I should have made this tool sooner. 5C to 4 Jaw
Vložit
- čas přidán 16. 12. 2022
- This week I have some fun making a adapter for my 5C powered work head that has a 4 Jaw chuck attached. Consider supporting Steve Summers CZcams channel
Peanut Coffee Mugs/New design Tee shirts
teespring.com/en/steve-summers?
New design/Tee spring
steve-summers-3.creator-sprin...
Amazon Wish List
www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ge...
Huge thanks to all my supporters who make all this possible, If you would like to support the channel please consider joining my patreon page. If you would like to make a onetime shop donation or monthly follow the link below to my PayPal
www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr...
Join my Patreon page.
/ stevesummers - Věda a technologie
Don't worry about making your videos too long Steve. I think I speak for a lot of viewers when I say we'll watch every second of them.
I didn't watch it in full due to time constraints, but everything I watched was solid content. Putting the shop to good use.
I just speed up the playback speed and skip ahead when needed.
Length is fine for me, Just thinking but length is just what it is to get the context across.
Aside: When I watch some of the Shawn Ryan Interviews, it's like 5 hours long. Yes a few setting to get thru it, but It's length is needed to get thru all the material and it also allows the interviewee to go off on tangents you will not hear on other formats. Delta and Seal members are part of his guest list.
Right to the very end. There are few sites that seem to be over far to quickly.
Still missing ya on Saturdays so a tour down memory lane brought me here today. I love shop made tooling. Money in the bank old friend.
Excellent work young man I'm a retired machinist of 50years got my own small shop in my garage I still like to tinker thanks for sharing
Your channel is one of those i never skip even a second. So dont you worry sir. Let them be long..
As a retired machinist of 40 years, a very nice video Steve!
Thanks buddy👍
I love your work and your Doggo supervisor is so cute!
Added bonus
This show rules Steve. I look forward to it every Saturday morning.
Thanks Buddy, its good to see you👍Hope you are doing well .
And another good morning from Dorset. Snow been lying here for more than 10 days. Unusual......
@@mmm365 Not far away. Wool.
@@mmm365 I've not been for about 10 years, but Holland always seemed to be well-represented. Amazing festival and the machinery/automotive stalls were always a good place to pick up tooling.
@@anemone104 Dorset Steam Fair director is our neighbour. He’s had to pull next year’s event due to too much uncertainty.
As for me, I no longer use magnets when I can avoid them. I used to stick Allen wrenches and such to them, but over time the wrenches became magnets and chips stuck to them. Over more time, some screws would become magnets and chips would stick to THEM. The convenience became inconvenient.
Love watching you work. Maybe try Counterboring the center of your plate. Turn down a smaller left hand thread on the end of your shaft there. Make a big left handed thin nut. Then your plate is locked on solid. You can run your little 4 jaw in reverse too!
I know that you did an impressive job on that truck and that it was important to you. Still, it's so nice to see some serious machining. Happy holidays to you and your family.
Wow a machine shop progect, loved the gratuitous shaper tool tooling portion of the show.
Right?! The shots with the door of the shaper open: Spicy!
For over a year you have been working on builing your shop, fixing your cars, doing Honey do projects all on film. Finally back to machinist work and with machines you rebuilt yourself. This video is ABSOLUTELY EPIC I agree, a long video is absolutely fine. I watched this in parts and took notes. All of your work shows a master's hand but this in particular was VERY enjoyable and fun. Thank you to the Summers machine shop
I love using my tools to make tools for my tools.
If you need cheap lathe carbide you can use circular saw blades.. Just cut off one tooth along with about an inch of steel so you can weld it to your blank at the angle you want.. (better to use the thick blades). They make great cut-off tools for small diameters and thin wall jobs.
I cut the whole tool from a saw blade & just stick it in a standard parting holder...no welding required, I'd be worried about heating the braze up too much.
I'm a machinist and that's a really cool idea. I've got plenty of nice tooling. But this Never occurred to me. Easy way to make some little custom groove tools
@@rollinrat4850 i do it all the time. Even cheep saw blades work well. Here is the downside: there is VERY little contact area for the braze on the top of the saw. Since its carbide, you can pretty easily make enough heat to soften that braze & rip the carbide out...usually embedding it in the part. So my word of advice, keep them well lubricated / cooled.
