My degree is in Chemistry. I worked in an R&D lab for a while, but enjoyed teaching chemistry and physics more. Although my knowledge of how the world works is key to who I am, I wonder if being a machinist wouldn’t have given me more satisfaction.
Get a bench top machine and go crazy any time you feel the need! They come in a wide range of prices. If you know a machinist ask questions and I’m sure you’ll get some help. Used machines are cheaper but if you have that friend it shouldn’t be a problem. Good luck!
@@nijelbbarkus9753 That’s the first time anybody has told me a chemistry joke. The last good one I read was on a toilet stall wall in the chem dept when I was in grad school. Appearing This Friday at The Drunken Sailor! For One Night Only. Don’t miss… Methyl Ethyl and the Gospel Ketones
Insane, I was looking for a long time to understand the shape made. I think i see little rounded pyramids in the corners. Very cool piece to show off your skills
Yes, it isn't that easy to get :) Rounded pyramids is a good way to describe the corners. They just occur when turning every side round to a specific measurement.
the corners are essentially tetrahedrons ... 4 sided ... if you call the bottom the face inside the cube ... it is a neat way to make a cube from round stock ... I wonder what ne would have to do to make say an 8 sided one ... be a nifty idea for making your own dice sets
I love you set up! I am a woodturner but always loved metal lathes. My metal experience is in silver and goldsmithing but by trade I am a woodworker/remodeler. One day I was installing 2 custom glass door slabs that where doweled together to make one big sliding glass pocket door. I had to go MacGyver on it because the hard ware wouldn't work right. Long story short I needed a custom pin with a notch in the middle and my goldsmith teacher was like ok, and grabbed a piece if brass pipe the right diameter and melted bronze to fill it, then he threw it on the lathe and made it for me right there. this was 24 years ago and I was just 22, so it blew my mind. I was fascinated ever since. For some reason I am a natural born woodturner with zero failures. serious just jinxed myself but it is truly unbelievable. I would turn cremation urns out of a single piece of wood so the grain would continue into the lid. seamless. I would turn them down to 3/16ths thick hollow turn on dry wood end grain. It took a long time. I miss it. Ill by the tools again someday when I'm done with more important shit.
Thanks for your comment! I didn't thaught about the backstop at all. I actually made one recently but just hadn't in mind that this could help here :D Thanks for your hint ;)
Once the first 2 sides are turned there cube can slide into the chuck a bit and not touch the chuck face.Check at 10min 15 secs. So the Lathe Spindle Backstop could be used from the start to the end as it would still make contact with the part giving you the same reference for all six sides.
@@WeCanDoThatBetter As a test and learning exercise it is great but I made quite a few on my little CNC milling machine which can make them quite easily. Still I got to enjoy the process and then learn a few things by converting it to a milling machine. Also put them back through and milled a hole right through them.
You also have to give thanks to Google. They give us our search engine, our videos, our email, our browser, our news, our maps, our operating systems, and it's all 100% free. And now that they control the Internet they even censor, demonetize, and cancel anyone who goes against current political and social trends. We are so lucky to have their experts controlling what information we can and can not see. We love you Google. Thank you for keeping us safe.
Very nice job. I had to go to the garage and make one for myself. It turned out okay considering I had to just eyeball some of the precision measurements Thanks for the idea.
Really nice machining mate!! Pro tip... wash aluminium parts in liquid hand soap and water while you wash your hands after the scotch bright and it comes up a real treat 😉
If you make a drawing of this piece, I am sure more than 50% of the engineers, machinists will be confused that what this part is? Absolutely great work. I wll surely add this as a task for my upcoming students of engineering.
Never thought I'd see this type of thing made on a manual lathe. Laser cut perhaps yes, possibly on a CNC machine. Kinda makes me want to get my hands on a small bench top lathe like this and take a whack at making something like that myself. And perhaps work up a few other pieces.
Amazing work. Interesting what can be accomplished if you know how. Now your challenge is to duplicate that on a three jaw chuck... That is all I have and would like to see if you can do that on a three jaw... Thumbs Up!
This was so cool I went out and made a couple myself. My wife stole one for a paper weight at work. Everyone asks me what it is. I tell them idk but I made it lol.
I really admire you!!!Can you make “reversing tapping heart” for thread ? Same brand “Tapmatic” , we can use it for proxxon mini milling, I also have a similar one!
Sehr sehr cooler Zeitvertreib, jeder geht mit dem Sommerloch anders um :-) BTW: Ich weiss, der Servomotor kann recht Fix anhalten, aber ist das auf Dauer gut für Riemen, Riemenscheibe, Lager & Co?
