Sunday Notes 1
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- čas přidán 24. 02. 2018
- Sunday Notes, a video series, made up of quick shop happenings looking through our Note 4. Sunday Notes 1, we share an example of heat straightening right in the lathe, just like we do on the Wright Roller Kits. You can notice that I have taken a set of my Wright Rollers and mounted them to stands that help support the shafting out beyond the lathe. ;{)-------
Keith, I'm fascinated with the shaft straightening and love watching you do it with such precision... Dave
I may not have a mill or lathe but nothing is more soothing than listening to keith getter done and learning while in the process.
I would much rather watch a video from Keith or Abom than any of the weekly entertainer awards ceremony shows.
Excellent videos every time.
I know! I only used a Lathe in metal shop for two years back in high school in the 80s but watching those two have me wanting one lol
They have entertainer awards shows? :)
Oscar, Emmy, Golden Globe, Producer Guild of America, Grammy, BAFTA, Independent Spirit, CMA, SAG, People's Choice, Critics Choice, NAACP Image, Directo'r Guild, Satellite Awards, Write's Guild, iHeartRadion Music, etc just to name a couple of the weekly entertainer adoration events.
I never get tired of hearing a torch light up!
it never gets old watching you straightening out a boat prop shaft
It is great to see a person holding to their quality standards even when it is not going the way they want to.
I've been machining for 22 years and always learn from your videos! Thank you for the incredible videos and know-how.
Just amazing to watch the indicator movement.....tks for the NOTE
Thanks for having the indicator in view now I have a better idea how you "getter done".
When your good, You are GOOD.... Thanks for bringing us along.... Although I did have to wait all day....! Bill Berry
*clapping vigorously*... unbelievable persistence for a couple of thou! Thank god I'm a woodworker. :)
Keith, Awesome video, your talented, love watching your videos, thanks for sharing.!.!.!.
That was possible the best heat straightening video you have done, or maybe just the one that made it all click for me.
Excellent start to the new series, do please carry on.
Keith the education you give us with out even trying is amazing. Ive been in the welding trade for 28 yrs and love to learn , been a machining novice for a few short years. nothing better than someone willing to share the tricks of the trade.
WOW!!! Awesomeness throughout. Thanks for sharing this very informative video. Seeing the indicator move in both directions with the heat cycling was perhaps the most impressive portion of this class by Professor Keith. Keep them coming.
That's some fancy hocus pocus. The magic is where you find it. Good show.
Good show , Thanks for sharing!
After watching you do this several times I think this is the best and I understand what your doing with the heat and cold
I just learned a new trick for straightening a bent shaft, thank you for the time you put into these videos
Probably the most vivid and educational video of your technique for straightening shafts. A little bit of heating and cooling can make a real difference in metal dimensions and dynamics. Physics at work!
The secrets of a Master revealed.
Dude, that was incredible to watch. It's almost magical how the metal responds.
I saw you do this once on some long shafts out in the driveway a while back but this shows EXACTLY what is happening during the process, the techniques and even the ultra secret Good Luck tap needed to complete the process.
Thank you from the bottom of my little black heart for being so generous as to share this.
Kieth, this was the best demonstration you have done on straightening, primarily because of the close-up video. thank you.
I loved this uncut video Kieth, I had no idea heat straightening a shaft could be done so quickly. Thank You for creating and sharing this!
Wow that was amazing. Never seen that before. You must save people a fortune. Cheers
Nice work. What works on big shafts works on little. I worked on Navy propulsion shifting back in the day. Before selective straightening came in we hot-spotted shafts the same way as you demonstrated in this vid. The only difference is scale and time between spot heat and equilibrium. You're a Navy shipyard alumnus; you been there.
I recall running an indicator over the cooled hot spot and noted a distinct bump on the shaft surface where expanded hot metal, trapped by the surrounding cool metal, upset - bulged up. The quench froze the metal in the upset condition so contraction pulled the shaft straighter. This leaves the shaft in a stressed equalibrium. So long as nothing disturbs this equilibrium the straightening effect continued.
Propulsion shafting, be it bow picker or aircraft carrier, sees little stress except the torsion between engine and propeller and the lesser incidental cyclic loads from blade/hull interaction and wave and wake turbulence. Navy experience suggests this supposition of metallurgical stability is valid - until you use the propeller to spool up another bouy cable or grind up the beach or mow a deadhead. Then it's back to the haul-out for re-furb and more hot-spotting.
It's a living.
good name, know exactly what to expect
Great video. Thanks for sharing.
You've shown this technique I don't know how many times, and it still looks like magic. If you were playing guitar this way you'd be one of those guys that inspires some people to pick up a guitar and learn, and drive others to burn the one they have. Thanks for sharing the magic!
Thanks Keith for tip´s and trix, i really enjoy your videos.
Metal is a strange and wonderful material to work with.
Thank you very much to pass your knowledge to us... really apreciate your time spent in teach us to be better... regards from Portugal
You just handed out keys to the Lamborghini, Keith. Great work
Lets hope we get many drivers and their still on track, many years down the road. You can share skills with high levels of workmanship expectations, but they have to be developed by the individuals. I needed to ready the work force for my retirement! LOL Thanks for stopping in and the comment, Me being me on CZcams is all your fault! LOL cheers, ;{)-------
A lesson to be learned for any CZcams content creators: putting out content every week draws in the subscribers.
