If you're interested in any of the tools or equipment I use and you want to help support the channel then don't forget to check out some of the affiliate links in the video description. Thank you for the support!
This is one of those videos that I expect to just click through and see the end result but that whole process was beautiful to see start to finish. Such a cool project
this is the actual way to make art castings or other high quality ones i never understood why some still use the a clearly outdated process that make low quality
I think what's most impressive to me, is that beyond the immaculate craftsmanship and aesthetics of the objects in general, you also managed to design an entire maze, in 3d, on a *cylinder* and then just kinda glazed over it entirely like NBD.
There are tutorials for it. You just generate a maze on a website, import it into your chosen design software like Fusion 360 then wrap it around a cylinder.
I had to make a custom cam in OpenSCAD a few weeks ago. It took me two days to get it right, but now I know how I would go about making a crazy screw like this.
You've really become a proficient machinist! Single point thread cutting is an achievement no matter how you look at it and as always your casting and finishing is stunning. Really well done on this puzzle it is beautiful.
but it’s satisfying every time you finish! I actually find it therapeutic to single point thread on a lathe. Haven’t done it since college. I really need a lathe at home.
it's an achievement? We learnt how to do it at Tafe this year, not quite a year and a half into my apprenticeship and i thought it was really easy. Only difficult part was trying to measure it using the 3 wire method, that shit can fuck right off lol You can tell by the thread angle when you're getting close anyways so i will just take light cuts from there and keep testing with a nut until it FEELS alright.
@@RazaXML ~ He made a factual, demonstrable statement. You copy/pasted a tired, flippant phrase, apparently lacking any original thought. You lose, great job!
In 2000 years the next humans finding this for sure say: "This must be a decoding Tool for some unknown language, how the old world humans did this 2000 years ago...". Great work, btw!
Tip: instead of making 8% tin bronze, 10% aluminum bronze is notably stronger. Also, using water to cool them down quicker like that actually makes them softer. The screws still look beautiful, and I'm sure there isn't really a problem with softer metal, since it's not undergoing much stress at all.
But aluminum has an extremely high melting point, does it not? We cast some at school and had to add an extra blower and coke to the forge to increase the burning temp like Carnegie did to purify his steel!
@@juliagrauel2951 I know aluminum has a lower temp than copper, since I can melt aluminum in my home foundry, but copper takes a lot longer. From a quick google search, copper is 1,085°C and aluminum is 660.3°C.
I cannot tell you how many wood working, wood turning, sword/knife making, Japanese bowl making and other videos I've watched. This is one of the coolest ideas and projects I've ever seen!! The process is extremely similar to how we dentists used to cast gold crowns and how jewelers cast gold jewelry pieces. Wax forms, instead of plastic. Different investment material and the gold is spun into the forms with a centrifuge. But, still, very similar. Really great job!!
Sweet and polished outcome! I love the entire process from forming/melting/casting/polishing/finishing...the complete vision! And, the final product is a beautiful piece of art...well done!
Every single part you did was superb and great to watch. I audibly went, 'wow', when you sandblasted the left over ceramic, amazed at the detail. Really well done!
This is a great video and it shows how well you've progressed with your foundry work. The castings are so crisp and detailed they look as though they were CNC machined. And I love the way you incorporate the machine work into your projects - it's another layer of skill that most will never attain. Keep up the good work on these pieces of art and the videos that accompany them, it's always such a treat to open up TH-cam and find one of your videos waiting for me to view!
Would be good for wheel locks, and programmed actuated solenoid key that would unlock the sequence, every one would have its own finger print,very large spectrum of pattern variations...
There's lots of them! Hanayama sells some great metal puzzles and I think they have a few bolt ones. Or if you want to 3D print something yourself, Oskar van Deventer posts lots of unique puzzles, and even some bolts th-cam.com/video/V1H52Q9JLkI/w-d-xo.html
It’s totally rad how awe inspiring you’ve become with machining. I loved that part the most about this video. More in depth than the foundry, which don’t get me wrong I love too. Last note, you should send one to Chris Ramsay and see if he could solve it. He’s a puzzle guy on TH-cam.