You've got to be as happy as a clam. You have a new shop, new truck and a new mill. What's next? A new lathe? I really enjoy your videos. Thanks for going to the work.
Excellent B&S grinder, Steve. Spent many years using same model in Tool and Die shop, very accurate and a pleasure to run. Thanks for your awesome content.
Having pieces that can easily be taken from machine shop machines is sooooo valuable. A few hours here and there are quickly replayed 10X over. Thanks a bunch Steve. All the very best to you and yours this -40 winters day. The same for 2023 for you all.
Good morning from a very, very cold Dorset in the UK!
Good morning from Minnesota!
Steve, I’m so impressed how your shop has been transformed. You can take on so many different jobs with the comfortable shop itself and the equipment, tooling and know-how you have. All your family’s hard work over the last few years has really paid off! It’s been a good time, entertaining and educational watching your videos.
That's called making your own tooling. That will be very useful. That is a sweet little dog...
Nice to see you back to doing some machine work. Thanks for sharing.
Ahhhh, a whole hour of project, start to finish!
Very Nice :)
The availability of machines in your country is amazing and the tooling you can buy and the price--its amazing..In Oz - small in secondary industry we have nothing second hand and your milling cutters--we are flogged..
Nice work on that tool, Steve. Milling, drilling, turning, threading, grinding and sawcuts all in one. Awesome machining video!
Thanks Ron👍
That is one of the great advantages of having a full machine shop, you can make your own tooling as needed. You cracked me up when you said "it's not ideal, I didn't say it was". Especially with the look that went with it! Happy Holidays! Thanks for the video!
So good to see You machining again Steve .All ready for 2023 now .Nearly time for a break !
Back to machineing, great video Steve, keep'um coming..
Well done Steve, I always consult my dogs before making a final decision 👍
Thank you for sharing. A big thumbs up, nice work.👍
Nothing better that Breakfast with Steve Summers and family on Saturday Morning! Great video and idea. I may just have to do that for my shop.
Thank you for all the fun you have brought in 2022. Merry Christmas to you all and in case I forget, Happy New Year!
Good morning from a frosty but sunny Cambridgeshire UK!
Very nice adapter Steve. Really appreciate that you keep the sound of the machines in your videos instead of overdubbing with music. As a novice it is very helpful to hear what a good cut should sound like. Merry Christmas to you and yours.
I really enjoyed watching your videos repairing your outbuilding and truck. That you did an excellent job at. I also really enjoy your videos machining, fabricating and repairing your machines. I really like that you are back to doing machinist videos. I subscribed to your channel not long after started producing videos. When I wake up on Saturday. Your CZcams channel is the first one I look forward to watching.
Morning Steve! Thanks for sharing 👍
Nice to see you back at lathe and mill work. I picked up a lot of great tips. Thanks for sharing.
the more detailed the better I watch the whole video
nice , another tool to add to the arsenal
😉I LOVE THE 'RAPID RABBIT' speed play
Humh
John Denver is a good accompaniment.
Strong work. It’s a thing of beauty that will serve you well for years. Merry Christmas
Have you noticed Cora is the same colors as your pickup. She seems like a really good shop dog.
Very nice job. The do-all is performing very well it was worth the rebuild. Merry Christmas.
It's nice to see you back doing some engineering. Great little project too.
It is good watching you make things again after so long doing rebuilding and restoring stuff.
I love machining D2. It chips off nicely and leaves a good surface finish.
Nice work. For those who's time/cost ratio decisions are different, you can just buy 5C blank end arbors. ArcEurotrade in the UK do them in 80 and 100mm diameters for chuck mounting.
Time cost ratio...haha
This is exactly why I always research before committing to the DIY route. Of course there are emergency fixes sometimes when lead times are unacceptable (factory line down situations). I often see people making their own 'COTS' items (T-nuts etc.) which is totally fine then you are a hobbyist but in the real world time is money. Not saying that is a good thing and I always try to find a balance.
@@benniethejew aint nobody got time for that
I friggin love thos channel
About time! I have missed the machining projects, now that is the Steve Summers I know and the reason I subscribed to the channel in the first place. 👍🏼👍🏼
Next time please include footage of the vicious arguments you have with the other machinists in the shop! Thanks for the video and happy holidays.
