This is the sort of video, that shows how spending time in coming up with good workholding solutions pays back in spades in the final product. Lovely job.
Nice job welding that busted pulley and subsequent machining. Looking forward to to seeing the guts of the slotting head, I can't recall ever seeing one opened up...
I totally understand your frustration. 40 years ago I opted to machine a new 5 grove pulley for my Cincinnati Drill Press. It took me a whole day on an engine lathe Without digital readout 👍 I mounted it on. 1 1/2 HP Baldor motor, It still works perfectly after all these years 👍
Old aluminum is always hard to weld, no matter where the metal comes from. This is either cast or extruded aluminum. Neither welds well. It requires heating at around 400F for around an hour to burn the contamination out. Either way it’s done, it’s a pain. I usually wave the tungsten over the surface to see if any more gunk comes up first. Then it’s just a matter of dabbing carefully and using a bigger cup, probably an 8, with more argon, maybe 30 cubic feet per hour, or however that translates to metric. I suspect that the pulley alloy is a higher magnesium alloy than your welding rod, that’s why it looks that way.
I think the rods were for extruded but have worked well on god cast before . Bigger cups i have to get , No 7 was the biggest one i had . A friend of mine who welds ally all the time said to try waving the torch over the area first as well . Cheers 👍
That was a nice repair Max. I noticed the fridge in your think tank looks alot like mine. Different brands inside but the effect would be the same. One thing I've noticed over the years is that the solutions that come out of those fridges at night seem to lose some of their lustre by the next morning. Ken
Hi Max, Just watched the latest video. I do a fair bit of alloy welding here in the UK. You may already know this, I use a Miller Dynasty 280. The AC balance setting starts at 50 and goes to 100, the standard is 75. I have found when welding castings or poor-quality alloy, the best results are when I have the AC balance closer to 50 which gives more cleaning, If you find out which way your AC balance goes for more cleaning, it may help in the future. Cheers Dave
I used a 2.4 rod but i think they are for welding extruded . AC balance was about 30 % . Their are better rods for cast but that was all i had on the day . But even building up on the filler rod , i was getting mixed results . More than i can remember seeing before . I am going to do a few tests on other material but i do suspect the Argon gas may be the issue as a friend of mine was welding with bad gas the other day & having similar issues . Cheers 👍
More likely to be contamination in the weld joint than bad argon gas I suggest Max. I’m no aluminium welder but about 20 years back welded a 16 foot aluminium Barra boat kit together that passed a hull survey for commercial use. The biggest issue was super clean aluminium (6061T6 3mm in this case). When cleaning the joint you can’t use mild steel rotary wire brush, or bronze rotary wire brush etc. Has to be a 316 stainless wire brush. Same with sanding discs, can’t use the standard brown sanding discs made from garnet, these a special green flap wheel disc made specifically for grinding aluminium that is to be welded. Anything else and the metals contaminate the alloy & the weld gets porous and just won’t join properly & get full penetration. Just a suggestion, might help next time, no doubt you probably already know all this. If you’re using filler rod, make sure it’s also completely free of external corrosion and also not contaminated with dissimilar metal. Brilliant repair job on that pulley, looks better than new. Wish I had 10% of your skills. 👍👍👍
Thanks Max for the great tips. I can't wait to try out some of your superb pointers as to adequate work piece fitment. The weather here has warmed and I can get back to more shop hours. I am enjoying the posts. Washington State, US. M.
Very good repair. I'm in the USA and really like how you intermix imperial and metric units. Of course all my machines are imperial, but a lot of stuff I repair are metric. A job well done.
Been running a similar lathe after retirement got tired of the lack of degree marks so I lined up zero and put marks on compound at plus and minus 30 degree on both sides with stamped + - to differentiate from originals. Ps good repair
Hey Max, good job. Don't stress with welding the Chinesium pulley, I welded up a cracked C12 cat sump the other month. That was fun being cast crap which I think your pulley would be as well. All the best from Brisbane.