Super impressive results, amazing threading, and I can't help but envy the amount of detail captured by your maze cast! I'm now getting into pouring and forms, and man is this the kind of inspiration I needed!
Wow man, the quality of work in every step of this project is truly impressive. I want one of those on my desk made out of solid copper and or titanium. Great work, thanks for sharing.
I've really enjoyed the videos you post. I'm definitely amazed at all the molds that you have been able to do using 3D printing techniques. Keep up the great work.
VERY NICE video! My dad worked on huge brass and stainless centrifugal castings and I worked in plastics. This video was a perfect application of both. I especially appreciated you melting most of the plastic out before burning the remainder. Even though the plastic is pretty much unusable, it wasn't dispersed into the air. KUDOS!
Beautiful work, and great process to get there. I'm surprised how cleanly you got the detail of the 3D prints, and with minimal post-processing of the castings. Excellent craftsmanship and presentation!
Really well made! Its incredible what pouring hot metal can create, especially if you have machinists tools for finishing. Maybe you should give away the extra maze. It would create more comments from your audience which increases engagement and youtubes algorithm loves that.
Thank you for sharing your amazing work and artistry with all of us! Not only your creativity and excellent machine work but the quality of your video - such great shots and editing! It was very satisfying to watch you work even though I know almost nothing about these processes. Thanks again!
Awesome design! You should send the second one to Adam Savage, I'm sure he'd love having this oddity on his shelf and would give your channel a nice shoutout.
I think you just invented the lock picking lawyers worst nightmare, the maze keyway! Just imagining trying to complete the keymazeway from muscle memory at 2am is dreadful 😂.
These are beautiful. I print puzzles for my nieces and nephews for gifts with money inside, but this takes it to a whole new level of gorgeous. Wish I had the equipment (and skill) to do something like this.
Prelucrarea prin aschiere a metalelor sau a diferitelor materiale este o meserie de precizie iar folosirea utilajelor de prelucrare implica un nivel foarte avansat de calificare , rezultatul fiind crearea unor obiecte finite de mare precizie , o scoala si o meserie practicata timp de o decada care mi-a adus multe satisfactii pe plan profesional . FELICITARI pt executia EXCELENTA :
This is such a cool project! Question from an aspiring amateur machinist: at 04:31, the bolt is protected from the chuck jaws by wrapping it in a metal sheath. That sheath overlaps itself a short distance, so that there are two layers of that metal between one of the chuck jaws and the bolt, while the other jaws appear to only have one layer between them and the bolt. Does this additional layer of material affect the precision of the lathe in any way, e.g., situating the bolt off-centre on the lathe by the thickness of the metal sheath? Or is this something that can be corrected for by individually adjusting the chuck teeth? Thanks to anyone that's willing to provide some guidance!
From what it appears, you could adjust the other jaws to account for it. However, we are probably talking of a 1/1000 shim (0.001 IN) so it would be a negligible difference for the accuracy you need on a project like this. I could be wrong though.
Nice one. Just a no handcrafting man here who's interested in puzzles. I like the logo like impregnation on the screw nut of the old one. This would also add to the new ones. And the round bottom of these two could hold some Jumanji like text which lures you into the maze. Could be something like this: "Holding this in front of you makes a more stronger you. But giving it some twists and once or twice or more a turn could help to start your brain burn, old energy within your body's corners to find an escape from this transformer..." ;-) But what's not so nice for a puzzle solver is that this is a one time pony. Maybe it is not too hard to make a maze holder containing 3 or more of these maze roles which than could be interchanged with one another or more ones you could make in the future. Like a long screw with 3 or 4 or 5 nuts on it. These just have to have something holding them in place when attached to each other. They could also be different materials/colors/themes/... . Same goes for the screw nut to solve the puzzle. You can imagine it a bit like the hero going into the maze. So beside the maze line logo of the old one one side could hold a hero picture like a tiny Mega Man or the Transformers logo or the Zelda Triforce. So multiple nuts mean multiple heroes to choose 1 from before you start. And another idea I have is to add a hat with a screw for this so the screw nut can only go back to the start at the bottom until you twist the hat until it is removed to change the hero/screw nut. You can use all this inspiration for free but maybe I will do something like this in the future myself. ^^ Or more precisely: Let it be done. 🤣
My guess is, if he fairly valued his time, energy use, consumables, and so on and charged a price that resulted in a profit large enough to justify what must have been dozens of hours; he’d sell the same number as he is now. Very, very few people are willing to pay for bespoke quality, and he doesn’t have a manufacturing facility(of scale) so he’d be making each one by hand. Or, he could outsource the production to china and get the unit cost down to a few dollars per(if ordered by the thousands) and he’d probably be unable to keep them in stock for awhile.
