Self made "ultra low profile 8 jaw adjustable chuck vice" ? Thing looks slick as heck! Also the editing is good and the narration too. Have my sub. You will be going places my man. Appreciate you put that out.
First of all, I appreciate the production values, good photography, audio, etc. That’s seems to be the price of entry into TH-cam these days. But what really impressed me is that this complex workpiece is apparently made (and works) having been machined in essentially open setup! My chance of machining 8 of anything identical in this manner is near zero. I don’t know how many “takes” were required or how much scrap was involved but it’s an absolute triumph in many regards. Practical questions remaining for me are 1) how you keep swarf out of the scroll and 2) life expectancy of all the cam lock features and 3) repeatability? Nicely done. Happy to be subscribed.
Really cool concept! My favorite thing is to come up with a design and bring it to life as you have. Thanks for bringing us a long, it was a joy to watch!
You have an amazing imagination and even more amazing talent to bring something in your head into being, AND YES YOU DO DESERVE A COUPLE OF AWARDS, very easily can see this one of a kind vise being used in a million and one ways, maybe more, extremely well done 👏 👏👏👏👏👏👏
That really is a work of art, i cant unsee the 🇬🇧 😂. When ever i say, ohh i have just enough steel, you can guarantee i will mess something up, start again and ultimately run out of steel 😂😂
Are you now able to mass produce the parts? I believe that you could sell them if you could speed up the process enough for you to make money. This is very impressive engineering.
What an impressive piece of metal metal... Multiple pieces of metal actually Really I see not many uses for this other than even clamping of not round but still round parts which can be a lot of different shapes really (gears, cams, eccentrics... ovals...) I'd call it a universal low profile mill chuck tbh a fixture plate would serve the same purpose but those can replace everything so they don't count Love the video
nicely done. I would probably add a 3D printed chip shield to it to prevent oil, coolant and chips to get too deep into the mechanism. bonus points for the sketchy use of the angle grinder...
Going to have to be pretty diligent about cleaning chips out of the scroll; something that work hardens like stainless could get in there and chew up the gear mesh if left unattended. But the thing is super cool. Might wanna look into getting a bench grinder and a portable bandsaw
lol I get how it is. No hate here just tips I try to keep in mind that that ruined my tolerances in the past, never hurts to try to be constructive :) I will say I love the build and set up, great vid@@allangles4020
My machinist brain hurts just looking at all those cavities that chips and other sorts of gunk will get into that you have to clean after every use! xD Looks cool though, and considering if it would be useful with something similar where i work.
Well I've subscribed. Some interesting work on this channel. Couple of comments, I'd love to see how you CNC'd the Warco mill and you seem to be using old engine oil as a cutting lubricant. The old engine oil, apart from being able to promote severe contact dermatitis is also carcinogenic. Probably better to not use it.
Love it. But quick question, aren't the chips gonna get the scroll stuck. I did learn from Mr Pete to use Graphite powder for lathe chucks instead of oil or grease, it did work great, hardly ever getting the jaws stuck from chips any more. But as yours are horizontal and the chips get piled on top...
So, in use, for an odd shaped part, you loosen the jaw parts, slide all of the jaws into place, tighten them, then crank on the chuck key to bring all of the jaws into pretty equal pressure... Nontrivial design
I have to say, this is one of the best vise idea I’ve ever seen. Just awesome.
One of the coolest metalworking videos on TH-cam, you deserve way more views!
Self made "ultra low profile 8 jaw adjustable chuck vice" ?
Thing looks slick as heck!
Also the editing is good and the narration too. Have my sub.
You will be going places my man. Appreciate you put that out.
OK now thats awesome!
A brilliant design, and expertly executed.
Amazing build, there were a few questionable deburring techniques in there, but what a finished product. 👏
Other then I’d like to put it on my precision grinder but otherwise THAT IS AWESOME I WOULD BUY ONE … awesome job
The deburring with the angle grinder was the sketches thing I've seen in a minute XD
Just wow! Nice bit of engineering, and machining. Something new is always nice to see!