Great work, Max. I would like to see how you get on with making the keyway in the next video. I know how keyways are made, but on a project so small and making it on a press fit, we'll, that could be challenging. See you next time, cobber. 👍⚒️🏴
G'day Max. The welding eventually turned out good, considering the amount of sediment & grime that would have been impregnated over time. That sort of job is Tedious at best of times. Great overall job. Well done.
Well that pulley repair has turned out nice. If you only had a working slotter you wouldn't need to buy a broach to cut the keyway in the slotter pulley.
Lol . Years ago when i was working up in Wyndham i was wondering why everyone drank Swan Gold , i still drank Export & used to get these wicked hangovers . Soon found out the brewery put extra arsenic in as a preservative so the beer would survive the 3000 km trip up there on a truck ! 👍
Welding looks great from here Max. Nice machining, that was a lot of setups, not an easy workpiece to hold. Looking forward to the assembly. Cheers....
For the second bore of shrunk in boss, I noticed the bar held in chuck wasn't cleaned up. Did you mark jaw 1 position to get it back in chuck same as when mandrel was made? May have been running true without bumping it around? As soon as I saw the grey box I knew it was a Mitutoyo dial indicator. The very first one I bought was Mitutoyo, 0.01-10mm in 1974. It got used far less than expected so still have it in original case, working like new after 50 years. Very low serial number and model number (NO. 2046) Don't remember why I got a second one in 1980, maybe because it had zero adjust? (guess I'm getting old and memory is going?) 🤪
Nice job on the step pulley, just wondering it looked to me like the mounting bracket was made to go on top of the ram rather than under it. With it mounted under neath it will not be able to rotate without hitting the side braces.
I thought it goes under so the slotting forces are on the ram not the mounting bolt . I think the Bridgeport mount goes top & bottom for maximum strength . The clapper on the slotter can turn 360 deg for side work . Cheers 👍
Max likes doing things the hard way - welding aluminium, much turning, broaching a keyway to be done using a broach purchased for the job. I would have simply bought a new pulley on eBay. A number of sellers offer drill press pulleys with various numbers of belt positions and various shaft sizes. The same pulley Max repaired is currently offered on eBay for $19 US. Most Chinese sellers ship to Western Australia (Max's location) within a week, with very low or no shipping cost due to Australia Post classing China as a developing country needing export encouragement. (I've never understood that one - it's due to a UN-sponsored international treaty. Nobody exports like China does.)
@@swanvalleymachineshop Perhaps. But while you waste hours of time repairing something that you can buy for 20 bucks, you loose the time to work on something you can't buy for 20 bucks. Professionals know their time is money and go for the quickest solution. Hobbyists make things they could cheaply buy.
@@swanvalleymachineshop Look it up for yourself. Various sellers list 6-step pulleys available with 14, 18, and 21 mm bores; a couple list 22 mm. I forget what you said your motor shaft is, but it should conform to the IEC standard (19 or 24 mm). You might need to bore it out, but that would be a lot simpler than repairing the old broken pulley. I would have hand-made a keyway broach out of a bit of tool steel, or even just mild steel, seeing as it only needs to cut soft aluminium - that would take 5 minutes on the bench grinder. Note when searching on ebay and elsewhere: they are called "pagoda pulleys".
@@keithammleter3824 Yes and they are 5 step pulleys not six . In plain English , way more expensive . That would mean i have to buy 2 of them to match . The smallest bores are 14mm they both would have to be sleeved & keyed to suit a 7/6 bore .
G'day Max, great stuff as always buddy, very nice solution and save, as always I enjoyed learning a little something too, thanks for sharing buddy, best wishes to you and yours
Good job. I have been eyeing off a set of expanding mandrels from LPR Toolmakers in Victoria to save a little work. Won't work for all jobs but if you NEED an excuse then....
Nice job. I was surprised to see you werent reinstating the grubscrew, as there now appears to be nothing to stop the pulley assembly floating on the motor shaft. Do you have a plan for that ? I was also curious as to why you didn't leave your round stock long (with a skim cut for concentricity), and use it for all work holding, including the pulley clean-up ? Then part off when youre all done ? Love your work, especially the freehand mill stuff, that blows me away . . . Incidentally, im just up the hill from you, and in fact, I can see Dayton out of my workshop window as i stand at my lathe ! Keep the awesome content coming mate ! Cheers (but not with Bush Chook ! Coopers for the win !)