Ive been a machinist for 23 years. This was beautiful machining my guy. I wish my first time threading single point went that well, pretty sure I scrapped my first go at it because I had my lathe set up wrong lol If I have any advice at all to pass down from watching this beautiful masterpiece you made, it would be to use a reamer instead of a boring bar any time you got the chance. Its a much better finish, and far more accurate than boring bars. Plus lets face it, those really nice mechanical boring bars that are actually accurate are very very very expensive lol(even the Chinese ones), like 2+ grand easily. Only down side to reamers is that they only come in certain sizes like 1/4", 3/8", 9/16", 1", basically standard common sizes, unless you custom order them(expensive). If you can use a reamer though, the surface finish, and size accuracy of the hole is gorgeous. A decent reamer has about a +/- .001" accuracy, so they get you super close, and they aren't very costly either. If you've never used a reamer all you do is make your hole about .010" - .015" under size then go in with the reamer, its that simple. A decent reamer set wont run you but a few hundred, maybe even cheaper if you buy them used. They are fairly easy to maintain, and last a looooong time, as long as you aren't expecting them to shave off .040" or some crap and you put them through hell lol Its mind blowing how far machining has came since I started. Lol hell when I started out about all we had was a file and a lathe and a mill lmao God bless!
Fascinating, as well the equipment needed to machine all the parts... Knowledge is king in the maze of fabricating anything out of metal and its metallurgy of combining various parts to make a whole heated substance that can be poured into the casting... Needless to say the plastic parts used for the casting processes... I'm a woodworker and metal work for me is more a hobby while still learning the craft. Nice piece of engineering I must say!
Wow! ❤❤❤ i could just hang out there and watch you work and admire your awesome tools all day! For that privileged, I'd sweep up like i used to for my dad!😂
If you're interested in any of the tools or equipment I use and you want to help support the channel then don't forget to check out some of the affiliate links in the video description. Thank you for the support!
do you sell them I have an ADHD son who can get lost in puzzles
I feel like Chris Ramsey would pay very handsomely for one of these!
This is one of those videos that I expect to just click through and see the end result but that whole process was beautiful to see start to finish. Such a cool project
I do the same
I can't believe how well the mould comes out. I expected bubbles and rough artefacts but those were perfectly straight lines. Amazing.
DUDE those castings were crisp as heck man. Absolutely beautiful details
this is the actual way to make art castings or other high quality ones
i never understood why some still use the a clearly outdated process that make low quality
@@darkplasmo7921 Whats the "Clearly outdated process"?
@@andrewsneacker1256 Sand.
Damn man I’m new here but you work is spot on!!
That's exactly what I thought! Perfect straight lines and no blemishes at all.
Man you are fantastic, not only skilled but extremely smart. I am 70 years old and I enjoyed every second of it, thanks sir
The workmanship on display here is absolutly inspiring!
I think what's most impressive to me, is that beyond the immaculate craftsmanship and aesthetics of the objects in general, you also managed to design an entire maze, in 3d, on a *cylinder* and then just kinda glazed over it entirely like NBD.
There are tutorials for it. You just generate a maze on a website, import it into your chosen design software like Fusion 360 then wrap it around a cylinder.
