Thanks for talking about the stress in CRS. It can be frustrating when so many people don't understand that when you mill into CRS you will end up with a banana. You briefly mentioned stress relieving. It definitely helps. A lot.
I really like most of your videos and wish I could have had a shop teacher like you in my HS, but we didn't even have a shop. One of the greatest features in your "hands on" videos show proper shop safety practices. As someone in the trade for forty five years, I've seen many Machinist with less than the standard amount of digits or ones slightly modified! I offer you my respect and thanks.
Thank you for sharing. 🙏 I'm impressed by the careful and detailed way you explain everything.I'm also impressed by the vast preparation of the project, which makes it easy to understand every step. 👍👍👍
Made a set of the tool maker's clamps right after watching your vid last year. Use them every week. Now it's vise time! Thanks for the knowledge. Got a feeling you were a great teacher.
great vid, i made one of these years ago and gave it to my farther. He opened it on Christmas eve. He loved it. I got it back when he passed. Still a good little vice. peace.
Very easy to print from the screenshot, and clear too. Thank you for taking the time to share your wealth of knowledge, it must take much more time that most imagine.
Thank you for the tip on the metal Mr. Pete. I use steel bar stock in my woodworker shop for weights when gluing lids on memory boxes. I tried to buy some from a local metal worker but I was too much of a pain in his posterior and was ignored. I somehow got the idea that he had a pile of cut off pieces that he could turn to cash by simply gathering them up for me. But he was busy so now I have a source.
I've got the volume turned-up, and a bunny is in the front yard, in the grass, hypnotized by the amplified sound of your voice playing through my speakers.. Hope that sounds like a compliment. lol
I love those old books. One of the things my father-in-law left me was a huge box of old Popular mechanics magazines from the 30's thru the 60's. They are one of my greatest treasures.
I don't know if you'll ever read this comment or not since this is a video made some years ago but I wanted to tell you the man who wrote your Machine Shop Projects book was a personal friend of mine. Roy passed away a few years ago. He was really big in the world of firearms and ran a gun shop in Connersville, Indiana for many years. He was a really good man and is missed by friends.
I watch a lot of your videos and they are all very good. The piece of steel you got for this project is exceptionally expensive though, compared to prices in England that are sold on Ebay UK. Originally when I first started watching your videos, I thought you were Tubal Cain from England, now dead, who was a prolific model engineer, publisher, and writer with several books and articles in the Model Engineer magazine. Thanks for sharing all your projects with us on TH-cam.
Sir, I am after a copy of that book you show in the video "Machine Shop Projects for trade, vocational and high school shops" I have searched on line and can't find a copy. I was wondering if you may have a spare copy for sale, or know where I could buy a copy. Thank you.
Looked on ebay and amazon etc. found 2 for $173.00 old ones. New from Starrett were about the same. You can't put a price on your own craftsmanship. plus its fun
I use a 30 inch screen on a re purposed server to watch your videos, and the drawings are good enough to use for the building of the vise. Thank you for all your work.
I love your example "what is a hammer for?". I think I could come up with a few different uses for any of the tools you showed before I would ask that question. I guess I love to have and use my tools a bit more than the average keyboard commando ;o)
Let see, a Belgium Company masquerading as an American Company, and an American Company doing the same as an Irish Company, and the list goes on an on........
congrats on the growth of your channel.. I've been watching since you were saying refer to my other 300 hundred other videos.. now over 750! way to go!
When I got my apprenticeship 1.5 years ago I bought the tools from a man retiring. He bought out his original set from a man retiring when he apprenticed 42 years ago. The tools in my box with 2 signatures on them are 40-60 years old and are still perfect.
Metal Supermarket is another source for cut pieces of metal with no minimum order. It is a franchise I believe and there are branches in more than one state. I was able to negotiate on small pieces that they would probably never sell. Don’t know if I can do a link in the comments but they have a website.
Yep they do have thousands of uses, I bought one at a junk shop and use it on my electronics bench to hold small components I'm soldering, it works great because of the weight it doesn't move around on me.
That's so weird, I've had one like that for about 30 years. Mine is a Brown & Sharpe 572, I got it when I used to make computer chips and ferrite rings at Ferroxcube. I use it constantly, but not in a machine shop.
Great project. Looking forward to seeing the rest of the videos. Your clamps all seem to be in good condition. I see lots of them for sale that have damage from people drilling holes in them.