Genau, ne kleine Fingerübung :) Ja, mit dem Motor hast du recht. Bin mir da auch nicht sicher, ob das so gut ist. Ich hab es so eingestellt, damit der Motor auch über den Not-Aus schnell stoppt. Leider lässt sich die Bremse nicht wirklich feinfühlig einstellen an dem Controller...
@@WeCanDoThatBetter evtl. lässt sich der Weg bzw. Abstand des Magneten zum Hallsensor etwas großzügiger gestalten, damit der Motor beim Auschalten erst Drehzahl reduziert bevor er anhält. Ich hatte mit dem Servo-Motor auch experimentiert, erst an meiner Drehe (Motor zu Klein, Drehe zu groß) Jetzt sitzt er in meiner kleinen Metabo-Bandsäge aus den 70ern ...
Hi and thanks for your comment! There are some teeth missing in one spot on the bandsaw blade. That's why you here the sound. The rest of the blade is still ok, so I just kept on running :)
Is there anyway that you could make a step by step talking tutorial with this video. This is really cool and I would like to learn it but I'm missing something somewhere. Thanks.
Thanks for your comment! When you start with a round bar, I think you need an independent four jaw chuck to make it square. When you already have a square stock, it might be possible to clamp it in special square collets.
that thing is so confusing to just look at even, the reflective surfaces make it really hard to tell what the geometry of those corners is lmao, very impressive
Because of the danger of being sucked into the lathe chuck? Since I have it there, not a single time it got grabbed by the chuck. But yes, doesn't say that this couldn't happen. It is there to protect the bedways from chips and does a good job. I'm not the only one with such a cover. But being cautious using a lathe is always a good thing.
Thanks for your comment! Aluminium isn't that hard to machine even on a small lathe like mine. The surface quality depends on the type of aluminium and the right cutting tools. I used special high strength aluminiums AW7075 which gives nice shiny surfaces und used sharp polished inserts for cutting.
For the rough passes in the beginning centering of the part isn't critical. If you watched the video you may have noticed that I carefully aligned the part with an dial test indicator for perfect runout and perpendicularity. This is important for the finishing cuts and an accurate end product.
if you turned it an got rid of the sort of "cross" in the middle, you could have a shape similar to a Steinmetz solid, but with 3 intersections instead of 2.
Hi. Wie immer, du hast das wirklich schön gemacht.👍👍👍 Sag Mal, hast sonst noch mit Maschinen zu tun, oder nur Zuhause Hobby mäßig? Wie ich zum Beispiel. Früher ja, mit Maschinen gearbeitet, jetzt leider nur Hobby mäßig. Leider, weil ich manchmal Bock habe auf richtig große Maschinen. Wünsche dir alles gute und bleib gesund.
I really like how it looks like it shouldn't be made on a lathe but the technique is actually quite simple. Love it.
Yes, absolutely fascinating!
Simple if you know what you are doing.
It probably took as much time setting it up as running the lathe.
@@markdaniel8740 sure, a non-machinist like me couldn't do it. I meant simple as in quite basic techniques used in smart ways.
I guarantee its more setup than runtime. Especially with it being aluminum that cuts like butter, SFM is high AF @@markdaniel8740
My degree is in Chemistry. I worked in an R&D lab for a while, but enjoyed teaching chemistry and physics more. Although my knowledge of how the world works is key to who I am, I wonder if being a machinist wouldn’t have given me more satisfaction.
Lol, I just quit my cnc machining job to pursue a degree in chemistry. Guess we are R and S enantiomers
Get a bench top machine and go crazy any time you feel the need! They come in a wide range of prices. If you know a machinist ask questions and I’m sure you’ll get some help. Used machines are cheaper but if you have that friend it shouldn’t be a problem. Good luck!
When You are a machinist You will Spend 99.9% of your time making stuff for customers and that IS Not Always fun in fact ITS called Work ;)-
@@nijelbbarkus9753
That’s the first time anybody has told me a chemistry joke. The last good one I read was on a toilet stall wall in the chem dept when I was in grad school.
Appearing This Friday at The Drunken Sailor!
For One Night Only. Don’t miss…
Methyl Ethyl and the Gospel Ketones
Yes, as a machinist, you would!!!
This is just incredible. Each time I stopped to say “Wow that’s cool” it just got cooler. Hats off to you
Thank you so much! I really do appreciate that!
If someone gave me this thing and asked me if you could make it on a manual machine. I probably would have said no.