It’s still just a 2d maze, it’s just wrapped around a cylinder
I had to make a custom cam in OpenSCAD a few weeks ago. It took me two days to get it right, but now I know how I would go about making a crazy screw like this.
You've really become a proficient machinist! Single point thread cutting is an achievement no matter how you look at it and as always your casting and finishing is stunning. Really well done on this puzzle it is beautiful.
100% agree!
but it’s satisfying every time you finish! I actually find it therapeutic to single point thread on a lathe. Haven’t done it since college. I really need a lathe at home.
Thanks! I appreciate it!
my machinist teacher only taught us Single point threading and it was maddening. But hey now i know it!
it's an achievement? We learnt how to do it at Tafe this year, not quite a year and a half into my apprenticeship and i thought it was really easy. Only difficult part was trying to measure it using the 3 wire method, that shit can fuck right off lol You can tell by the thread angle when you're getting close anyways so i will just take light cuts from there and keep testing with a nut until it FEELS alright.
nice to finally see repressed memories coming back,ever feel like youve done this before? well you did 🎉
Awesome result. I can see how having all the “dummy” set screws makes it way more difficult
Thanks!
@@RazaXML ~ He made a factual, demonstrable statement. You copy/pasted a tired, flippant phrase, apparently lacking any original thought. You lose, great job!
@@RazaXML ~ Then proceed with that demonstration.
@@RazaXMLDemonstrate
@@RazaXMLthen demonstrate it.
So cool to see so many manufacturing techniques used in a backyard project! As an engineer I always love seeing how things are made!
wow, very impressed. i was a bridgeport operator for 20 years and your video brought me back to those days.
The workmanship on display here is absolutly inspiring!. DUDE those castings were crisp as heck man. Absolutely beautiful details.
You hella copied the comment above this one.
I hella copied the commemt above this one.
2:22 give that dog an extra hug for me pls
Do it!
Wow.
this kind of content is so much better than anything on TV
In 2000 years the next humans finding this for sure say: "This must be a decoding Tool for some unknown language, how the old world humans did this 2000 years ago...". Great work, btw!
No they fucking wouldn't
@@milklover2351Sad Troll
Tip: instead of making 8% tin bronze, 10% aluminum bronze is notably stronger. Also, using water to cool them down quicker like that actually makes them softer.
The screws still look beautiful, and I'm sure there isn't really a problem with softer metal, since it's not undergoing much stress at all.
Water cooling softens the metal? Annealing it? Oh right! So you can hammer it some more.
But aluminum has an extremely high melting point, does it not?
We cast some at school and had to add an extra blower and coke to the forge to increase the burning temp like Carnegie did to purify his steel!
@@juliagrauel2951 I know aluminum has a lower temp than copper, since I can melt aluminum in my home foundry, but copper takes a lot longer. From a quick google search, copper is 1,085°C and aluminum is 660.3°C.
I cannot tell you how many wood working, wood turning, sword/knife making, Japanese bowl making and other videos I've watched. This is one of the coolest ideas and projects I've ever seen!! The process is extremely similar to how we dentists used to cast gold crowns and how jewelers cast gold jewelry pieces. Wax forms, instead of plastic. Different investment material and the gold is spun into the forms with a centrifuge. But, still, very similar. Really great job!!
i love that you left the mahcining marks on the outside of the nut, it adds such a nice look to the end result. fantastic puzzle.
A true craftsman at work. Thank you for sharing.
Sweet and polished outcome! I love the entire process from forming/melting/casting/polishing/finishing...the complete vision! And, the final product is a beautiful piece of art...well done!
Polishing the high points of the maze came out amazing. Looks very good.
I needed to see this. Thank you!
did you? really?
Every single part you did was superb and great to watch. I audibly went, 'wow', when you sandblasted the left over ceramic, amazed at the detail. Really well done!
These things are *gorgeous* -- wtf.
Really well done on the process here, too. They're so complex but incredibly well made. Kudos!
Another beautiful creation. I am a big fan of the way the set screw filled nut looks.
This is probably one of the coolest and most satisfying things I've ever come across. Almost makes me want to start casting my own pieces of art!
