos they show the viewers the funny side of your lives. 🦆RIP to the duck and Homie don't play nice with ducks...lol
Tap handle def looks better than the Bunnings special, hope it works as good as it looks. You could have saved yourself a lot of lathe work by painting a ducks face on it and given it to Homey to chew a bit off 😁
I’ve been a machinist for longer than your life. I just love to “make chips” . You do a good job with the 1045. Your lathe seems to be a copy of a Tuda lathe we had about 50 years ago. Keep up the good work and break them chips.
I love shop made tools! They end up being exactly what you wanted/ needed without having to settle for what's available and making do. If you've got the time, nothing can compare to shop made. Bespoke. Custom. Made to order. In the end, you cannot beat a shop made tool! They're always the best possible! :)
@ 44:33 I was hoping you were not knee deep in water there Mate !! I was wondering why your videos were so fascinating ... and it's a mix , it's your dog , your outakes , your subs sending you surprise gifts.... and your craftmanship is like watching magic bring performed ... Thank You !!!
Love the rainy days... as long as I'm working indoors. Brought my Grandfathers lathe home this week (1940 Craftsman). Last use was in 1975 when I was in high school.
Kurtis, thank you for walking us through real engineering! What a joy. Along with your insights into materials, wear, strength of structures, fitness for purpose and all-round excellence in your work I am seriously enjoying watching a true engineer at work. Flimflam doodad indeedy😂 and Homie and Karen make it perfect. Thank you thank you.
Good to see that you weren't flooded out by the rain! Knowing how much water lays in the back yard after a normal rain, I was a little concerned that you may have gotten into trouble. BTW - ever thought of taping Homey's growl, and selling it to security? Bugger the "You are being watched" announcement, simply have Homey's growl come from dark corners would be enough.....
Great design and execution. This shows the best of creating shop-made tools - identifying the problems in commercial offerings and eliminating them once and for all. And it's just so damned satisfying when you use them! Glad to hear you guys were safe through all the flooding.
You three (2.5) are a joy to watch. As a time served toolroom grinder who started work at 15 years old in 1976 I am in total awe of not only the machining but your whole philosophy with regards to your business and clients. Keep doing what you 3 (2.5) do best it makes me smile with every video. And do not forget bananas are still important some of us still use both every cut.
Been wondering how you guys were doing, what with all the rain and flooding I've read about. Glad you guys are okay! Watching you fabricate something from raw steel was especially interesting! Seeing how Homey went after Duck was a riot! The outtakes were some of the funniest yet! ("multi-use hole"?!?) 🤣Priceless!
I’m a real fan of shop made tools and gadgets that make life easier in my machine and auto repair shop. Fantastic machining and filming by you and Karen and of course not forgetting the awesome Homeless. You guys are a ray of sunshine in a cold miserable UK for a humble mechanic on a Friday morning whilst eating breakfast 😀👍🏻
Being a lawyer I was 45 when I saw my first lathe life in action and the machinist was very nice and explained all to me ...two weeks later I bought my first lathe than mill...now five years and about 60-70K later I've two workshops in the second are the grinding machines to protect the others from the grinding dust the mill is converted to a four axis CNC the fifth I'm already building cause I want only steel and cast iron as material and its the best hobby in the world.🤪🤪🤪 You can imagine how I "eat" your videos when I see a pro like you on the work I get big respect how and what you do 👍😎thanx for entertaining us so well...in this episode the part you build is excellent well done 🤠
Доброго времени суток Смотрю ваши ролики с удовольствием У вас хорошее оборудование и инструменты Со знанием дела подходите к работе золотые у вас руки
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering A transition to mechanical art form. Very Cool. This was a video of the Mechanical Art Form. That is so Very Cool. Thank you for taking us along.
Half the fascination in watching these vids is seeing the way the swarf behaves; chippy, curly, springy, wooly, stringy, deep blue, super shiny, etc. Oh, and just love the straight up explanations of exactly what's going on. This is a channel with terrific editing, no stupid music, 1-second jump-cuts, or other crappy "production" gimmicks. Indeed, a totally bulĺshit-free zone. Great dog, too.
I'm not a machinist, just a mechanical engineer and gearhead. I love watching a skilled machinist & engineer design and make something. Even though you didn't verbally go through every step, you showed them. This video appears to be equivalent to a set of professional sessions in a university course on machining practices. Thank you.
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering better check with the safety officer 1st that many people walking threw the shop on a friday night might get a bit crowded ,, lol that would be a good video some day ..
The WNMG insert is super versatile. It's easy to see why so many folks like them. Also, that lathe is a beast. Didn't even flinch at that big drill! EDIT: "It beat's doing it with a file..." I'm putting that on a T-shirt.