Because i forgot about the grub screw , still have to do it when i do the keyway !!! Had to cut the bush to length to be able to access the small bore for finishing . 👍
Aren't the small Noga arms with the adjustment at the base a pleasure to work with. I almost didn't buy one because of the price but after using it the first time I would pay twice as much for it. Cheers. Dave
Hi Max, Great vid mate. Can you please share how you pressed out the last arbor? Did you press from the 7/16 end? Or did you hold the arbor from the other side and press on the pully? Thanks
> nice going there max. the beer o'clock armchair machinist commentary here? spritzing that thing with wd-40 just increased its value 10x; coat of fresh paint should hide the multitude of sin in that part and best thing about machining chinesium is sweeping up the resulting swarf and stuffing it down the tip. take care amigo.
There was enough material that you could have left the bushing long so that you didn't have to make an arbor. Then just part it off when your done drilling the shaft bore.
@swanvalleymachineshop I'm speaking of the second arbor at @34:43. Leaving a bit stick out past the repaired small end would give you something to hang onto while you finished the motor shaft bore.
Hello Max. Very interesting repair. Better than tossing it and buying a replacement. Perhaps you will allow a stupid question. I sometimes have trouble figuring out what measurements you are using. Things go back and forth between bananas and monkeymeters. When you mention "a few thou", may I assume that you are referring to bananas? I follow several "down under" channels and this is somewhat common. Just in passing, as a machinist, I'm a pretty good blacksmith.
I think you're the grandmaster of workholding. You always find a solution that works. Brilliant.
Cheers Rusty . 👍
It was so satisfying to watch a broken, then welded part, turn into one that looked brand new.
Thanks Rob . Cheers 👍
This is the sort of video, that shows how spending time in coming up with good workholding solutions pays back in spades in the final product. Lovely job.
Cheers 👍
Thanks Max, hope the mailman arrives soon. Very enjoyable video, cheers.
Cheers 👍
Nice job welding that busted pulley and subsequent machining. Looking forward to to seeing the guts of the slotting head, I can't recall ever seeing one opened up...
No worries . Doing it now 👍
Great video to watch when it's about beer O clock time here in Norway 👍 Cheers 🍻
No worries 👍
I totally understand your frustration. 40 years ago I opted to machine a new 5 grove pulley for my Cincinnati Drill Press. It took me a whole day on an engine lathe Without digital readout 👍 I mounted it on. 1 1/2 HP Baldor motor, It still works perfectly after all these years 👍
Not 5 minutes work making step pulleys from scratch . I did one a couple of years back in an earlier video . Cheers 👍
Old aluminum is always hard to weld, no matter where the metal comes from. This is either cast or extruded aluminum. Neither welds well. It requires heating at around 400F for around an hour to burn the contamination out. Either way it’s done, it’s a pain. I usually wave the tungsten over the surface to see if any more gunk comes up first. Then it’s just a matter of dabbing carefully and using a bigger cup, probably an 8, with more argon, maybe 30 cubic feet per hour, or however that translates to metric. I suspect that the pulley alloy is a higher magnesium alloy than your welding rod, that’s why it looks that way.
I think the rods were for extruded but have worked well on god cast before . Bigger cups i have to get , No 7 was the biggest one i had . A friend of mine who welds ally all the time said to try waving the torch over the area first as well . Cheers 👍
Many thanks for this information, very well done and EXCELLENT job.
No worries 👍
That was a nice repair Max. I noticed the fridge in your think tank looks alot like mine. Different brands inside but the effect would be the same. One thing I've noticed over the years is that the solutions that come out of those fridges at night seem to lose some of their lustre by the next morning. Ken
Lol , too bloody true !!! 👍
Pulley turned out great, weld build up in any material is a pain, especially non ferrous, nice job Max.