I bought an old Gerstner toolbox, inside was full of tools and a 1938 Starrett catalog.....clamps like you show...$2-3....one thing I'll always remember...a GROSS (144) of hacksaw blades....about $11......
I came here from your talking video. The more videos you make like this will make me a happy man. But I'm just one person and my opinion doesn't count for much.
MrPete, there is actually standards per size on every dimension imaginable. Just wanted to say you might not need to follow the standards at home, but I would recommend it for pairs.
Don't tell Tony's Books, but there are currently 2 of those project books (in good condition) available on Amazon, but different editions. One is $617.45 and the other is $662.94 (plus shipping)??? That's just crazy!!!
I got to convince my wife to let me get a small milling machine and a small lathe. I want to get into machining so bad. Even if it just for hobby fun or small components for the house or cars. Any good suggestions for getting a used mill or lathe for a decent price? Even if it needs a little work.
Not sure whether or not anyone has noticed this, but there are some errors in the drawings. For one thing, in the movable jaw (at 18:13), the 8-32 hole can't be 0.375" deep and NOT intersect the main hole for the 5/16" screw. Since that hole is 0.250" diameter, its radius is 0.125". So when you add 0.375" and 0.125", it equals 0.500" which is the dimension up to the center of the main screw hole. In other words, the 8-32 hole must intersect the hole for the main screw--even though this drawing shows the two nowhere close to merging. I modeled this in SOLIDWORKS so I can make one for a "shop project" in a class I'm taking (practice with a surface grinder!), and I noticed this problem then.
No sweat. It is a bit perplexing, which is why I mentioned it. The other one or two things I found were pretty minor--and may have just been unclear, rather than a mistake.
Believe it or not I was still using Fountain ink pens back in 1984 and then self filled ink pens the year later, seems a long time ago now but wow, those days just went so fast.
Where you measure from also depends on how the drawing is dimensioned. I was taught that it's the "design" intent. Unless I dimension it using ornate scheme I shouldn't assume it to be measured / machined from a common edge. Similar to what your GD&T datum schemes are, just a little more simplistic I guess :)
Thanks for the steel source!!! Looks like there is a typo in the URL, should match the domain name of the email address. Looking forward to this series of videos!
Hey Pete I live right by alro steel in Michigan they are in several States I don't know they might be Nationwide I'm not sure but my particular Outlet has these scrap bins therefore well scrap LOL but I find all sorts of good pieces of coral steel hot rolled steel chunks of aluminum and stainless steel they're all in separate bins. The cold roll steel any carbon steel actually sells for $0.50 a pound you can't beat it! I've completed so many projects just by hunks of metal found in the scrap bin for literally nothing. There's even a bin that gets the occasional chunk of D2 or a7 tool steel tossed in there and I got a plate was it that was a quarter inch thick 8 in x 6 in and it was absolutely dead nuts perfectly 90° corners. I could have made a sign played out of it it was ground with a perfect finish I don't know why it was in the scrap bin but I guess it was just too small for any resale purpose for a big company like that. So your viewers should check around their state see if there's a lro steel maybe all of the outlets have scrap bins who knows
For those looking for prices on small quantities of steel, aluminum, and other common metals, I would suggest trying www.pottingersteel.com - for me, it's a local company that I've dealt with for many years. I just searched their site for a 1" x 1.25" x 12" C1018 - $8.60 (same as in the video). The only reason I'm posting is Tubalcain seemed pretty happy about paying 13.70 for the same piece of steel. Shipping? $9.85 for UPS ground... granted I live in the same town, but they're not overcharging. FULL DISCLOSURE - I have no association with this company other than my company buys steel from them locally.
Hi I really enjoy your TH-cam videos I’m 70 years old and decided to get into the hobby of machining I have 1000 different questions do you know where I can buy that book that has the plants in it to make the vice
I also have a Starrettclamp with a hole in it. You could buy them in that time wth a mounting hole I think. They exportede them to The Netherland I presume. Thatswhere I live
At 18:08 the drawing shows all dimensions given to three decimal places, including the 4″ overall length which you say is not critical. Is this a typo in the plans?
Brian Hostak I just graduated from high school and i completed 4 years of machining and CAD drafting. This was one of our projects haha. It looked exactly like the one he made. I loved taking this shop and it gave me valuable skills that i can take with me for the rest of my life.