That were my thoughts too, when I saw this thing the first time :)
Well, you could make it on a manual knee mill…
did you watch the entire video?@@Advanced_pack
A CNC machine wouldn't do you much good either, no idea how you would do it on there... 😄
@@TheFlyBullet magic
The precision is incredible
Insane, I was looking for a long time to understand the shape made. I think i see little rounded pyramids in the corners. Very cool piece to show off your skills
Yes, it isn't that easy to get :) Rounded pyramids is a good way to describe the corners. They just occur when turning every side round to a specific measurement.
the corners are essentially tetrahedrons ... 4 sided ... if you call the bottom the face inside the cube ... it is a neat way to make a cube from round stock ... I wonder what ne would have to do to make say an 8 sided one ... be a nifty idea for making your own dice sets
Brilliant example of manual turning on a centre lathe using independent soft jaws x 4. Nice work!
Even your rough passes look so polished! And the final form is something hard to comprehend in 3D-space. 2D makes it easier. :D
Thank you very much for your comment! I really do appreciate that!
i've been having this shower thought just yesterday
i knew you can turn a cube in a lathe! i knew tis possible!
I love you set up! I am a woodturner but always loved metal lathes. My metal experience is in silver and goldsmithing but by trade I am a woodworker/remodeler. One day I was installing 2 custom glass door slabs that where doweled together to make one big sliding glass pocket door. I had to go MacGyver on it because the hard ware wouldn't work right. Long story short I needed a custom pin with a notch in the middle and my goldsmith teacher was like ok, and grabbed a piece if brass pipe the right diameter and melted bronze to fill it, then he threw it on the lathe and made it for me right there. this was 24 years ago and I was just 22, so it blew my mind. I was fascinated ever since. For some reason I am a natural born woodturner with zero failures. serious just jinxed myself but it is truly unbelievable. I would turn cremation urns out of a single piece of wood so the grain would continue into the lid. seamless. I would turn them down to 3/16ths thick hollow turn on dry wood end grain. It took a long time. I miss it. Ill by the tools again someday when I'm done with more important shit.
Now that's a portfolio piece if ever I saw one!
Nice job.A backstop in the lathes spindle would also help for this sort of turning.
Thanks for your comment! I didn't thaught about the backstop at all. I actually made one recently but just hadn't in mind that this could help here :D Thanks for your hint ;)
I must be missing something. How would that help? He’s already using the chuck as a backstop.
Once the first 2 sides are turned there cube can slide into the chuck a bit and not touch the chuck face.Check at 10min 15 secs.
So the Lathe Spindle Backstop could be used from the start to the end as it would still make contact with the part giving you the same reference for all six sides.
@@localele1 Yes, I totally forgot about using the stop. It would we helpful and I keep it in mind for the next time :)
@@WeCanDoThatBetter As a test and learning exercise it is great but I made quite a few on my little CNC milling machine which can make them quite easily.
Still I got to enjoy the process and then learn a few things by converting it to a milling machine.
Also put them back through and milled a hole right through them.
This is both madness and brilliant. I love it.
Thank you :)
Gives a literal meaning to the phrase "squaring the circle" 😃
Haha :D Everything's possible ;)
Thank you for the adventure and the exemplary film-making.
Thank you very much for your kind comment! I really do appreciate that!
You also have to give thanks to Google. They give us our search engine, our videos, our email, our browser, our news, our maps, our operating systems, and it's all 100% free. And now that they control the Internet they even censor, demonetize, and cancel anyone who goes against current political and social trends. We are so lucky to have their experts controlling what information we can and can not see. We love you Google. Thank you for keeping us safe.
Outstanding! Very well done! I like how simple it actually ended up being.
Thank you very much!
Very nice job.
I had to go to the garage and make one for myself.
It turned out okay considering I had to just eyeball some of the precision measurements
Thanks for the idea.
Mesmerizing! I like the pattern on the corners!
It's still fascinating for me too! Thanks for your comment :)
Really nice machining mate!! Pro tip... wash aluminium parts in liquid hand soap and water while you wash your hands after the scotch bright and it comes up a real treat 😉
Thank you very much for your kind comment and the tip for washing the aluminium part. I will definitely keep that in mind!
I’m going to try making that in the morning. Thanks for the inspiration! That’s so cool.
Thanks and good luck!
If you make a drawing of this piece, I am sure more than 50% of the engineers, machinists will be confused that what this part is?
Absolutely great work. I wll surely add this as a task for my upcoming students of engineering.
Nicely done. Enjoyable viewing, thank you.
Thanks for your kind comment!
Never thought I'd see this type of thing made on a manual lathe. Laser cut perhaps yes, possibly on a CNC machine. Kinda makes me want to get my hands on a small bench top lathe like this and take a whack at making something like that myself. And perhaps work up a few other pieces.