Thanks for sharing
Thanks 👍
Max that's a perfect job for the condition it was broken into
Thanks 👍
Fantastic - I have to repair two pulley cones for my mill - pretty much I’ll just follow your example. Thanks for the step step demonstration!
No worries 👍
Wow. . Nice job. . Glad that the welding turned out with no air pockets. . Great job.
Thanks 👍
Hi Max, Just watched the latest video. I do a fair bit of alloy welding here in the UK. You may already know this, I use a Miller Dynasty 280. The AC balance setting starts at 50 and goes to 100, the standard is 75. I have found when welding castings or poor-quality alloy, the best results are when I have the AC balance closer to 50 which gives more cleaning, If you find out which way your AC balance goes for more cleaning, it may help in the future. Cheers Dave
I recommend using an 1/8” rod if you’re going to go that high on the cleaning, maybe 5/32”, or what is it there, 4mm, or so?
@@melgross 2.4mm would be fine, AC balance has nothing to do with wire size
I used a 2.4 rod but i think they are for welding extruded . AC balance was about 30 % . Their are better rods for cast but that was all i had on the day . But even building up on the filler rod , i was getting mixed results . More than i can remember seeing before . I am going to do a few tests on other material but i do suspect the Argon gas may be the issue as a friend of mine was welding with bad gas the other day & having similar issues . Cheers 👍
More likely to be contamination in the weld joint than bad argon gas I suggest Max.
I’m no aluminium welder but about 20 years back welded a 16 foot aluminium Barra boat kit together that passed a hull survey for commercial use.
The biggest issue was super clean aluminium (6061T6 3mm in this case).
When cleaning the joint you can’t use mild steel rotary wire brush, or bronze rotary wire brush etc.
Has to be a 316 stainless wire brush.
Same with sanding discs, can’t use the standard brown sanding discs made from garnet, these a special green flap wheel disc made specifically for grinding aluminium that is to be welded.
Anything else and the metals contaminate the alloy & the weld gets porous and just won’t join properly & get full penetration.
Just a suggestion, might help next time, no doubt you probably already know all this. If you’re using filler rod, make sure it’s also completely free of external corrosion and also not contaminated with dissimilar metal.
Brilliant repair job on that pulley, looks better than new.
Wish I had 10% of your skills. 👍👍👍
I hope you drilled a hole for the set screw...your details were right on for all else. Nice job, thanks for sharing.
Still have to do that , when i do the keyway . 👍
Thanks Max for the great tips. I can't wait to try out some of your superb pointers as to adequate work piece fitment. The weather here has warmed and I can get back to more shop hours.
I am enjoying the posts. Washington State, US. M.
Thanks . Ours is starting to cool down at last ! 6 months of summer temp's with hardly any rain . 👍
Very good repair. I'm in the USA and really like how you intermix imperial and metric units. Of course all my machines are imperial, but a lot of stuff I repair are metric. A job well done.
Thanks . I get a good mix as well & my machines are half & half ! 👍
@@swanvalleymachineshop Metriperial,the best measuring system ever🤣
Been running a similar lathe after retirement got tired of the lack of degree marks so I lined up zero and put marks on compound at plus and minus 30 degree on both sides with stamped + - to differentiate from originals.
Ps good repair
I will probably go the same way . Cheers 👍
Great Job Max. Slotting Head with be great to have.
Thanks . 👍
Hello Max,
Nicely done... enjoyable viewing, thank you. Nice gift...
Cheers.
Paul,,
Thanks Paul , Cheers 👍
So useful, and brilliantly and entertainingly explained.
Cheers 👍
Hey Max, good job. Don't stress with welding the Chinesium pulley, I welded up a cracked C12 cat sump the other month. That was fun being cast crap which I think your pulley would be as well. All the best from Brisbane.
Thanks Graham . I will drop by later in the year , Cheers 👍
A successful repair Max. I doubt you'd ever find a stock replacement.
Thanks . I did not even waste my time looking as i thought that as well ! Cheers 👍
Max, please film making the guide for the broach.