Outstanding job machining this Kurtis. Its nice to see someone being "old School" and making it themselves instead of relying on going out and buying a chintzy supposedly highly engineered part from the manufacturer at a premium price. I've been doing this for 40 yrs, like I said nice to see the tradition continue.
Kurtis, you are once again doing a SUPER job of machining, designing, fabricating your own tooling. Karen, MOST EXCELLENT job of capturing everything he is doing and making it fun to watch!! Thank you both for yet another fantastic journey into CEE Australia!!!!!
So satisfying to see a thing well made. Congratulations to you and Karen. In a world getting crazier and darker by the minute, you guys put things in order and brighten my day. Well done. Please keep up the excellent work!
That's "The Problem" with Starrett No. 91 Tap wrench. You cannot just own one! I have the all four, plus the small No. 174. There is something about them. Pleasing to the eye and they feel just right in hand. I like the hinge design you use, next time I make a boring head I will most likely try that or something similar in design. Edit. the heads I currently use have two bolts that clamp then to the bar and can be a bit fiddly to attach. Plus the big sizes I use are heavy as well.
I once had a quite old Starrett hack saw frame. I don't remember it's parts number or vintage, but it was an absolute jewel of a tool. Unfortunately during a move it got lost, and I miss that tool every time I use my much inferior hacksaws.
It's just sickening how badly you want another after holding your first No.91. I have an A and got the B on my list for this year and won't stop until they're all mine. Their precision hand tools are honestly unlike anything else
@@crichtonbruce4329 i like the old sandvik hacksaws and after my apprentice lost mine i spent a chunk of change on a 30 year old saw, the mrs just didnt understand when she saw that id spent 5 x times what a new modern one would cost
Great tool with great fit and finish. I love seeing people use their ingenuity to make tools or jigs to meet their exact needs. Thanks for making the video! Hope you guys are safe and dry now.
the best I find of this channel is seeing someone fixing problems in real life in "real time" and manufacturing actual real job. I am learning 3D modeling, and for the practice I come to your videos and such..and no 3Dtutorials, they don´t tell you the real deal when the stuff is finaly made and all the issues to consider. this stuff is greatful, this is the real deal, so so yeah Kurt&Family -keep it up
As always, an amazing video! extremely informative and in insight into shop tool design and thought process. As a CNC field service tech myself, I enjoy seeing how others see a problem, find a solution, and manufacture the perfect product. Keep up the good work! As an idea for a future video, I'd like to see the rolls reversed. Have Karen try to run a machine and Kurtis be filming. Would be entertaining. Thanks for another enjoyable video!
Oh guys that was a sweet episode👍...precision machining..👍👍 I was on edge of my seat thinking it might have been a great segway to a sir mechanica tour..but allas..im now crying in my ginger beer hanging out to see it in action😥.. Keep safe in the big wet.. Cheers and beers..regards Patchy🍻🍕🍻🍕
Hey Patchy yeah we've still got the Line boring tour up our sleeve will hopefully do that one soon! We have jobs out every hole at the moment so bit short on time to make extra content
A welder fabricator machining a hole. Use a boring bar to get close and a reamer to get the perfect size. A tool maker machining a hole. A reamer will get you close but if you want to get it right on you need a good boring bar.👍 Good show.
Good to see that you didn't get hit too hard with all that flooding, my work lost power 8am Monday and only went back to work on Thursday but aside from that we didn't get to hammered by the rain Until it rained on Thursday and almost flooded my welding machine as the roof begun to leak a fair bit of water but managed to save it before it shat itself
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering unfortunately my favorite pie shop up the road that I spend my paycheck I mean enjoy the occasional pastry only got up and running today
Awesome work man, I love making new shop tools as it’s exactly how you want it. It’s good to see that you guys weren’t as effective from the flooding, It was crazy how fast that it happened.
When I was at school the lathe was worn out - loads of backlash everywhere. We were not allowed near the reamers - they were sacred. The teacher was the only one allowed to use them. The kids had to watch. Best wishes.
Hey guys just wanted to mention Hilman Rollers they’re good to move all the machinery around and won’t disintegrate like the ones used for that old cnc machine, you could check them out online but they might be available in OZ, I’m not affiliated with them, I just know how sturdy and well built they are, the ideal situation would be if you could find them at auction as well Continued Success Fabrizio
I watch all of your videos and thoroughly enjoy them . Your skill level is super high and your attitude super humble . Good luck and continued success in everything you do . Many thanks from France .
Hi Kurtis, I'm no engineer but I do enjoy your videos I just love to see a raw piece of steel transformed by cutting and milling producing a beautiful face of steel Keep up the great videos. RIP Shayne Keith Warne.