Simply beautiful! 🥳
Thank you so much! :)
this is very interesting.....Thank You from the US..Paul
Thanks my friend!
that'd be a vicious slug for Taofledermaus
Absolutely brilliant. I'll be giving it a go
looks great, thank u for sharing! 👍
Thank you very much for your comment!
Amazingly Beautiful ! , You have done that Perfect
Thank you very much! I really do appreciate that!
Fantastic !
Hugs from Brazil.
Thank you very much! I really do appreciate that!
Spectacular project my friend 👍
Thank you very much!
Very nice! I never have seen such a thing before.
machining asmr is best asmr
Thank you very much for your comment! Happy to hear, you like the content.
I saw it with my own eyes but I’m still not sure how it was done! Wow!
Yes,very different.Thank you.
Thanks! :)
Amazing work. Interesting what can be accomplished if you know how. Now your challenge is to duplicate that on a three jaw chuck... That is all I have and would like to see if you can do that on a three jaw... Thumbs Up!
That hurt my brain. I loved it!
Haha :D Yes, it's mesmerizing!
I love the cooper sheets for the jaws. I need to make a few of those for myself! :D
Thanks for your comment! I made a video about making the copper jaw protections. You find it on my channel.
I have same, but in aluminium.
Shout out to how well on center you have your tool set there. No nipple at all, I really gotta work on that lol
Thank you very much! :)
Wow, so nice, so unnecessary, I love it!
A threaded hole, a pin and a nice base would make a geat display.
Thanks for your comment! That's a good idea, I think I will make a little stand for it.
@@WeCanDoThatBetter Please make a short video or at least a photo of the result.
Love this channel.
Wow! Brilliant!
Thank you! :)
Took me a while to understand hahaha. Amazing!
Nice project, saw this type of cube in the forum a while ago.
Perhaps it was the same place where I had seen it :) Thanks!
@@WeCanDoThatBetter Yes, i think so, too.
Soooo satisfying!!
Tricked me thinking the corners were knocked off ... Great job anyway 😂
Wow. That’s brilliant
Thank you very much! :)
This was so cool I went out and made a couple myself. My wife stole one for a paper weight at work. Everyone asks me what it is. I tell them idk but I made it lol.
Wow, very impressive and time consuming process 😮 cools very amazing 👌😍🔥🔥
the tweezers are adorable
Could you please specify the dimensions of the square and the diameter of the circle
I really admire you!!!Can you make “reversing tapping heart” for thread ? Same brand “Tapmatic” , we can use it for proxxon mini milling, I also have a similar one!
what a fun little guy
Thank you very much!
I just want to hold it. It is such an interesting shape.
Thanks! Yes, it is really satisfying :)
Комментарий в поддержку канала и ролика, а также труда 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
Thank you very much! :) I really do appreciate that!
Sehr sehr cooler Zeitvertreib, jeder geht mit dem Sommerloch anders um :-) BTW: Ich weiss, der Servomotor kann recht Fix anhalten, aber ist das auf Dauer gut für Riemen, Riemenscheibe, Lager & Co?
Genau, ne kleine Fingerübung :) Ja, mit dem Motor hast du recht. Bin mir da auch nicht sicher, ob das so gut ist. Ich hab es so eingestellt, damit der Motor auch über den Not-Aus schnell stoppt. Leider lässt sich die Bremse nicht wirklich feinfühlig einstellen an dem Controller...
@@WeCanDoThatBetter evtl. lässt sich der Weg bzw. Abstand des Magneten zum Hallsensor etwas großzügiger gestalten, damit der Motor beim Auschalten erst Drehzahl reduziert bevor er anhält. Ich hatte mit dem Servo-Motor auch experimentiert, erst an meiner Drehe (Motor zu Klein, Drehe zu groß) Jetzt sitzt er in meiner kleinen Metabo-Bandsäge aus den 70ern ...
Amazing piece.
Thanks a lot!
What lathe is this? Couldn’t quite see in the video.
I need to make one of these now...
Better than ThisOldTony's April vid for sure
:D Haha, I'm humbled! Thanks ;)
i think a hole through the center of each face would also look pretty cool
Yes, that would probably look good.
I realised your saw blade jerks at each cycle, do you know why is that....and great to see a self centering 4 jaw chuck. 👍
Hi and thanks for your comment! There are some teeth missing in one spot on the bandsaw blade. That's why you here the sound. The rest of the blade is still ok, so I just kept on running :)
Very enjoyable 👏👏👍😎
Thank you very much! I really do appreciate that.
