Easy Improvements For Your Lathe And Mill!

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  • čas přidán 21. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 573

  • @fredschmidt3148
    @fredschmidt3148 Před 3 lety +33

    Aside from your tech expertise, I appreciate your articulate speech and complete sentence structure.

  • @Colonel_Overkill
    @Colonel_Overkill Před 3 lety +16

    In addition to the brass, aluminum, and nylon hammer ends I use oak and pine glued to a simple hex bolt. the wooden ones are a great alternative as they have more mass than nylon and yet arent as likely to damage the surface as brass on finished pieces. Im a gunsmith so it may be a very specialist tool but Im throwing it out there for any who may find it useful.

  • @boostie1005
    @boostie1005 Před 4 lety +14

    To protect work from lathe chuck jaws try aluminium self adhesive tape also called purging tape,available from welding suppliers,it is very accurate on thickness so should not cause any more trouble than usual in a 3 jaw. I first used this when machining some parts for a camera lens. Set up , now use it on everything couple of layers is sufficient.

  • @kevinmcenhill2656
    @kevinmcenhill2656 Před 4 lety +86

    Quinn: "Quinn, you're crazy."
    Also Quinn: "True, but that doesn't make me wrong."
    Love that!

  • @SethKotta
    @SethKotta Před 4 lety +83

    Also, if the rpm on either your lathe or mill is too slow, you can speed it up by simply painting it red.

    • @MrRedstoner
      @MrRedstoner Před 4 lety +10

      Also with stickers. On cars they are like 10hp a piece, not sure how it scales to hobby machines.

    • @eyeTelevision
      @eyeTelevision Před 3 lety +1

      Rgb led’s also do the trick nicely

    • @petermenningen338
      @petermenningen338 Před 3 lety +2

      If your speed readout is digital double the number of teeth in the encoder instant 2X speed increase

    • @stephenrose8188
      @stephenrose8188 Před 3 lety +1

      Ferrari red will do it!

    • @jeffreyyoung4104
      @jeffreyyoung4104 Před 3 lety +2

      Don't forget to chrome parts for power increase.

  • @longcaster
    @longcaster Před 4 lety +27

    Sneeze guards on the mill, perfect timing.

  • @moehoward01
    @moehoward01 Před 4 lety +61

    We'd love to see you make a new Tappy-tapper, Quinn.

    • @fredchenze8676
      @fredchenze8676 Před 4 lety

      I absolutely agree

    • @seanrodden6151
      @seanrodden6151 Před 4 lety +3

      When she mentioned making a nylon head, I pictured a X-headed hammer with Alum, Brass, Nylon and Lead all on the same handle!

    • @ExtantFrodo2
      @ExtantFrodo2 Před 4 lety

      @@seanrodden6151 2 ends, 4 heads. Why not or Y-knot?

    • @joemccarthywascorrect6240
      @joemccarthywascorrect6240 Před 2 lety

      Nylon on one end, lead on the other

  • @keyganversfeld6124
    @keyganversfeld6124 Před 4 lety +11

    One tip that i learnt when doing my apprenticship on Mills and Lathes. One for the Lathe, this depends on your own machine, is to remove any levers next to the half nut lever. It was a common problem when concentrating on the work and need to engage one of the levers you could accidently go for the wrong one. So when setting up your turning operations keep in mind what out of the two or three levers you will need, then remove the other(s). In time with experiance with the machine you could always put the levers back on all the time.

    • @Blondihacks
      @Blondihacks  Před 4 lety +1

      Great tip!

    • @georgedennison3338
      @georgedennison3338 Před 4 lety +6

      If you CAN'T remove one or more of the others, change the texture or shape of them, (or both). Your hand & brain will quickly learn the difference.
      I sustained a brain injury 17 years ago, and am very prone to these kinds of mistakes, so I have been forced to learn ways to accomodate my tendencies, and multiples methods for making mistakes.

    • @ExtantFrodo2
      @ExtantFrodo2 Před 4 lety +5

      @@georgedennison3338 My wide was always mixing up the gas tank door re;ease lever with the trunk hood release lever so I stuck a piece of velcro to one and she thanks me every time she uses it.