Great vid as always - thanks The drill bits etc. lined up ready for use reminded me of a surgeon and his tray of surgical implements - but after all you are a metal surgeon 😎 Very nice 40mm reamer - bet that was not cheap! All the best, Paul.
Hey mate I use a bench grinder and anything up to 13mm or 1/2" a drill doctor to sharpen the drill bits, sometimes I send the bigger one's out to a mate
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering I'd love to see how you do it in one of your videos, I did try doing it on my belt grinder but the results were questionable. Thanks for answering!
That is a cosmic tool, Kurtis. Not only your own design, but never a drawing in sight so, you not only designed it - yes, I know, it was the same as the small one - but the dimensions and detail just bubble out of your brain. And all the little details - like the dual tool hole so you can use square AND round tool holders - are priceless. Speaking of which, if you ordered one of those from the original manufacturers, what would they rush you for it? I am long retired - and I was never an engineer like that, I just fixed things and just occasionally made a tool to accomplish a particular job - but my appreciation of your engineering skills and Karen's videography skills, are almost limitless. Plus Homeless is a classic (and very handsome) Staffie! Glad you are all safe, well done on the vlog.
I have made a similar tool holder for line boring big holes. Our original holder was about 6 inch OD. The new one I made was over 8 inches. I didn't use a hinge(because I never thought about using one), but used a bolt on either side. I also just milled a square pocket for a tool, but had a set screw at the back end of the pocket for fine adjusting my cut depth. My Cardigan Welsh Corgi is really quick at destroying a squeaky toy. He always seems to remove the squeaker in the first minute or so, then proceeds to destroy the rest of it. 😁
It's been a long time since I watched someone use 'mechanic's blue' - my old mentor, in fact. Long since gone to meet his maker. Thanks and R.I.P. old friend.
Honestly if I were a machinist I'd give it a shot. But I'm a landscaper. If I had your insight on having the exact tool for a job I'd have a had ass weed eater I didn't have to carry. Lol. Love you guys. Stay safe
Rainy days and Mondays may get me down but Friday's always a treat . Glad to see you weren't awash and the sun came out to play . Commiserations to homeless for his blue chicken carnage and his subsequent discovery that there were no more on the shelf.
Good day to you Kurtis,great example of a job well thought out and executed.it seems to me though i'm not familiar with eastern australian weather, this rainy spell & flooding seems to be out of the ordinary?and lastly my condolences to you and all australians on the passing of a cricketing legend ShaneWarne.
Kurtis, I've been in radio for 23 years now. I have those brain AAAAAARRRGH moments every show sooner or later. When my finger is reaching for hte button to press, and my mind is trying to dig up who the artist is I'm playing and what the other damn thing iwas going to say about the song ... I relate exactly I am deeply impressed with the quality of work you produce!!
Greetings from Las Vegas, Nevada! After getting out of high school in 1960, I went to work in a machine shop as an apprentice. Worked there for about three years and then moved on. I thought "The Grass is Greener" in a different profession. I should have stayed in the machine shop. Anyway, I really enjoy your channel and you bring back lots of fine memories. Thank you! PS: Love the dog. Sorry, I can't remember his name.
Thanks for watching! We would love to know if this line boring tool holder is something you would have a go at making?
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@@importanttingwei7747 nah needs to be rock hard and solid 💪😏
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering 🤣😂 That what she said 🤣😂
You should send this or sell this video to the company that makes the line bore machine because to them this video is worth its wait in gold.
You could even make and market these tool holders.
Yep, could make it no prob.
But on a Friday afternoon, finished working for the man, it's sure nice to watch someone else do it with a beer in My hand!
Nice job though...
That'll do the job perfectly.
'Hi' to the Giggler and Hommy, of course.
In these awful times we’re living through Kurtis, you and Homey and Karen are such a wonderful break every Thursday night 🥰 I hope you know how much joy you bring to your fans, and how much you are all loved. Be well guys.
Thanks very much for the support, we agree there is enough shit going on in the world it's good to put out some entertainment for people to enjoy 👍
Very well said👏
Well said, Kurtis, Karen, and Homeless are highlights of my week. In a world going crazy, it's nice to see people who haven't gone "Bananas"...or have they? :) Love you guys.
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering Thank You .
Thursday night? it's friday afternoon here :)
"I'll just run up a new line boring tool of my own design" 🤣 bloody brilliant Kurtis. Its a real pleasure seeing your work and Karen's videos. 👍
haha glad you liked that made, can't beat a good shop made tool!
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering It is so satisfying to see someone make a tool that is the best they can design rather than design to some bean counter's price point and have it last exactly a week past the warranty period.
Karen’s editing work is amazing. Y’all are a great team.
Thank you 😊
It drives me crazy when somebody is standing over my shoulder, watching me work.