This is a great video and it shows how well you've progressed with your foundry work. The castings are so crisp and detailed they look as though they were CNC machined. And I love the way you incorporate the machine work into your projects - it's another layer of skill that most will never attain. Keep up the good work on these pieces of art and the videos that accompany them, it's always such a treat to open up TH-cam and find one of your videos waiting for me to view!
Supreme quality video! awesome 😮
Great job! You really turned your work into art.
No pun intended 😂
Thank you very much!
@@theorangebaron1595 Sorry, I dont get It.
Turned, as in on the lathe.
Would be good for wheel locks, and programmed actuated solenoid key that would unlock the sequence, every one would have its own finger print,very large spectrum of pattern variations...
I'd love to have a collection of puzzle bolts that would be so cool, physical puzzles like these are my favorite type of puzzle.
There's lots of them! Hanayama sells some great metal puzzles and I think they have a few bolt ones. Or if you want to 3D print something yourself, Oskar van Deventer posts lots of unique puzzles, and even some bolts th-cam.com/video/V1H52Q9JLkI/w-d-xo.html
Amazing, I thought it was only a decorative maze, I didn't expect it would be a real maze escaping "toy". Such a beautiful work!
It’s totally rad how awe inspiring you’ve become with machining. I loved that part the most about this video. More in depth than the foundry, which don’t get me wrong I love too. Last note, you should send one to Chris Ramsay and see if he could solve it. He’s a puzzle guy on TH-cam.
I was thinking the same, but I think chris may have done it before?
Super impressive results, amazing threading, and I can't help but envy the amount of detail captured by your maze cast! I'm now getting into pouring and forms, and man is this the kind of inspiration I needed!
They look great.
youtube recommended got me here, but i stayed the whole time for how interesting and well made the video is. Amazing work!
That's absolutely fantastic work! The maze type pattern as a surface texture alone looks stunning.
Ultra, mega, master, blaster, top!!!
Wow man, the quality of work in every step of this project is truly impressive. I want one of those on my desk made out of solid copper and or titanium. Great work, thanks for sharing.
Crazy cool. Must have been damn satisfying putting those parts together.
3:03 You nearly Looney Tunesed yourself there.
ah. I forgot to mention how utterly fantastic I think this puzzle is - Absolut fantastisch!
I've really enjoyed the videos you post. I'm definitely amazed at all the molds that you have been able to do using 3D printing techniques. Keep up the great work.
VERY NICE video! My dad worked on huge brass and stainless centrifugal castings and I worked in plastics. This video was a perfect application of both. I especially appreciated you melting most of the plastic out before burning the remainder. Even though the plastic is pretty much unusable, it wasn't dispersed into the air. KUDOS!
It puzzles me how one person can make something so amazing, on the first try too! Props to you sir.
"puzzles me" - oh I get it. Good one! 🧩
I have seen and been a part of a ton of fab jobs but this is the coolest one I have ever seen.
0:28 yeah, obviously. i think that's what we were all thinking.
The best pour results I've ever seen. Never thought to use pla for lose wax
Beautiful work, and great process to get there. I'm surprised how cleanly you got the detail of the 3D prints, and with minimal post-processing of the castings. Excellent craftsmanship and presentation!
i love that you try to show it can be handcrafted and not with machinery
Really well made! Its incredible what pouring hot metal can create, especially if you have machinists tools for finishing. Maybe you should give away the extra maze. It would create more comments from your audience which increases engagement and youtubes algorithm loves that.
Glad your process works so good
no channels clogged in the pattern
can bronze be blued? it would look nice with darker grooves
It can be darkened but not really blued.
@@robinson-foundryaluminium and anodise it ❤
Bronze is so purdy polished you don't want wreck.. brass even more but steels and aluminium you can anodise afterwards
Go ahead and do it yourself
It can be “blued” (turned black) just like copper and brass. But the term of bluing isn’t used for bronze.
this looks like a bolt the aztecs would've made if they survived until the industrial revolution (and industrialised, too.)
These turned out amazing! I'm always impressed with how nice your polishing always turns out!