There's only one that I know in my state (different country) that has them. (Huge hangar like place with a lot of machines). All other high-schools don't have anything special about them.
Shop classes have largely been replaced with computer classes. However there are Maker spaces now which provide access to machines and in many cases classes. Also high school students may get involved with FIRST Robotics, and there are many that do machining via access to maker spaces. A high school student that has a FIRST FRC team and wants to learn machining can probably do it. In SE Michigan where the auto industry is, it's almost the exception for a high school to not have a robotics team, but in much of the country it's much rarer.
You mentioned Hobby Metal Kits about a year ago and have been ordering from them, exclusively, ever since. Great company to deal with!
I LOVE your make it series. So relaxing to watch, and your subtle humour is quite enjoyable. Thanks for all the videos.
Thanks for watching.
I sent an email to Toly and he sent the dwgs immediately. What a great guy!!
Thanks for talking about the stress in CRS. It can be frustrating when so many people don't understand that when you mill into CRS you will end up with a banana. You briefly mentioned stress relieving. It definitely helps. A lot.
I really like most of your videos and wish I could have had a shop teacher like you in my HS, but we didn't even have a shop. One of the greatest features in your "hands on" videos show proper shop safety practices. As someone in the trade for forty five years, I've seen many Machinist with less than the standard amount of digits or ones slightly modified! I offer you my respect and thanks.
There are a lot of good guys online and you are one of the best.Please keep up the great work.
Thank you very much and merry Christmas
Thank you for sharing. 🙏 I'm impressed by the careful and detailed way you explain everything.I'm also impressed by the vast preparation of the project, which makes it easy to understand every step. 👍👍👍
Thanks for watching.---you are right--lots of prep
Back in the saddle, with lots of vises and no vices. Looking forward to this series!
Thanks for watching.
Made a set of the tool maker's clamps right after watching your vid last year. Use them every week. Now it's vise time! Thanks for the knowledge. Got a feeling you were a great teacher.
Thanks for watching.
Enjoying these full build videos Mr. Pete Triple 2. Thanks.
great vid, i made one of these years ago and gave it to my farther.
He opened it on Christmas eve. He loved it.
I got it back when he passed. Still a good little vice.
peace.
Thanks for watching--thats a good story
Very easy to print from the screenshot, and clear too. Thank you for taking the time to share your wealth of knowledge, it must take much more time that most imagine.
Thanks,yes it does. Glad the screen shots work.
Thank you for the tip on the metal Mr. Pete. I use steel bar stock in my woodworker shop for weights when gluing lids on memory boxes. I tried to buy some from a local metal worker but I was too much of a pain in his posterior and was ignored. I somehow got the idea that he had a pile of cut off pieces that he could turn to cash by simply gathering them up for me. But he was busy so now I have a source.
I can see some of the projects I made when I was a kid in high school. Thanks for the memories.
👍
The sound metal makes when it is handled is awesome!
So classic...."what do you use it for....well, a hammer doesn't come with an instruction manual...." Awesome.
I've got the volume turned-up, and a bunny is in the front yard, in the grass, hypnotized by the amplified sound of your voice playing through my speakers.. Hope that sounds like a compliment. lol
lol
Glad to see you back, nice collection of vices. looking forward to next chapter.
Thanks for watching.
I love those old books. One of the things my father-in-law left me was a huge box of old Popular mechanics magazines from the 30's thru the 60's. They are one of my greatest treasures.
Nice. Having "just" got my mill back into operation... I think this will be an excellent project for me to make over Christmas vacation. Thanks!
yes-hi jerry
Just looking at the screenshot, those vises look beautiful. Can't wait to watch all the videos, thanks.
Thanks for watching.
"if I'm moving too slow, speed up your video" love it!
Thanks for watching
I don't know if you'll ever read this comment or not since this is a video made some years ago but I wanted to tell you the man who wrote your Machine Shop Projects book was a personal friend of mine. Roy passed away a few years ago. He was really big in the world of firearms and ran a gun shop in Connersville, Indiana for many years. He was a really good man and is missed by friends.
Thank you very much, that is great to know that
@@mrpete222 I really admire you and your hold on morality. I can certainly tell you are the type of man this old world needs more of.
Thanks Mr. Pete for sharing your expertise
with us.