@@wilde.coyote6618 this is why we only video 1 job a week 🤣🤣🤣
Agree and if I am not mistaken this is the first time we have a side by side images from two cameras synced. Nice new technique for the channel. Nice work.
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering 🤣🤣
I've been a tool and die maker for almost 30 years and there is just something impressive about how you do things and the workmanship for the size material you do , I can understand why you are busy and can appreciate how guys like you make a go of it all on your own, well done I am a true fan and have learned alot following along .
thanks very much! Appreciate the support
I wonder if it would be worthwhile having the new tool nitrided? But I guess if the original was aluminum plain steel is sufficient.
Den stahl erwärmen und dann in waffenöl werfen zieht ein .
Billiger is zu arbeiten soll nicht rosten .
I was surprised he didn’t build his own 40 mm Reamer. This guy can build anything.
The reamer delivering an ID of exactly 40.00mm was so satisfying.
Glad you guys were okay with the floods, great vid as always! Thanks Kurtis and Karen
Measured with caliper 😀 .Yeah, sure....
I missed that whistle 😙
@@gregorteply9034 that were my thoughts exactly I'm thinking to myself why is he measuring all this with calipers they're so inaccurate. You can put enough pressure in your measurement to make it read whatever you want it to read. At least use telescoping gauges. If it needed to be accurate I wouldn't use a 40 millimeter hardenerd pin
@@ClownWhisper Exactly, and reamer should be used in free floating holder xD
If you can't measure accurately with calipers could be you're doing something wrong 😎👍
My wife and I try not to miss anything you put out, we are a couple of oldies but as a retired serviceman, mechanic & tinkerer inventor your segments are a breath of fresh air compared to so many others out there. We just love homeless & I love watching the funny interplay between yourself and giggles. Please don't stress over how you look and what you are saying because when it all boils down it's obvious you know what you are doing and there lies the difference between your stuff and that of so many others.
Keep up the great entertainment guys- just love watching.
Hey mate thanks very much for saying so we always appreciate support like this from our viewers and great to know the videos are enjoyed. Cheers!
My Dad always told me that the best tools he had were the ones he made. They never failed because he used the right materials to make them. If you have to buy them you never know if they will last. Great to see you guys are ok and the water did not get to your shop. Hope that your area will recover soon from the flooding....
If I was still a young man,I'd be asking you for an apprenticeship. It amazes me as to how much you know and how unbelievably good you are at it. So enjoy watching your videos.
I appreciate that! I've been doing this a long time and still love it.
Kurtis, how is it that your keep beating me to these jobs? Last week was the dipper arm, I just put one up on the boring mill the morning your video came out. Now it's line boring tooling, I have a video coming up in a few weeks with a new line boring bar I made. I guess great minds think alike. Love the videos, keep up the good work!
Such ingenuity. My wife always wondered how I could spend hours making a jig for woodworking. It’s because the next job I use it for will take minutes! Thanks for the videos and shots of the safety officer.
the safety officer does destructive testing of the toy unit ❤
I'd love to see a video on your cleanup routine after making all those wonderful metal chips and spirals. : )
hey mate will put that on the ideas list 👍
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering Time to make some casting moulds, and make CEE shaving epoxy coasters. Those should sell well, as you have enough chips to work it. That way you can have a sideline with Karen doing the odd batch of them.
I'd buy one
I really appreciate your explanations for 1. identifying the problem, 2. why the current tool can't be modified to 'fix' it, 3. what your solution is, and 4. how and why it's better. Being great at explaining stuff is a really valuable skill, mate. Respect👍
Great outtakes. If it's any consolation, we've not moved beyond grunts and pointing in my shop.
SHOULD HAVE SENT THE 3 OLD BLUE POINT TAP HANDLES MY BROTHER SENT ME LAST CHRISTMAS EARLIER AS i HAVE MEANT TO BUT KEPT FORGETTING TO DO SO. Each time i would remember they were at the shop. Every time I saw you take out that old beater I remember every time you would take that pc of old, tired dime store one I would just shake my head in wonder. Nice one that until someone uses it f for who knows it will be there for your shop for a very long time. Thanks bud.
Its always a pleasure to see Kurtis show what skills and years of knowledge can do.
7:20
Other machinists: Carefully step up the drillsize in small increments.
Curtis: I paid for the whole drill, I‘m gonna use the whole drill!
🤣👍
I love the huge steel curls that drill makes, fantastic.
This is the correct procedure, generally your pilot hole should be just a little bigger than the web of the drill you're using. Slowly stepping up the sizes means you are only using the cutting edges on the outer corners of the drill, which are the weakest part of the drill and also have the sharpest rake angle, leading to a danger of the drill grabbing and pulling in.
@@nerd1000ify
Nah, just plunge the bastard straight in..!!!