I was curious how you were going to get square inside corners in the pockets. But its just an optical illusion.
I don't know why I expected this video to be in similar to the the one This Old Tony made.
Haha :D Ok, the title is misleading, sorry for that ;)
Is there anyway that you could make a step by step talking tutorial with this video. This is really cool and I would like to learn it but I'm missing something somewhere. Thanks.
What lathe is this?
it reminds me of stepping on lego pain
Haha :D It actually feels a bit like this in your hand.
You end your video with, thanks for watching. Let me answer with, thanks for showing.
Thank you very much for your kind comment! I really do appreciate that!
A M A Z I N G 👍 really " YOU CAN DO THAT BETTER ". ❤. FROM PAKISTAN 🇵🇰
Thank you!
Cylinder ^3. 😂 Good job mate
Thank you! :)
I learned from Stefan to use IPA as cutting fluid for aluminium, try it and you will love the result
Thanks for your comment! Oh yes, I've seen him using it too. Should buy some and try it out.
@@WeCanDoThatBetter I didn't had IPA in house, but did had some ethanol/glycerine as handsoap from the covid period and it was also a nice result
@@mslucass Good idea, thanks! :)
Exquisite! I would love to try this on the woodturning lathe but I don’t think it has the precision.
Thank you very much! I think this will work in wood too. I have no experience in turning wood. You have to work accurately but I guess, it's doable.
Nice job! Can't do this using collet chucks? Or can you? Thanks for posting and take care!
Thanks for your comment! When you start with a round bar, I think you need an independent four jaw chuck to make it square. When you already have a square stock, it might be possible to clamp it in special square collets.
You can make holes inside, and even a sphere
Yes there are some complications we can think of for the future.
that thing is so confusing to just look at even, the reflective surfaces make it really hard to tell what the geometry of those corners is lmao, very impressive
thats amazing
Nice job!
Thanks!
l bought 4" four jaw at little machine shop, & a self centering 4" four jaw chuck too, novice here.
I know nothing about machining except what I learned from this old tony but that loose mat under the lathe chuck scares me
Because of the danger of being sucked into the lathe chuck? Since I have it there, not a single time it got grabbed by the chuck. But yes, doesn't say that this couldn't happen. It is there to protect the bedways from chips and does a good job. I'm not the only one with such a cover. But being cautious using a lathe is always a good thing.
Absolute skills
Thanks!
How is the surface finish so good? I thought small, less rigid machines couldn't do it.
Thanks for your comment! Aluminium isn't that hard to machine even on a small lathe like mine. The surface quality depends on the type of aluminium and the right cutting tools. I used special high strength aluminiums AW7075 which gives nice shiny surfaces und used sharp polished inserts for cutting.
@@WeCanDoThatBetter amazing! Thank you!
With a chuck like that, how do you know that your part is centered? I don't get it.
For the rough passes in the beginning centering of the part isn't critical. If you watched the video you may have noticed that I carefully aligned the part with an dial test indicator for perfect runout and perpendicularity. This is important for the finishing cuts and an accurate end product.
How do you center a piece with that chuck with four independent teeth?
Ah I shoulda kept watching, that’s effort
Haha ;)
I'm looking at it and I still can't work out what shape it is!
It's fascinating isn't it?
I can't believe he just actually got that thing that accurate with a damn hammer...
Nice!
Personally, I would have kept the machine finish instead of sanding and scotch-briting it, but this still looks really cool!
6:14 when a dog meets a dog
Make a little fence to slid stuff against. Really night and day in the finishing.
Thanks for the hint!
Now that's Awesome....
Thanks!
nice turn😇
Thank you very much! :)
It took me 2:50 go from, "How TF do you make a cube in a lathe" to "Oh, duh *face plam*"
if you turned it an got rid of the sort of "cross" in the middle, you could have a shape similar to a Steinmetz solid, but with 3 intersections instead of 2.
Hi that sounds very interesting. Do you have a picture of such a thing? Never heard of the Steinmetz solid, just looked it up now. Cool idea!
amazing.
Thanks!
very cool
Thanks!
Now can you colour anodize aluminium?
I've never done this before.
What's lather????
Hi. Wie immer, du hast das wirklich schön gemacht.👍👍👍
Sag Mal, hast sonst noch mit Maschinen zu tun, oder nur Zuhause Hobby mäßig?
Wie ich zum Beispiel. Früher ja, mit Maschinen gearbeitet, jetzt leider nur Hobby mäßig. Leider, weil ich manchmal Bock habe auf richtig große Maschinen.
Wünsche dir alles gute und bleib gesund.
I bet you could make an incredible D20