Like the sound of Sunday Notes looking forwards to more interesting videos like the first.
Great to see such a Craftman(s) in his element. Thanks for sharing. You have a great day.
What amazes me is that with a fixed camera position I can very easily see that .002 or .004 runout on the shaft as you are turning it.
Great skill Kieth ,watched and learned a hell of a lot from all the episodes. I am in the west of u.k. and if anyone does that to a shaft over here we burn them at the stake for having the know how keep er coming Steve T
I have no words to define your skill and your huge experience, Keith sincere congratulations!
Another great video, Thank you. I Always look forward to see what you are doing.
cool new series, looking forward to these
YOU are an artist. Lather, rinse, repeat, with style. Great video. 👍
Fascinating to see what the steel is doing with the dial indicator. This brought it into perspective. Thanks Keith!
I like heat straightening shafts much better than big beams, you feel like you are getting somewhere on a shaft. When I heat straightened my crane runway beam it took like a day to see the movement, of course there is a lot of steel to draw in a 21" beam! You made short work of this one. :-)
bcbloc02 wait, and you didn’t film it!? That would have been fun to see, Brian. Just give the camera to Bailey.
Well I didn't film the in process work at the time but the before and after and how I did it was in this video czcams.com/video/sjvTuU92FFM/video.html Fortunately my video skills have gotten better since then. LOL
I'll look forward to watching you on Sunday.
That was amazing! Thank you! I never thought of anything that simple to straighten a part.
Good video, detail explanation of straightening the shaft,
Extremely knowledgeable
Incredible! Subscibed.
Regards from NE Thailand.
Fantastic thanks for taking us along with you
Amazing!! Very impressive. That is years of experience, knowing where to heat it and cool it, and how much. Thanks for the Good show.
The witchcraft-part of machinist work: straightening. That live indicating in both directions (heat -> cool) was awesome. Thanks for the insight.
Boy you have some patients Keith. But the result in the end is well worth it mate :)
Great Show Keith. Thanks for sharing your time and many talents
Astoundingly good work. You sir are a specialist and a gentleman.
Amazing Keith
Love watching your videos.I have learned a lot.
I enjoy watching and learning the heat Street mean that was very helpful thanks Keith
Hi Keith that is so cool.Just had my large size ox acetylene tanks filled in Springfeild,MA.300$ yikes.But now can experiment on some round stock.Thanks for showing us this again it was grate.
Outstanding, you make it look so easy Keith. Pure Master class!
Tfs!
Beautiful work, Keith. I can easily see that what you're doing is as much art as science. Thank you for another incredible video!
Very cool, like the sunday segment. Great stuff.
Such incredible talent you have. I feel like a hack, after watching your videos.
Keith you got that process down pat, amazing.
That was really good up close and personal. Thanks learned a ton.
Now you got some serious lathe clean up, wow that was a real eye-opener on how little heat it takes to move the shaft
You sir, are good! Looking forward to more of these Sunday Notes!
Much appreciated, Keith. I love your info about straightening shafting. THANKS!
You are a legend, thanks for sharing
Hi Keith
Enjoyed very much. What a great example of the skill and patience required to true these shafts! A single thumbs up is not sufficient. :-)
warm regards
vic
What a great job of getting everything to run true.
Thank You for your time and a lesson in shaft work .....
Amazing Keith, great visuals, look forward to the next one
WTF did I just watch !!?? That was great. Being a newb machinist just was just plane awesome..
Just a stunning video of the whole technique and outstanding video work to capture it all. Many thanks and total congratulations.
Perfection from persistence 👍
Nice work Keith, as per usual!!
You are a magician! Love your videos.
Great thanks for sharing
Great stuff as usual Keith. I'm always learning from your videos.
Thankyou for your videos.Iove from Denmark
Outstanding Keith! Yes Sunday Night Notes "SNN" is a great addition to TWM. It keeps us from going into withdraw if you don't have a new video. Rock on
Good one! Enjoyed the presentation. THANKS!
Really enjoyed this and am looking forward to seeing more.
Great technique my friend. I hope one day I will get a chance to use it.
Great video. Thank you for posting this.
Keith’s methods may be old school but they solve the problem with near perfect results.
8:06 People are capable of fast forwarding or speeding the video up - I very much value when videos aren't too cut up and edited for some kind of short term attention span video clip ........ let it fly ..... if anything Keith - your viewers can't get enough anyhow. Thumbs Up for leaving it uncut
That was great . I thought it would take more heat than that. Really great Sunday addition !
Always enjoy your vids Keith
I bet you could straighten a tree limb with that process. Thanks for the "Notes", Greg.
Enjoyed , Looking forward to seeing the shares !
Wow! Just wow! Schools in session. Can't believe what a good job you do demonstrating to us how it's done and being persistent like, and you're absolutely dropping SCHOLARSHIP on this technique.
The series is a good idea!
Keith that was pretty cool you’re a man of very many talentsI’m never seen better straighten anything like that but you know what you’re doing
Thanks for sharing your great knowledge
Nicely done, enjoyed the quick note.
Great video Keith.
Nice work as usual. "Geter Done".
Awesome video! Keep it coming! Getter done!
Amazing how little heat it takes to tweak that thick shaft and then how quickly it reacts. Neat video, Keith.
Keith, you rock!
Looking forward to more, I like.