I will try & remember ! Cheers 👍
Very nice repair on the pully Max.
That should run for along time.
Have a great day. 👍☕️ Cheers.
Thanks 👍
Argon seemed to be a common issue at INCAT. Nice arbour decission. Always a high skill display.
Thanks . I will do some test welds on different materials & different rods . 👍
Great work, Max. I would like to see how you get on with making the keyway in the next video.
I know how keyways are made, but on a project so small and making it on a press fit, we'll, that could be challenging.
See you next time, cobber. 👍⚒️🏴
Cheers 👍
nicely done max!
Cheers 👍
Thanks for the show Max 🍻 🇦🇺
No worries 👍
Good job Max, enjoyed the show. 😁😁😁😁
Cheers 👍
Another great day at the workshop, from deep within in the Swan....
Yep , just another day ! 👍
G'day Max. The welding eventually turned out good, considering the amount of sediment & grime that would have been impregnated over time.
That sort of job is Tedious at best of times. Great overall job.
Well done.
Cheers Ted . Hey , a ball out of that old bearing you gave me fitted perfect in that thing i was going to use it for . 👍
Enjoyed…nice repair
Thanks Chuck . 👍
Expert repair, Max!
Thanks 👍
Always a pleasure to watch.
Thanks 👍
Well that pulley repair has turned out nice.
If you only had a working slotter you wouldn't need to buy a broach to cut the keyway in the slotter pulley.
Lol . Had to order a broach ! Cheers 👍
Nice job Max, hope to see the internals of the slotter.
Many a hangover drinking Emu Export, had a nickname which I can't disclose on YT.
Lol . Years ago when i was working up in Wyndham i was wondering why everyone drank Swan Gold , i still drank Export & used to get these wicked hangovers . Soon found out the brewery put extra arsenic in as a preservative so the beer would survive the 3000 km trip up there on a truck ! 👍
Outstanding video and work Max!
Thanks Don . 👍
G’day Max. That pulley came up good mate. Thanks for the video and the work holding solutions. Have a good one 👍🇦🇺
No worries 👍
Another awesome video Max, looking forward to the next installment.
Thanks 👍
Repair turned out great.
Cheers 👍
G'day Max. That repair has come along very nicely mate. Good work as per usual Max. Cheers, Aaron.
Thanks Aaron 👍
Welding looks great from here Max.
Nice machining, that was a lot of setups, not an easy workpiece to hold.
Looking forward to the assembly.
Cheers....
Thanks Dean 👍
Maybe set the compound at 60 and add a new mark in line with the 40 degree area to extend the reading range.
That is a bloody good idea . Will scribe an extra line . Cheers 👍
That's what I did on my lathe. Nice work on the pulley Max.
another job well done max.
cheers
ben
Thanks 👍
For the second bore of shrunk in boss, I noticed the bar held in chuck wasn't cleaned up.
Did you mark jaw 1 position to get it back in chuck same as when mandrel was made?
May have been running true without bumping it around?
As soon as I saw the grey box I knew it was a Mitutoyo dial indicator.
The very first one I bought was Mitutoyo, 0.01-10mm in 1974.
It got used far less than expected so still have it in original case, working like new after 50 years.
Very low serial number and model number (NO. 2046)
Don't remember why I got a second one in 1980, maybe because it had zero adjust? (guess I'm getting old and memory is going?) 🤪
No , did not mark it . Was going to use the 4 jaw if it clocked in over 2 thou .
I was lucky with that indicator , it is like new . Cheers 👍
Superfluous! Your English teacher would be proud of your choice of verbiage 😂. Great repair, shame you didn’t have a slotting device 😮
Lol , English classes were not my best ! 👍
Nice job on the step pulley, just wondering it looked to me like the mounting bracket was made to go on top of the ram rather than under it. With it mounted under neath it will not be able to rotate without hitting the side braces.