Thanks for watching.
I love your answer about the use of the mini clamps :o) !!!
I watch a lot of your videos and they are all very good. The piece of steel you got for this project is exceptionally expensive though, compared to prices in England that are sold on Ebay UK.
Originally when I first started watching your videos, I thought you were Tubal Cain from England, now dead, who was a prolific model engineer, publisher, and writer with several books and articles in the Model Engineer magazine.
Thanks for sharing all your projects with us on TH-cam.
Yep--but everything I do is costly---Thanks for watching.
Yeah that beer I used to drink. I haven't seen that stuff in awhile
Thank you for sharing your plans and teaching us novices. I made your toolmakers clamps last year. I will give this vice a shot.
Thanks for watching. yes, make one
Sir, I am after a copy of that book you show in the video "Machine Shop Projects for trade, vocational and high school shops" I have searched on line and can't find a copy. I was wondering if you may have a spare copy for sale, or know where I could buy a copy. Thank you.
No-------you will have to watch on ebay. They are rare. Also, check with POWELLS.com book store
Looking forward to this project Mr. Pete. Thanks in advance. Cheers!
Thanks for watching.
Looked on ebay and amazon etc. found 2 for $173.00 old ones. New from Starrett were about the same. You can't put a price on your own craftsmanship. plus its fun
WOW!!! Thanks for watching.
I'm going to apprenticeship right now become a toolmaker and I must say I really do enjoy your videos
Thank you very much study hard
I use a 30 inch screen on a re purposed server to watch your videos, and the drawings are good enough to use for the building of the vise. Thank you for all your work.
Thanks--I am glad you told me that
I love your example "what is a hammer for?". I think I could come up with a few different uses for any of the tools you showed before I would ask that question. I guess I love to have and use my tools a bit more than the average keyboard commando ;o)
Very nice Mr.Pete..👍👍👍
Let see, a Belgium Company masquerading as an American Company, and an American Company doing the same as an Irish Company, and the list goes on an on........
Just discovered your channel - looks like im gonna learn a lot over here - subscribed immediately.
Welcome -Thanks for watching
congrats on the growth of your channel.. I've been watching since you were saying refer to my other 300 hundred other videos.. now over 750! way to go!
Thanks for watching.
Love all the old Starrett stuff!!!
Yes they do show up in the video, I have spare material kicking around so will be making a pair of these with you great project
Yes--do so. Thanks for watching.
When I got my apprenticeship 1.5 years ago I bought the tools from a man retiring. He bought out his original set from a man retiring when he apprenticed 42 years ago. The tools in my box with 2 signatures on them are 40-60 years old and are still perfect.
Thanks 👍👍
Nothing better then spotting a red Starrett box at a garage sale or pawn shop.
I can spot a starrett box from the street
Looks to be good tool to have, am going to make a pair for my Christmas holiday project
Thanks for watching.
Another nice vice to have. Great work.
Thanks for watching.
that looks like A FUN project. i guess it could be made up on the shaper too!
Thanks for watching.-I thought about that, but my shaper is in my cold garage
Nice start. will watch the whole series. Thanks.
Thanks for watching.
Metal Supermarket is another source for cut pieces of metal with no minimum order. It is a franchise I believe and there are branches in more than one state. I was able to negotiate on small pieces that they would probably never sell. Don’t know if I can do a link in the comments but they have a website.
Yep they do have thousands of uses, I bought one at a junk shop and use it on my electronics bench to hold small components I'm soldering, it works great because of the weight it doesn't move around on me.
Good find
That's so weird, I've had one like that for about 30 years. Mine is a Brown & Sharpe 572, I got it when I used to make computer chips and ferrite rings at Ferroxcube. I use it constantly, but not in a machine shop.
Nice project TC , I might tackle a couple of these this winter, thanks!
Thanks for watching.
I made this vise while I went to school finished it in 1980 Ambridge High School , Ambridge Pa . We had a nice machine shop program all gone now .Jeff
Machine shop was replaced with candle making shop i will bet.
or basket weaving , local businesses complain that they can't find any machinist's
Thanks for watching.--I was surprised by how many had made one
My neice has a degree in women's studies--now shes a secretary
Interesting video. You never get too many vises although you can certainly get too many vices.
true-Thanks for watching.