It wasn't completely family friendly 😕. A bit of name calling and questioning of abilities. Typical bathroom mirror meeting stuff I guess.
A great Saturday morning with Steve Summers. Nice job as always, great detail and explanation. Keep up the great work and videos. Happy Holidays to all.
At 40:30, maybe the new intro to your future videos as an opener? I am glad that you made that piece and got it out of the way. It has to feel good what you just accomplished. Hello from San Antonio, TEXAS.
Seeing the little saw brought memories of the big saw you spent so much time and resorses on. What has ever come of that old beauty?
That is a handy tool to have in your shop, I did a similar thing with a small 4-inch, 4-jaw, #2 Morris taper that now will fit in my headstock or tailstock, I can quickly put the small 4-jaw on the headstock, with no need to remove the 8", 3 jaw or use it in the tailstock to cut tapers without moving my tailstock lateral setting.
Beautiful
Very nice!
I feel like you have finally settled back into your shop after all the modifications and distractions, this was an awesome watch, thank you.
West Sussex UK checking in.
It is great to see your video on a Saturday morning. One of my must watch moments.
Thank you😁
Wow, great job!!
Great job
I like the combo of collet and adapter. That means you could put this inside your big lathe chuck to hold smaller items.
Good morning.
Really happy to see you back to making chips,very enjoyable!
Cool project.
Enjoyed….happy holidays
Thanks for sharing. Super kool project.
Another fine project
Nice job 👍👍👍
Love these projects, nice!
Good job. You could add some flats 2/4 to the back plate squared up to jaws, when moving from fixture/machine without removing part from 4-jaw you have a reference surface to indicate from.
Great job! I love all the old large machinery you have acquired. They are so accurate.
Magnets are great I have them stuck to every tool. Even paint brushes for dusting off grinders. Saves a lot of time looking for a common tool.thanks for sharing.
Beautiful work sir
Thanks Steve, great to see the do-all mill in action….
Nice addition to the shop!
Steve, you seem to have a growing fan club here in the beautiful county of Dorset, on the south coast of England. 😁
😄 Seems so. Hope everyone is doing well over in cold and snowy Dorset.
Excellent. Well done. I will enjoy your channel snafus as well.
That’s some weird steel you used. Didn’t make curls like most steel, but didn’t turn to dust like cast iron. Neat!
That was very interesting, to say the least. Kept me awake at work, thank Steve, and HAPPY HOLIDAYS 👋🏻🎄👍🏻
wow, amazing equipment et mostly skills
Nice.
wow nice shaper well cared for looks like
Good to see you back in the machine shop Steve!
Love the long videos!
love your videos 👍
A nice DRO would perfect for that mill.
😎😎
Nice job Steve, as per the usual. I have one of those and they are very handy to have around the shop.
You went after that rotary table with a towel, I thought you were gonna cover it's head so it wouldn't fight you so hard.
I like that big brown christmas ornament in your shop! 👍🎄
Excellent job on the editing for this one. Thanks for sharing!
As much as I enjoyed your wonderful truck restoration series, it's great to see machining videos again. Very nice watch, thanks Steve!
Love your work. The energy that emanates from your shop is all positive and peaceful. Totally dig the fact that there's no DRO's anywhere in sight! I run a little shop here in Holland using only vintage iron mainly of German and Swiss origin.
On the workpiece you made, Use a cylindrical fit and assemble with green Loctite like 601. Positive fit of 0.01 - 0.03 mm. Then skim cut the face. The bolt holes can be easily scribed off saving tons of time setting up the dividing head.
Note: skimming through the comments it turns out the 5C/ blank end arbors are for sale for next to nothing. Goes to show it pays to investigate. Always more than one way to skin a cat.
Thanks!
Thank you 😊
Merry Christmas! 🎄
I really like the zoomed out view of the surface grinder. Always cool to see different angles. Awesome video as always
Merry christmas to you and everyone watching, and a happy new year too!
It takes as long as it takes! Thanks for bringing us along, love this stuff Steve.
Pray all is well with you and yours', wishing only the best for the Holidays.
wishing you and your family a happy Christmas and a prosperous new year
When single pointing threads I always set my compound at 60 deg. So I’m not cutting on both surfaces makes a very clean thread. Especially on coarse threads.