Lovely - well done!
Thank you for sharing your amazing work and artistry with all of us! Not only your creativity and excellent machine work but the quality of your video - such great shots and editing! It was very satisfying to watch you work even though I know almost nothing about these processes. Thanks again!
I love these casting and machining videos. It is always exciting to see what the final result will be. Especially when it is all nicely polished. 🙂👍
Fantastic as usual! 🙂
Thank you!!
Awesome design! You should send the second one to Adam Savage, I'm sure he'd love having this oddity on his shelf and would give your channel a nice shoutout.
That is a great suggestion!
The perfect castings show how many times you've failed to absolutely master them! Truly amazing.
I think you just invented the lock picking lawyers worst nightmare, the maze keyway! Just imagining trying to complete the keymazeway from muscle memory at 2am is dreadful 😂.
These are beautiful. I print puzzles for my nieces and nephews for gifts with money inside, but this takes it to a whole new level of gorgeous. Wish I had the equipment (and skill) to do something like this.
First rule in government spending: "Why build one when you can have 2 at twice the price."
Contact
in 2000 years, archeologists will think this is the key to hell
This is one of the best things I've ever seen to have lying on your coffee or end table. Brilliant work.
Prelucrarea prin aschiere a metalelor sau a diferitelor materiale este o meserie de precizie iar folosirea utilajelor de prelucrare implica un nivel foarte avansat de calificare , rezultatul fiind crearea unor obiecte finite de mare precizie , o scoala si o meserie practicata timp de o decada care mi-a adus multe satisfactii pe plan profesional . FELICITARI pt executia EXCELENTA :
Chris Ramsey would solve it
I love this maze puzzle. One of the most beautiful puzzles I have seen.
This is such a cool project! Question from an aspiring amateur machinist: at 04:31, the bolt is protected from the chuck jaws by wrapping it in a metal sheath. That sheath overlaps itself a short distance, so that there are two layers of that metal between one of the chuck jaws and the bolt, while the other jaws appear to only have one layer between them and the bolt. Does this additional layer of material affect the precision of the lathe in any way, e.g., situating the bolt off-centre on the lathe by the thickness of the metal sheath? Or is this something that can be corrected for by individually adjusting the chuck teeth? Thanks to anyone that's willing to provide some guidance!
From what it appears, you could adjust the other jaws to account for it. However, we are probably talking of a 1/1000 shim (0.001 IN) so it would be a negligible difference for the accuracy you need on a project like this. I could be wrong though.
@@Twitchy239 Thank you for the insight! I guess it makes sense to use faster and easier techniques in cases where tolerance is less of a concern.
Nice one. Just a no handcrafting man here who's interested in puzzles. I like the logo like impregnation on the screw nut of the old one. This would also add to the new ones. And the round bottom of these two could hold some Jumanji like text which lures you into the maze. Could be something like this: "Holding this in front of you makes a more stronger you. But giving it some twists and once or twice or more a turn could help to start your brain burn, old energy within your body's corners to find an escape from this transformer..." ;-)
But what's not so nice for a puzzle solver is that this is a one time pony. Maybe it is not too hard to make a maze holder containing 3 or more of these maze roles which than could be interchanged with one another or more ones you could make in the future. Like a long screw with 3 or 4 or 5 nuts on it. These just have to have something holding them in place when attached to each other. They could also be different materials/colors/themes/... .
Same goes for the screw nut to solve the puzzle. You can imagine it a bit like the hero going into the maze. So beside the maze line logo of the old one one side could hold a hero picture like a tiny Mega Man or the Transformers logo or the Zelda Triforce. So multiple nuts mean multiple heroes to choose 1 from before you start.
And another idea I have is to add a hat with a screw for this so the screw nut can only go back to the start at the bottom until you twist the hat until it is removed to change the hero/screw nut.
You can use all this inspiration for free but maybe I will do something like this in the future myself. ^^ Or more precisely: Let it be done. 🤣
Nah
imagine being a mechanic and this mf shows up
W comment 😂😂😂😂
Those are the most amazing bolts I've ever seen!