@@nerd1000ify Kurtis, got pilot hole, one stop full diameter.........
WOW! You really think outside the box. Bringing the saw to the customer. Keep being AWESOME!
Thanks mate will do 👍
Having a good sized fork truck at hand has a way of redefining 'portable'.
@@andreblanchard8315 and a yard crane th-cam.com/video/Ys5ca0DUXE0/w-d-xo.html
I Love work I could watch you all day as a matter of fact that's what I do, I'm retired and still learning Thanks to both of you.
Great video! The out takes and watching Homeless antics is are the icing on the cake!😆
The three of you are so much fun to watch and you constantly show every step of your jobs and explain them so people can understand what you do. Never remove the ending part of your videos they show the viewers the funny side of your lives. 🦆RIP to the duck and Homie don't play nice with ducks...lol
Tap handle def looks better than the Bunnings special, hope it works as good as it looks. You could have saved yourself a lot of lathe work by painting a ducks face on it and given it to Homey to chew a bit off 😁
The problem is getting it back before it's all gone!
I’ve been a machinist for longer than your life. I just love to “make chips” . You do a good job with the 1045.
Your lathe seems to be a copy of a Tuda lathe we had about 50 years ago. Keep up the good work and break them chips.
That is a mighty fine gift right there, Starrett tools are awesome.
I love shop made tools!
They end up being exactly what you wanted/ needed without having to settle for what's available and making do.
If you've got the time, nothing can compare to shop made.
Bespoke. Custom. Made to order.
In the end, you cannot beat a shop made tool! They're always the best possible! :)
Very true mate, always great to make your own tools
And you don't get a warranty operator you can't understand, after being on hold for 1/2 an hour! Good job!
@ 44:33 I was hoping you were not knee deep in water there Mate !!
I was wondering why your videos were so fascinating ... and it's a mix , it's your dog , your outakes , your subs sending you surprise gifts.... and your craftmanship is like watching magic bring performed ... Thank You !!!
My thoughts exactly!
Talk about artistic form. This tool looks so cool, I can't wait to see it perform.
I believe that you should be running a machinist school with all of your knowledge. Outstanding work. Thanks for sharing.
Nah, that's a waste of Kurtis' skills.
Those that can, do.
Those that can't, teach.
Love the rainy days... as long as I'm working indoors.
Brought my Grandfathers lathe home this week (1940 Craftsman).
Last use was in 1975 when I was in high school.
Kurtis, thank you for walking us through real engineering! What a joy. Along with your insights into materials, wear, strength of structures, fitness for purpose and all-round excellence in your work I am seriously enjoying watching a true engineer at work. Flimflam doodad indeedy😂 and Homie and Karen make it perfect. Thank you thank you.
I’m not a machinist - but your innovations are often amazing! Thanks for making really good videos.
Good to see that you weren't flooded out by the rain! Knowing how much water lays in the back yard after a normal rain, I was a little concerned that you may have gotten into trouble.
BTW - ever thought of taping Homey's growl, and selling it to security? Bugger the "You are being watched" announcement, simply have Homey's growl come from dark corners would be enough.....
Great idea‼️gloomy but I like it👍
Great design and execution. This shows the best of creating shop-made tools - identifying the problems in commercial offerings and eliminating them once and for all. And it's just so damned satisfying when you use them! Glad to hear you guys were safe through all the flooding.
You three (2.5) are a joy to watch. As a time served toolroom grinder who started work at 15 years old in 1976 I am in total awe of not only the machining but your whole philosophy with regards to your business and clients. Keep doing what you 3 (2.5) do best it makes me smile with every video.
And do not forget bananas are still important some of us still use both every cut.
Finally some real content that is full of info, not corny, and not stupid!! Real people and real work. Nothing space age.
Been wondering how you guys were doing, what with all the rain and flooding I've read about. Glad you guys are okay! Watching you fabricate something from raw steel was especially interesting! Seeing how Homey went after Duck was a riot! The outtakes were some of the funniest yet! ("multi-use hole"?!?) 🤣Priceless!
Incredible amount of skill shown here - greatly enjoyed !!! Thank you for the road trip of your countryside. John
Hey John welcome mate thanks for watching
I’m a real fan of shop made tools and gadgets that make life easier in my machine and auto repair shop. Fantastic machining and filming by you and Karen and of course not forgetting the awesome Homeless. You guys are a ray of sunshine in a cold miserable UK for a humble mechanic on a Friday morning whilst eating breakfast 😀👍🏻
Being a lawyer I was 45 when I saw my first lathe life in action and the machinist was very nice and explained all to me ...two weeks later I bought my first lathe than mill...now five years and about 60-70K later I've two workshops in the second are the grinding machines to protect the others from the grinding dust the mill is converted to a four axis CNC the fifth I'm already building cause I want only steel and cast iron as material and its the best hobby in the world.🤪🤪🤪
You can imagine how I "eat" your videos when I see a pro like you on the work I get big respect how and what you do 👍😎thanx for entertaining us so well...in this episode the part you build is excellent well done 🤠
Glad you guys are safe from the rain.