Amateur Redneck Workshop THAT'S SOMETHING THAT WE ALL HAVE TO COME TO GRIPS WITH!!!
(get it? get it? get it? SNUCKER-SNUCKER-SNUCKER)
Great project. Looking forward to seeing the rest of the videos. Your clamps all seem to be in good condition. I see lots of them for sale that have damage from people drilling holes in them.
I usually give the bad ones away Thanks for watching.
I bought an old Gerstner toolbox, inside was full of tools and a 1938 Starrett catalog.....clamps like you show...$2-3....one thing I'll always remember...a GROSS (144) of hacksaw blades....about $11......
what a buy--Thanks for watching.
I came here from your talking video. The more videos you make like this will make me a happy man. But I'm just one person and my opinion doesn't count for much.
Thank you for watching, and yes your opinion does matter to me.
I would love to have had this man as a teacher at school ,fantastic, does anyone else think he sounds like Jimmy Stewart?.
I usually notice that stuff, but this one slipped by. I'll probably hear him every time I watch one of these now. ;-)
I love the fact this man called out Anheuser Busch before it was cool.
Asking what it's used for is kind of like asking how long a piece of string is.
MrPete, there is actually standards per size on every dimension imaginable. Just wanted to say you might not need to follow the standards at home, but I would recommend it for pairs.
I'm glad you're back. I was starting to feel the effects of withdrawal.
Right? I was starting to get shaky....
Thanks for watching.
Don't tell Tony's Books, but there are currently 2 of those project books (in good condition) available on Amazon, but different editions. One is $617.45 and the other is $662.94 (plus shipping)??? That's just crazy!!!
I got to convince my wife to let me get a small milling machine and a small lathe. I want to get into machining so bad. Even if it just for hobby fun or small components for the house or cars. Any good suggestions for getting a used mill or lathe for a decent price? Even if it needs a little work.
I made that exact same vice in trade school two years ago. I shit you not, it's the exact same one. I even 3D printed a mockup of it!
Holy Sh*T!
Neat-Thanks for watching.
Your vise pun earned my like, sir 😄
Good-Thanks for watching.
I think Palmer is just looking for more reasons to drink beer!
thanks for the still photo screen shot worked perfect .
Not sure whether or not anyone has noticed this, but there are some errors in the drawings. For one thing, in the movable jaw (at 18:13), the 8-32 hole can't be 0.375" deep and NOT intersect the main hole for the 5/16" screw. Since that hole is 0.250" diameter, its radius is 0.125". So when you add 0.375" and 0.125", it equals 0.500" which is the dimension up to the center of the main screw hole. In other words, the 8-32 hole must intersect the hole for the main screw--even though this drawing shows the two nowhere close to merging.
I modeled this in SOLIDWORKS so I can make one for a "shop project" in a class I'm taking (practice with a surface grinder!), and I noticed this problem then.
Thanks--I need to pass that on to toly
No sweat. It is a bit perplexing, which is why I mentioned it. The other one or two things I found were pretty minor--and may have just been unclear, rather than a mistake.
LOL, I love his dry humor.
I love your video's and I have a lot of respect for you I think we are both tool hoarders lol .
Thanks
Believe it or not I was still using
Fountain ink pens back in 1984 and then self filled ink pens the year later, seems a long time ago now but wow, those days just went so fast.
Are used fountain pens with a cartridge all through high school
In 1985 we switched to biro.🙄
Where you measure from also depends on how the drawing is dimensioned. I was taught that it's the "design" intent. Unless I dimension it using ornate scheme I shouldn't assume it to be measured / machined from a common edge. Similar to what your GD&T datum schemes are, just a little more simplistic I guess :)
Thanks for the comments
I see You have a lot of Vices.....er ...I mean Vises !!!
I have both
the holes drilled into them are for screws for mounting it to almost any surface
Love all your videos.
Thanks for watching.
Thanks for the steel source!!! Looks like there is a typo in the URL, should match the domain name of the email address. Looking forward to this series of videos!