This was totally random in my algorithm and it was interesting to watch. I love CNC machining of parts. So satisfying to watch :)
Have you sold this?
My guess is, if he fairly valued his time, energy use, consumables, and so on and charged a price that resulted in a profit large enough to justify what must have been dozens of hours; he’d sell the same number as he is now. Very, very few people are willing to pay for bespoke quality, and he doesn’t have a manufacturing facility(of scale) so he’d be making each one by hand.
Or, he could outsource the production to china and get the unit cost down to a few dollars per(if ordered by the thousands) and he’d probably be unable to keep them in stock for awhile.
I’m sure he has
Ive been a machinist for 23 years. This was beautiful machining my guy. I wish my first time threading single point went that well, pretty sure I scrapped my first go at it because I had my lathe set up wrong lol
If I have any advice at all to pass down from watching this beautiful masterpiece you made, it would be to use a reamer instead of a boring bar any time you got the chance. Its a much better finish, and far more accurate than boring bars. Plus lets face it, those really nice mechanical boring bars that are actually accurate are very very very expensive lol(even the Chinese ones), like 2+ grand easily. Only down side to reamers is that they only come in certain sizes like 1/4", 3/8", 9/16", 1", basically standard common sizes, unless you custom order them(expensive). If you can use a reamer though, the surface finish, and size accuracy of the hole is gorgeous. A decent reamer has about a +/- .001" accuracy, so they get you super close, and they aren't very costly either. If you've never used a reamer all you do is make your hole about .010" - .015" under size then go in with the reamer, its that simple. A decent reamer set wont run you but a few hundred, maybe even cheaper if you buy them used. They are fairly easy to maintain, and last a looooong time, as long as you aren't expecting them to shave off .040" or some crap and you put them through hell lol
Its mind blowing how far machining has came since I started. Lol hell when I started out about all we had was a file and a lathe and a mill lmao
God bless!
THIS IS CRAZY. Another level of skill!
Great video👍
Man, this was sooooo much fun and BEAUTIFUL !!!! Thank you !!! Excellent editing !
As a kid my father had a casting company that made Golf Club Heads using this same "lost wax" process. Thanks for sharing.
Awesome job and great detail work. Love it. Not to mention I'm a huge fan of these types of puzzles and have a good collection.
everything about this process is gorgeous
Why is lathe work always so hypnotically therapeutic to watch?
l am a Gold Smith in my very late 70's and really like how you cast.......Thanks...
this stuff being made on a lathe oh from experience its ugh so satisfying itll make a grown man shed a tear
great job, one of the best start to finish lost wax/( plastic) Videos! with all the steps to cool finished product!
EXCELLENT IMAGINATION , BUILD PROCESS , and SUCCESSFUL COMPLETION.
Thank you!
Fascinating, as well the equipment needed to machine all the parts... Knowledge is king in the maze of fabricating anything out of metal and its metallurgy of combining various parts to make a whole heated substance that can be poured into the casting... Needless to say the plastic parts used for the casting processes... I'm a woodworker and metal work for me is more a hobby while still learning the craft. Nice piece of engineering I must say!
its like you are making movie props, so detailed
Vraiment formidable de voir tout ces processus bout à bout pour faire un produit !
Merci pour cette vidéo et vive la passion !
Excellent job. Your lost ceramic shell did not crack when you emptied it of the polymer, which is the most critical point in this process.
That sand blaster was a great addition to the foundry.
Amazing! Both the puzzle and the video. I enjoyed every second watching it.
Very cool!
Awesome, just awesome. Really loved all the casting and machining
Wow! ❤❤❤ i could just hang out there and watch you work and admire your awesome tools all day! For that privileged, I'd sweep up like i used to for my dad!😂
A very, very beautiful work. You are a man of a thousand arts. Congratulations.
Both the result and how the process is illustrated are very nice. I really love the shiny result. I guess they are heavy and heard to solve.
-- _Wowee Zowee . . . I regret not developing a trade such as yours!_
*_Thank you, Robinson Foundry!_*