  • @lynnbryant9866
    @lynnbryant9866 Před 3 lety +3

    I loved the comment, "True, but that doesn't make me wrong." Wisdom of the ages there. Absolutely words to live by. Nailed it.

  • @justandy333
    @justandy333 Před 3 lety +6

    One thing I noticed on your Lathe that happened on mine too was the Spindle guard disappeared! Even more strangely the fixing screws were left untouched.
    One of those unsolvable mysteries I guess.
    On a more serious note, one of the first things I did on my Lathe was to install an emergency kick switch. I had to get an electrician friend of mine to wire it in, but its one of those just in case mods. If I did have a lapse of concentration and my Lathe did try and have my hand off, I'd need to reach over the spindle to hit the kill switch. Not ideal.
    Some might say its over kill but since Im alone in my machine shop, you gotta have your own back.

  • @davidjohnson3635
    @davidjohnson3635 Před 3 lety +6

    I know most of your tips were mechanical in nature. A good thing to do with a lathe is have a designated place for T handle. Wire a limit switch so the lathe can not be powered up while T handle is not in its safe location. Then tether a cable so the t handle can be used but not leave the machine. I've done this for machines at work as well for machine s at home. Just added safety and organization.

  • @Gronicle1
    @Gronicle1 Před 4 lety +16

    When I was young and stupid (as opposed too old and stupid now) I messed with Triumps, MGs, and the odd Cooper. So, the "...built like a British car..." was right in my wheel house. Never forget that Lucas electronics were the heart-of-darkness also...

    • @Blondihacks
      @Blondihacks  Před 4 lety +5

      As someone who has spent 15 of the last 20 years working on British cars, we share that bond. Time to place another order for a jar of Lucas magic smoke...

    • @mikecurtin9831
      @mikecurtin9831 Před 4 lety +6

      Why do the Brits drink their beverages at room temperature? Their refrigerators are made by Lucas Electrics.

    • @craigleemehan
      @craigleemehan Před 4 lety +1

      I also feel your pain, I had a TR6. I thought the ladies would like it, but it only drew older men, who had had one in their youth. In my waning years, I now have an older SL500, not sure it's an improvement.

    • @Gronicle1
      @Gronicle1 Před 4 lety +4

      @@Blondihacks You must have the patience of a saint! Fifteen years of Brit madness, wow. The worst I ever had was a four door Austin American...think it was a '66 model. It used fifty weight oil for the engine and shared it with the automatic transmission! I bought it from a buddy to help him out in '74. Then I tried to drive it from Sacramento over Donner's Pass to Reno. It ran out of power at altitude and couldn't climb the last thousand or so feet to the pass. Had to push it through the median and coast to a lower altitude to start it.

    • @SeanBZA
      @SeanBZA Před 4 lety +1

      Lucas, inventor of the dark emitting lamp, and the intermittent wiper. However they learn that from Magnetti Marelli, as anybody who ever owned an Italian made vehicle can attest to as well. My father with his Alfa had a tool kit in the car, which included amongst them a special handbrake adjuster tool a half meter long on each part, as the adjusters were buried half way down the firewall, and he was not keen on the typical Alfa owner solution of either, not park on inclines, or carry 2 bricks with. Also the vehicle that he took from the dealership brand new to Corrosolve, to basically drown the inside of every panel. Only slowed the rust down a little.

  • @bobuk5722
    @bobuk5722 Před 3 lety +2

    Hi Quinn. Not sure that it is easy but I added a low voltage relay electrical interlock, no volt release switch and low voltage table travel limit switching to my mill table power feed. A lot safer to use here in the UK than it was. Stopping the mill spindle now stops the table drive and it has to be reset to restart. Restoration of electricity after a failure no longer results in the table starting to move until it has been reset. Finally the table travel limit switches now run on 24 volts AC instead of the potentially lethal UK mains electricity voltage of 230 Volt AC. BobUK.

  • @JamesTCurran
    @JamesTCurran Před 2 lety +3

    Owner of a "cheap import lathe" here - would love to hear more about gib adjustment and tips. I 100% agree, the compound is the source of most of the lack of rigidity. Locking it would be great, but single-point threading is mostly what I do. I think this topic could be a whole video - if someone with the relevant expertise and experience (hit-hint, nudge-nudge) had the time and inclination.
    Love the videos - please keep them coming!