I think that’s the best thing I have ever seen made
On TH-cam.
Thanks for sharing. This has inspired me to work on my project.
Undoubtedly, one of the most amazing builds I have ever come across. Absolutely incredible design and build. Off the scale mate!
The spider vice. Awesome
Lot of work to make something amazing. I hope you never crash an end mill into any of it. I enjoyed the video.
Fantastic!
First of all, I appreciate the production values, good photography, audio, etc. That’s seems to be the price of entry into TH-cam these days. But what really impressed me is that this complex workpiece is apparently made (and works) having been machined in essentially open setup! My chance of machining 8 of anything identical in this manner is near zero. I don’t know how many “takes” were required or how much scrap was involved but it’s an absolute triumph in many regards. Practical questions remaining for me are 1) how you keep swarf out of the scroll and 2) life expectancy of all the cam lock features and 3) repeatability? Nicely done. Happy to be subscribed.
It’s Christmas Day 2023. I’m glad I watched. Thank you for sharing.
Add my voice to the chorus of praises! I'd love some CAD drawings for this. What an awesome idea!
this is awesome! your narration is spot on!
very entertaining video
That was one hell of a lot of work, Very impressive outcome 😊😊
Nice job, mammoth effort machining all those tiny parts with dovetails and countersinks and the scroll
Your fabrication skills are off the chart.
Wow..I'm impressed! Not bad for a Puerto Rican! You just earned yourself a new subscriber. Good job!
OOOOOH. MYYY that is a lot of machining and a lot of parts. And one beautiful vice. I would love to have one. Awesome work. Thanks
I can tell you put a lot of thought into this vice. Great job on the both the vice and the video, you earned a subscription for sure!
Just awesome!
Absolutely brilliant build.
Beautiful metal artistry, and functional to boot. 👌👏
That is a really cool vice.
wow, this thing is amazing.
Beautiful piece... Interesting way to mount the chuck, and the way to interchange it between machines
Marvelous piece of mechanical engineering.
You could definitely sell the idea. I am humbled by your brilliance truly.
Really cool concept!
My favorite thing is to come up with a design and bring it to life as you have. Thanks for bringing us a long, it was a joy to watch!
The best video of my day! Thanks!
Good job! Cool project!
Very slick, well done
WOW- beautiful machine work on all those many pieces. Your biggest challenge will be to find a project that requires this tool.
Lots of work . Lots of moving parts . Lots of places for the metal chips ti hide . Congrrats , You have manage to make a very complicated HORSE SHOE .
I genuinely agree 🤣 however chips don't seem jam-up the system the way you think they whould....... much in the same way a 3 or 4 jaw chuck's don't
Machinist art!! Excellent job
May be a little overkill 😂 Like it.
Beautiful vice!👍
An ambitious project and well executed. Very innovative as well. Awesome. Regards
What a brilliant piece of machining! Well done!!
Best idea for a vice u are a MAD GENIUS i mean that in best ways…..
Got my sub
Great video. Suggestion, turn the volume down on the machining noise, especially while you are talking. It’s hard to understand.
Yep, totally awesome!
Credit to you for your tenacity!
Heck of a lot of thought and work went into that plus a great deal of confidence. Quite amazing and inspriring. Well done and thank you.
Life only gets interesting thanks to vices. Wait...
Fantastic work and a great idea. Weĺl done!
Robin renzetti would by proud of you.
I am too. So nice the result of months of work.
Have a great new year bud
Very cool…thanks
A fantastic job of extreme precision and a lot of patience, congratulations, you're really good
Brilliant!
Hey, this video was great, but could you dial the machine noise back a little bit when you're doing the voice over?
thats a cracking vice IMHO. Ive always wondered how you make the spiral teeth wind up
Thanks for sharing
amazing!
Прекрасная работа! Хорошая задумка!