I thought it goes under so the slotting forces are on the ram not the mounting bolt . I think the Bridgeport mount goes top & bottom for maximum strength . The clapper on the slotter can turn 360 deg for side work . Cheers 👍
Very nice repair! Like it never happened 👍🏻👏🏻
Thanks 👍
Max likes doing things the hard way - welding aluminium, much turning, broaching a keyway to be done using a broach purchased for the job.
I would have simply bought a new pulley on eBay. A number of sellers offer drill press pulleys with various numbers of belt positions and various shaft sizes.
The same pulley Max repaired is currently offered on eBay for $19 US. Most Chinese sellers ship to Western Australia (Max's location) within a week, with very low or no shipping cost due to Australia Post classing China as a developing country needing export encouragement. (I've never understood that one - it's due to a UN-sponsored international treaty. Nobody exports like China does.)
That's what sorts out the men from the boys . We have the skills to repair parts .
@@swanvalleymachineshop Perhaps. But while you waste hours of time repairing something that you can buy for 20 bucks, you loose the time to work on something you can't buy for 20 bucks.
Professionals know their time is money and go for the quickest solution. Hobbyists make things they could cheaply buy.
@@keithammleter3824 What is the bore size for the 6 step pulley you found on ebay ? .......
@@swanvalleymachineshop Look it up for yourself. Various sellers list 6-step pulleys available with 14, 18, and 21 mm bores; a couple list 22 mm. I forget what you said your motor shaft is, but it should conform to the IEC standard (19 or 24 mm). You might need to bore it out, but that would be a lot simpler than repairing the old broken pulley.
I would have hand-made a keyway broach out of a bit of tool steel, or even just mild steel, seeing as it only needs to cut soft aluminium - that would take 5 minutes on the bench grinder. Note when searching on ebay and elsewhere: they are called "pagoda pulleys".
@@keithammleter3824 Yes and they are 5 step pulleys not six . In plain English , way more expensive . That would mean i have to buy 2 of them to match . The smallest bores are 14mm they both would have to be sleeved & keyed to suit a 7/6 bore .
G'day Max, great stuff as always buddy, very nice solution and save, as always I enjoyed learning a little something too, thanks for sharing buddy, best wishes to you and yours
Cheers Ralfy 👍
Good video friend max
Thanks 👍
👍👍😎👍👍 - Weld repair came out super nice!
Cheers 👍
Thanks for posting this I learned something here.
No worries 👍
Excellent job max, great video, keep'um coming.
Thanks 👍
Great job mate
Cheers Matty . 👍
max, if your TIG machine has adjustable frequency crank it up to 120hz to 200hz, it will narrow up the puddle and let you stack the welds easier.
It has .5 to 300hz . The knob does not have graduations , so it is about 1/3 up from .5 . Thanks , i did not know it had that effect . 👍
I'd bet that pulley has never run as true as it does now. 👍🏻👍🏻
That's for sure ! Cheers 👍
Thank you Max!
No worries 👍
Max - Lots of moves before paydirt . Nice going . -- Jim
Cheers 👍
Good job. I have been eyeing off a set of expanding mandrels from LPR Toolmakers in Victoria to save a little work. Won't work for all jobs but if you NEED an excuse then....
Something i would like to get as well . 👍
Nice job. I was surprised to see you werent reinstating the grubscrew, as there now appears to be nothing to stop the pulley assembly floating on the motor shaft. Do you have a plan for that ? I was also curious as to why you didn't leave your round stock long (with a skim cut for concentricity), and use it for all work holding, including the pulley clean-up ? Then part off when youre all done ? Love your work, especially the freehand mill stuff, that blows me away . . . Incidentally, im just up the hill from you, and in fact, I can see Dayton out of my workshop window as i stand at my lathe ! Keep the awesome content coming mate ! Cheers (but not with Bush Chook ! Coopers for the win !)
Because i forgot about the grub screw , still have to do it when i do the keyway !!! Had to cut the bush to length to be able to access the small bore for finishing . 👍
Aren't the small Noga arms with the adjustment at the base a pleasure to work with. I almost didn't buy one because of the price but after using it the first time I would pay twice as much for it. Cheers. Dave
You are not wrong there . 👍
Nice outcome. 👍
Thanks . 👍
Max, I would be disinfecting the lathe after all that Chineseium contamination😷😅.👍🏴
I gave it a good clean this morning ! 👍
That will do, and a nice video.