California has only got 672 gallons of rain this year. That’s 2543.797 liters
Доброго времени суток
Смотрю ваши ролики с удовольствием
У вас хорошее оборудование и инструменты
Со знанием дела подходите к работе золотые у вас руки
Hey mate thanks for watching. I make sure to invest in tools that I enjoy and work well, usually the best I can get without spending crazy money 😎👍
Давай уже русский язык вспоминай, Товарищ!)
Very nice.
It always amazes me how you take what looks like a rusty piece of scrap and make a shiny precision piece of work from it.
Thank you! Definitely satisfying to see the transition
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering A transition to mechanical art form. Very Cool. This was a video of the Mechanical Art Form. That is so Very Cool.
Thank you for taking us along.
Just like a sculptor - simply carve away the bits that are not the tool holder!
You are one of the best craftsmen I have ever seen! I always enjoy watching!
Greetings from Dresden (Germany). Have a lot of success and a lot of fun!
Half the fascination in watching these vids is seeing the way the swarf behaves; chippy, curly, springy, wooly, stringy, deep blue, super shiny, etc. Oh, and just love the straight up explanations of exactly what's going on. This is a channel with terrific editing, no stupid music, 1-second jump-cuts, or other crappy "production" gimmicks. Indeed, a totally bulĺshit-free zone. Great dog, too.
I hope everyone realizes what a skill set this takes to just produce and trust a tool from scratch! This man is a genius! Well done Curtis!!!!
thank you mate appreciate it
I'm not a machinist, just a mechanical engineer and gearhead. I love watching a skilled machinist & engineer design and make something. Even though you didn't verbally go through every step, you showed them. This video appears to be equivalent to a set of professional sessions in a university course on machining practices. Thank you.
Welcome mate glad you enjoyed it 👍
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering lmkim3f4k ii7
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that is a perfect example where standard production ends and customization starts. Super nice and clean job!
I'd love to see a tour of the whole place!!
that is on our to do list!
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering better check with the safety officer 1st that many people walking threw the shop on a friday night might get a bit crowded ,, lol that would be a good video some day ..
I think that shop-made tool is a beauty. Thanks for sharing.
Cheers mate! Glad you're enjoying our videos! Thanks so much for the support 😊👍
The WNMG insert is super versatile. It's easy to see why so many folks like them. Also, that lathe is a beast. Didn't even flinch at that big drill! EDIT: "It beat's doing it with a file..." I'm putting that on a T-shirt.
Outstanding job machining this Kurtis. Its nice to see someone being "old School" and making it themselves instead of relying on going out and buying a chintzy supposedly highly engineered part from the manufacturer at a premium price. I've been doing this for 40 yrs, like I said nice to see the tradition continue.
This was really fascinating. I never would have guessed how much effort went into a project like this. So cool.
Watching how you make things like this is just FLAT OUT MIND BENDING to me. Great work.
Kurtis, you are once again doing a SUPER job of machining, designing, fabricating your own tooling. Karen, MOST EXCELLENT job of capturing everything he is doing and making it fun to watch!! Thank you both for yet another fantastic journey into CEE Australia!!!!!
Love it when Homie growls around his toys - sounds freakin primordial!!
So satisfying to see a thing well made. Congratulations to you and Karen. In a world getting crazier and darker by the minute, you guys put things in order and brighten my day. Well done. Please keep up the excellent work!
That's "The Problem" with Starrett No. 91 Tap wrench. You cannot just own one! I have the all four, plus the small No. 174. There is something about them. Pleasing to the eye and they feel just right in hand. I like the hinge design you use, next time I make a boring head I will most likely try that or something similar in design. Edit. the heads I currently use have two bolts that clamp then to the bar and can be a bit fiddly to attach. Plus the big sizes I use are heavy as well.
I hope that James is sitting behind his computer saying "exactly as planned".
I once had a quite old Starrett hack saw frame. I don't remember it's parts number or vintage, but it was an absolute jewel of a tool. Unfortunately during a move it got lost, and I miss that tool every time I use my much inferior hacksaws.
It's just sickening how badly you want another after holding your first No.91. I have an A and got the B on my list for this year and won't stop until they're all mine. Their precision hand tools are honestly unlike anything else
@@crichtonbruce4329 i like the old sandvik hacksaws and after my apprentice lost mine i spent a chunk of change on a 30 year old saw, the mrs just didnt understand when she saw that id spent 5 x times what a new modern one would cost
@@everydaysceptic7803 As you know, modern has nothing to do with it. It's about quality, design, and craftsmanship.