You have an amazing imagination and even more amazing talent to bring something in your head into being, AND YES YOU DO DESERVE A COUPLE OF AWARDS, very easily can see this one of a kind vise being used in a million and one ways, maybe more, extremely well done 👏 👏👏👏👏👏👏
That really is a work of art, i cant unsee the 🇬🇧 😂. When ever i say, ohh i have just enough steel, you can guarantee i will mess something up, start again and ultimately run out of steel 😂😂
Amazing work 🤩 great video 👌
Pane vy jste hodinář, 👍klobouk dolů. 👍
That is some dedication
Are you now able to mass produce the parts? I believe that you could sell them if you could speed up the process enough for you to make money. This is very impressive engineering.
Awesome, only issue I see is swarf getting into the scroll - maybe some sort of cover, not sure what...
That is a cool Fixture,
genius
What an impressive piece of metal metal... Multiple pieces of metal actually
Really I see not many uses for this other than even clamping of not round but still round parts which can be a lot of different shapes really (gears, cams, eccentrics... ovals...)
I'd call it a universal low profile mill chuck
tbh a fixture plate would serve the same purpose but those can replace everything so they don't count
Love the video
This guy is a competitor to inheritance machining
I'll take 2! I need them by Friday.
nicely done. I would probably add a 3D printed chip shield to it to prevent oil, coolant and chips to get too deep into the mechanism. bonus points for the sketchy use of the angle grinder...
Nice vice/chuck!
Nice
I winced when you started playing with that angle grinder... :(
Going to have to be pretty diligent about cleaning chips out of the scroll; something that work hardens like stainless could get in there and chew up the gear mesh if left unattended. But the thing is super cool. Might wanna look into getting a bench grinder and a portable bandsaw
Nice!
perfect ❤ i love it ❤ tanky u❤❤❤❤❤
that's amazing
Awesome 👍
There are square 4 jaw chucks almost like this but an 8 jaw chuck I've never seen
hello great work full of tips too bad the assembly is done with lots of shavings everywhere
Nice job
Fun to watch yet i am wondering which part would actually need something like that😂
countersunk skrewheads are not bad, but NOT accurate. Would always recommend to ream holes, and position critical elements with pins.
If this vice were a car, it would be a Ferrari
fantastic work something I'd use in work most days
Holy shit dude! That some mean machine type 'o thing
Great channel.
I like ca lem too but he doesn't post enough.
Spetacular
youll get more precise holes if you stop you reamer when you get to final depth and pull it out when its stationary
also please move in the direction you indicate my ocd is going insane what about the slop in the machine
the jaw portion is super informative taking away some techniques for my next project. at about 23min too rly cool way to whip those out
I will apsloutly bare that in mind ...
And yes I should really but I tend to use a dial test indicator like a plunger indicator on flat surfaces although I shouldn't 😅....
lol I get how it is. No hate here just tips I try to keep in mind that that ruined my tolerances in the past, never hurts to try to be constructive :) I will say I love the build and set up, great vid@@allangles4020
I miss having projects I could measure with calipers lol.
Nice design, nice build!
I love the idea and the build. But can I suggest that you lower the volume on the tool noises during your narration?
My machinist brain hurts just looking at all those cavities that chips and other sorts of gunk will get into that you have to clean after every use! xD
Looks cool though, and considering if it would be useful with something similar where i work.
Well I've subscribed. Some interesting work on this channel.
Couple of comments, I'd love to see how you CNC'd the Warco mill and you seem to be using old engine oil as a cutting lubricant. The old engine oil, apart from being able to promote severe contact dermatitis is also carcinogenic. Probably better to not use it.
Love it. But quick question, aren't the chips gonna get the scroll stuck. I did learn from Mr Pete to use Graphite powder for lathe chucks instead of oil or grease, it did work great, hardly ever getting the jaws stuck from chips any more. But as yours are horizontal and the chips get piled on top...
So, in use, for an odd shaped part, you loosen the jaw parts, slide all of the jaws into place, tighten them, then crank on the chuck key to bring all of the jaws into pretty equal pressure...
Nontrivial design
Building time was? 8-10 days? Very nice work very nice indeed love it!
This is an amazing build! Any chance you'd consider releasing plans for it?
I wondered how many *weeks of design work*?
It's a lot of moving parts in one place!