Thanks for watching.--I fixed it
14:58 -- I'll have to do the math in my head
15:05 -- Shows a calculator with the answer to the math
A calculator is how I do math in my head too
Hey Pete I live right by alro steel in Michigan they are in several States I don't know they might be Nationwide I'm not sure but my particular Outlet has these scrap bins therefore well scrap LOL but I find all sorts of good pieces of coral steel hot rolled steel chunks of aluminum and stainless steel they're all in separate bins. The cold roll steel any carbon steel actually sells for $0.50 a pound you can't beat it! I've completed so many projects just by hunks of metal found in the scrap bin for literally nothing. There's even a bin that gets the occasional chunk of D2 or a7 tool steel tossed in there and I got a plate was it that was a quarter inch thick 8 in x 6 in and it was absolutely dead nuts perfectly 90° corners. I could have made a sign played out of it it was ground with a perfect finish I don't know why it was in the scrap bin but I guess it was just too small for any resale purpose for a big company like that. So your viewers should check around their state see if there's a lro steel maybe all of the outlets have scrap bins who knows
Thanks 👍👍
For those looking for prices on small quantities of steel, aluminum, and other common metals, I would suggest trying www.pottingersteel.com - for me, it's a local company that I've dealt with for many years. I just searched their site for a 1" x 1.25" x 12" C1018 - $8.60 (same as in the video). The only reason I'm posting is Tubalcain seemed pretty happy about paying 13.70 for the same piece of steel. Shipping? $9.85 for UPS ground... granted I live in the same town, but they're not overcharging. FULL DISCLOSURE - I have no association with this company other than my company buys steel from them locally.
Quick question. How would I go about making a spherical washer for a screwless toolmakers vise?
Hi I really enjoy your TH-cam videos I’m 70 years old and decided to get into the hobby of machining I have 1000 different questions do you know where I can buy that book that has the plants in it to make the vice
I do not. I found mine at a flea market. Check on eBay. And that is never too late to get started!
mrpete222 thanks your the best
That book is currently listed on Amazon for $650.00
I also have a Starrettclamp with a hole in it. You could buy them in that time wth a mounting hole I think. They exportede them to The Netherland I presume. Thatswhere I live
Yes, maybe they did sell it with a whole. You are a long way off
I have a Starrett vise with the countersunk hole in the base.
Maybe some were made that way???
Eu fiz em 1960 na Escola 9.1 do SENAI em Campos / RJ / Brasil, uma morsa igual a esta a primeira mostrada na mão durante o vídeo
Outstanding...!! Thank you.
Thanks for watching.
I took a screen shot with my phone and it turned out nicely !
👍
I can read the drawing on my phone even just in the video. The stills are more than clear enough.
One might ask what is it for? They can;t see the forest because trees are in the way!!!
Thanks for watching
I don't think the vice squad will get excited by your claim to be vise ridden. I think they would find you mostly harmless! {but fascinating}
I wonder which of these vises AvE would prefer......
thanks!Paulo
THANK YOU...for sharing.
Thanks for watching.
Can scroll saws work on metal like this for cutting that opening perhaps?
no
I look at stock metal like I suppose some folks look at bars of chocolate. Prices just ain't what they used to be for either one.
Thanks for watching.
Excellent great thanks 🙏🙏🌹🌹🙏🙏
😀
where??????? all 9 parts of this video series of the Tiny
Toolmaker's Vise. it is not in your play list
coming soon-not done yet
thanks
At 18:08 the drawing shows all dimensions given to three decimal places, including the 4″ overall length which you say is not critical. Is this a typo in the plans?
not a typo--just not really critical
I have been using Amazon Prime for small amounts of steel shipping is cheaper they claim free but it is included in the price
This would make a great high school shop mass production
project. Oh wait, do HS shops evan exist any more ?
Brian Hostak I just graduated from high school and i completed 4 years of machining and CAD drafting. This was one of our projects haha. It looked exactly like the one he made. I loved taking this shop and it gave me valuable skills that i can take with me for the rest of my life.
not much-Thanks for watching.
awesome!
There's only one that I know in my state (different country) that has them. (Huge hangar like place with a lot of machines). All other high-schools don't have anything special about them.
Shop classes have largely been replaced with computer classes. However there are Maker spaces now which provide access to machines and in many cases classes. Also high school students may get involved with FIRST Robotics, and there are many that do machining via access to maker spaces. A high school student that has a FIRST FRC team and wants to learn machining can probably do it. In SE Michigan where the auto industry is, it's almost the exception for a high school to not have a robotics team, but in much of the country it's much rarer.
Thank you Lyle......Jeff
Thanks for watching.
A perfect job !
Thank you very much