Great tool with great fit and finish. I love seeing people use their ingenuity to make tools or jigs to meet their exact needs. Thanks for making the video! Hope you guys are safe and dry now.
the struggle is real talking to a camera , just bought a mill, thanks from wauseon for ideas, , , love the pup
the best I find of this channel is seeing someone fixing problems in real life in "real time" and manufacturing actual real job. I am learning 3D modeling, and for the practice I come to your videos and such..and no 3Dtutorials, they don´t tell you the real deal when the stuff is finaly made and all the issues to consider. this stuff is greatful,
this is the real deal, so so yeah Kurt&Family -keep it up
As always, an amazing video! extremely informative and in insight into shop tool design and thought process. As a CNC field service tech myself, I enjoy seeing how others see a problem, find a solution, and manufacture the perfect product. Keep up the good work!
As an idea for a future video, I'd like to see the rolls reversed. Have Karen try to run a machine and Kurtis be filming. Would be entertaining.
Thanks for another enjoyable video!
Great machining and excellent filming. You both make a magnificent team.
That tool holder sets the new meaning of "heavy duty".
Stay safe.
Oh guys that was a sweet episode👍...precision machining..👍👍
I was on edge of my seat thinking it might have been a great segway to a sir mechanica tour..but allas..im now crying in my ginger beer hanging out to see it in action😥..
Keep safe in the big wet..
Cheers and beers..regards Patchy🍻🍕🍻🍕
Hey Patchy yeah we've still got the Line boring tour up our sleeve will hopefully do that one soon! We have jobs out every hole at the moment so bit short on time to make extra content
Excellent job as usual! If you ever get tired of the rain feel free to send some to California, USA. We can use it.
A welder fabricator machining a hole. Use a boring bar to get close and a reamer to get the perfect size.
A tool maker machining a hole. A reamer will get you close but if you want to get it right on you need a good boring bar.👍 Good show.
Good to see that you didn't get hit too hard with all that flooding, my work lost power 8am Monday and only went back to work on Thursday but aside from that we didn't get to hammered by the rain
Until it rained on Thursday and almost flooded my welding machine as the roof begun to leak a fair bit of water but managed to save it before it shat itself
this week has been crazy to say the least! glad you didn't get any damage mate 😎👍
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering unfortunately my favorite pie shop up the road that I spend my paycheck I mean enjoy the occasional pastry only got up and running today
Awesome work man, I love making new shop tools as it’s exactly how you want it. It’s good to see that you guys weren’t as effective from the flooding, It was crazy how fast that it happened.
When I was at school the lathe was worn out - loads of backlash everywhere. We were not allowed near the reamers - they were sacred. The teacher was the only one allowed to use them. The kids had to watch. Best wishes.
Don't know why. Just love watching Kurtis's favorite 37mm drill.
20:20 Days Since last Incident was one of the most precious things I've ever seen here on you-tube 🙂
notification squad, Have a nice weekend guys!🔥🔥🔥
Cheers mate we've finally got some sunshine and dry ground so should be a good weekend
Thanks, I hope to get my eyesight back this weekend, I've been a one eyed wanderer for two months now.👨🏼🦯
@@tomahoks Awsome, let us know how it went, good luck🤞
@@tomahoks all the best mate here's hoping for better eyesight! 😎👍
Hey guys just wanted to mention Hilman Rollers they’re good to move all the machinery around and won’t disintegrate like the ones used for that old cnc machine, you could check them out online but they might be available in OZ, I’m not affiliated with them, I just know how sturdy and well built they are, the ideal situation would be if you could find them at auction as well
Continued Success
Fabrizio
Will check them out thanks mate
I watch all of your videos and thoroughly enjoy them . Your skill level is super high and your attitude super humble . Good luck and continued success in everything you do . Many thanks from France .
Thanks for the support
Yay! I get my Friday fix of CEE!!!! thank you guys, for another awesome video 🤘🏼🍻
Good stuff mate enjoy the weekend ahead
Your pup needs a cutting edge engineering shirt! What a mascot! 👍😀
Hi Kurtis, I'm no engineer but I do enjoy your videos I just love to see a raw piece of steel transformed by cutting and milling producing a beautiful face of steel Keep up the great videos. RIP Shayne Keith Warne.
Great vid as always - thanks
The drill bits etc. lined up ready for use reminded me of a surgeon and his tray of surgical implements - but after all you are a metal surgeon 😎
Very nice 40mm reamer - bet that was not cheap!
All the best,
Paul.
hey mate they were all lined up because I spent an hour finding them 😂 only need a few hundred thousand in tools & equipment to make it! 😅
Who needs Netflix when you got Kurtis, Karen and Homeless?