What other problems will this kit for a slotter offer up…
We will enjoy your solutions Max.
The problems have only just started for this thing ! 👍
@@swanvalleymachineshop and max, I will want a no BS critique on how
Well that Noga copy indicator stand works, please
@@captcarlos Lol , ok 👍
Hi Max, Great vid mate. Can you please share how you pressed out the last arbor? Did you press from the 7/16 end? Or did you hold the arbor from the other side and press on the pully? Thanks
Pressed through the 7/16 end with a small slug . Cheers 👍
Hi Max great work like always. What files do you use on lathes?
Thanks . Any fine , single cut files . 👍
Great video Max!!!
Thanks 👍
Nice one Max
Thanks 👍
Emu larger, reckon there’s been a few sketchy decisions made after drinking that stuff 😂
Nice repair.
Cheers
I would be guilty of quite a few in my younger days when it was all i drank . That's why i drink Great Northern mid strength now !!! 👍
why was the parting tool upside down is it better that way
It works better in my lathe . 👍
Very enjoyable video, love the beer fridge ol man Emu??
No worries , the old ''Bush Chook" 👍
> nice going there max. the beer o'clock armchair machinist commentary here? spritzing that thing with wd-40 just increased its value 10x; coat of fresh paint should hide the multitude of sin in that part and best thing about machining chinesium is sweeping up the resulting swarf and stuffing it down the tip. take care amigo.
Cheers . 👍
I thought kangaroos delivered the mail out your way. 😀
Lol , we have a Scottish chappie on a postie bike !!! Cheers 👍
Top Job
Thanks 👍
3D Aloominum printing by Max .... 🖨
Lol , Cheers 👍
Set screw hole and thread would be easier before pressing, no?
After , otherwise it would never line up ! I still have to drill it . Cheers 👍
"Thinking" with a big leading "D" ;-)
Cheers 👍
There was enough material that you could have left the bushing long so that you didn't have to make an arbor. Then just part it off when your done drilling the shaft bore.
I would not have the reach to bore out the small hole if i had done that ! Cheers 👍
@swanvalleymachineshop
I'm speaking of the second arbor at @34:43. Leaving a bit stick out past the repaired small end would give you something to hang onto while you finished the motor shaft bore.
@@TgWags69 Ahh , now i know what you mean . Yes , it never crossed my mind at the time . That would work as well . 👍
cool
Thanks 👍
Butchered my a.s.s. Ill give you a thow sand doll hairs for that pully!
Lol , 👍
👍
Cheers 👍👍👍
I have that shaper, the pulley is not made in cheena.
The whole thing is made in China . 👍
Hello Max. Very interesting repair. Better than tossing it and buying a replacement.
Perhaps you will allow a stupid question. I sometimes have trouble figuring out what measurements you are using. Things go back and forth between bananas and monkeymeters. When you mention "a few thou", may I assume that you are referring to bananas? I follow several "down under" channels and this is somewhat common. Just in passing, as a machinist, I'm a pretty good blacksmith.
I use both . A bad habit that i have , but i have a mix of metric & imperial machines ! Also , the parts i work on are either metric or inch . 👍
Use alcohol as a coolant when milling / turning aluminium not WD-40. Try looking into some books.
Kerosine or wd40 for ally . Alcohol is not a viable choice . 👍
Household alcohol (ethanol) Is the best and the cheapest. Use it next time You make a thread and You will feel how smooth it goes!
@@a1b2c3d47432 I will keep an eye out & try it . 👍
🇨🇦🤓🤟
Cheers 👍
Dont make it look to easy !!
Lol , Cheers 👍
the use of Arbors. easy to do and a perfect way to hold Chinese stuff LOL Job turned out real good.
Thanks 👍
Really enjoy these sessions with you. Thanks for your time!
No worries 👍