Homemade Fi**en flim flam do dads!😅😅😅😅
Second that
Hey Kurtis, are you using any tools to sharpen your drill bits? Or do you buy new ones after old ones get dull?
Hey mate I use a bench grinder and anything up to 13mm or 1/2" a drill doctor to sharpen the drill bits, sometimes I send the bigger one's out to a mate
one video he said he sends his bits out to get sharpened .. don't remember witch video
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering I'd love to see how you do it in one of your videos, I did try doing it on my belt grinder but the results were questionable. Thanks for answering!
@@TheDercik - you can't sharpen a drill bit accurately on a belt grinder without a very special setup.
I'm stupid I couldn't even know how to use a wobbler. Man you are one very smart human. Maybe. You are the man of steel. Superman.
good to see you made it through all the flooding without any major lose
What about the giggler doing the explaining next time. But she has to wear your clothes and has to say it exactly like you do!
What can't you make? I am not a machinist but I find it fascinating all the stuff you make and fix.
That is a cosmic tool, Kurtis. Not only your own design, but never a drawing in sight so, you not only designed it - yes, I know, it was the same as the small one - but the dimensions and detail just bubble out of your brain. And all the little details - like the dual tool hole so you can use square AND round tool holders - are priceless. Speaking of which, if you ordered one of those from the original manufacturers, what would they rush you for it?
I am long retired - and I was never an engineer like that, I just fixed things and just occasionally made a tool to accomplish a particular job - but my appreciation of your engineering skills and Karen's videography skills, are almost limitless. Plus Homeless is a classic (and very handsome) Staffie! Glad you are all safe, well done on the vlog.
Glad you all are safe. I like the Chuck holder at the back of the lathe 🤙🏼
That was awesome 👌.
Manufactures don't all ways make the right tools for our needs so time to get creative.
Kind regards from London Ingland 🇬🇧
I have made a similar tool holder for line boring big holes. Our original holder was about 6 inch OD. The new one I made was over 8 inches. I didn't use a hinge(because I never thought about using one), but used a bolt on either side. I also just milled a square pocket for a tool, but had a set screw at the back end of the pocket for fine adjusting my cut depth.
My Cardigan Welsh Corgi is really quick at destroying a squeaky toy. He always seems to remove the squeaker in the first minute or so, then proceeds to destroy the rest of it. 😁
So so sad to see people losing their homes Curtis.
My heart goes out to everyone in the areas affected.
Love the vid as always ✌️
It's been a long time since I watched someone use 'mechanic's blue' - my old mentor, in fact. Long since gone to meet his maker. Thanks and R.I.P. old friend.
that's great he was both a friend and mentor to you
Honestly if I were a machinist I'd give it a shot. But I'm a landscaper. If I had your insight on having the exact tool for a job I'd have a had ass weed eater I didn't have to carry. Lol. Love you guys. Stay safe
Rainy days and Mondays may get me down but Friday's always a treat . Glad to see you weren't awash and the sun came out to play .
Commiserations to homeless for his blue chicken carnage and his subsequent discovery that there were no more on the shelf.
Glad to hear you survived the floods in good condition. Another great video! Your Friday morning (to me) videos are always a pleasure to watch.
Making several of these holders to offer as a CEE product looks like an ideal project for your CNC.
Well that’s one way to get 45 minutes of content. And really I found it pretty entertaining. Because what’s better than shop made tools.
If you ever need one of these clamping tools, I am sure Kurtis would love to make you one!
Good day to you Kurtis,great example of a job well thought out and executed.it seems to me though i'm not familiar with eastern australian weather, this rainy spell & flooding seems to be out of the ordinary?and lastly my condolences to you and all australians on the passing of a cricketing legend ShaneWarne.
Kurtis, I've been in radio for 23 years now. I have those brain AAAAAARRRGH moments every show sooner or later. When my finger is reaching for hte button to press, and my mind is trying to dig up who the artist is I'm playing and what the other damn thing iwas going to say about the song ... I relate exactly I am deeply impressed with the quality of work you produce!!
I liked that you finished turning off the scale on the O.D. rather than facing off, starting with the scale, on each pass.
Greetings from Las Vegas, Nevada! After getting out of high school in 1960, I went to work in a machine shop as an apprentice. Worked there for about three years and then moved on. I thought "The Grass is Greener" in a different profession. I should have stayed in the machine shop. Anyway, I really enjoy your channel and you bring back lots of fine memories. Thank you! PS: Love the dog. Sorry, I can't remember his name.
I have been with Guhring for nearly 34 years. It is great seeing you use our products! Peace
nice one mate!
@@CuttingEdgeEngineering Cheers!