  • @reginaldmorton2162
    @reginaldmorton2162 Před 4 lety +2

    No BS, just facts and useful information for machine works.. I like this chick

    • @Blondihacks
      @Blondihacks  Před 4 lety

      And this chick likes your comment! 😀

  • @erikakaiserkaiser6791
    @erikakaiserkaiser6791 Před 4 lety +1

    Cheap will do in a pinch, however, a great lesson for a creative learning curve. Blondie, amazing teacher with personality that allows for students to retain! GOOD STUFF!!

  • @cooperised
    @cooperised Před 4 lety +3

    Solid tool post for the win! One thing nobody ever seems to mention is the reason for using the compound for single-point threading: it's to reduce chatter caused by the high cutting forces involved in taking a plunge cut with a form tool. But you know what else reduces chatter? Rigidity. I can cut almost as coarse using a plunge cut with my solid toolpost as I could using the compound, and I get the DRO telling me how deep I've gone as a bonus.

  • @petem6291
    @petem6291 Před 4 lety +2

    Quinn, I looked up Quinns word of the day , And now I will use it in a sentence.... She practiced her( Alchemy) In her shop turning ordinary metal into precision parts .... Viewer tip I use hanging file cabinet folders to store , Emery cloth . crocus cloth and all the grids 120.220, 400. Staples sells little plastic file box's for hanging folders . so i can move the whole box from job to job , This is the first video in my Saturday night Blondie hacks Marathon , ( because the world is closed ) so thank you for taking the time to make these videos. Pete M

    • @Blondihacks
      @Blondihacks  Před 4 lety

      Hey, that’s a great idea! Hanging folders. Gotta remember that.

    • @ExtantFrodo2
      @ExtantFrodo2 Před 4 lety

      @@Blondihacks Either way is much better than all grits jammed together on a shelf including bits and pieces torn off ... :-)

  • @bobpackard9527
    @bobpackard9527 Před 4 lety +1

    on you slide lock, with the cute hex wrench. Use your dremel and machine an O-ring groove in the hex. That will stop it falling out. perhaps.
    I have a small workshop as well, and a huge industrial compressor. THAT lives under the house and the air line comes through the wall. I ran a switched electrical line out to it, and using a double pole single throw switch, control a light in the workshop to remind me that the compressor is ON. Gets very old, to hear the compressor kick in at 0-dark:30 and its winter, with the grass all sparkly with water crystals.

  • @awizardalso
    @awizardalso Před 4 lety +1

    I'm glad I've found people on CZcams that teach others by their videos on how to do things. I have a small shop in my basement and made things from metals for my motorcycle. One thing I did find is how to heat treat metal parts using a small charcoal grill and used a fan to force air up through the vent on the bottom, then quench the parts in used motor oil (turns them black and makes them rust proof), let them cool then put them in the oven at 200 degrees for about half an hour to finish the process. I have a bench top drill press, a bench grinder and other tools. I may be looking into getting a Harbor Freight small lathe. I do like to watch what you do as I can always learn something.

  • @keithmonarch447
    @keithmonarch447 Před 3 lety +1

    Very few individuals know this process, just bought a new Lathe. On the "ways" I will flaking the surfaces for oil tention. The cross slide will move a lot easier.

  • @christopherlease
    @christopherlease Před 4 lety +1

    Great ideas. Finally someone who understands the psychological damage that working on British cars can do. To stop chips from my mill I use cardboard wings, about 18" tall, cut to fitted under and behind and to the side that catch all the chips. I protected them with gaffe tape and renew when necessary. Cheap, simple and very effective. Will be making the front guards like the ones you have. Great vids.

  • @Za7a7aZ
    @Za7a7aZ Před 3 lety +5

    After watching a few Adam Booth Abom76 uploads I discovered having interest in machining.. Now I did discover your channel a few days ago and do really appreciate the way you teach and how creative you are to solve practical...and theoretical problems. Very clear and professional uploads..Thx Quinn.

  • @jchrisj200
    @jchrisj200 Před 2 lety +3

    When I was in grad school I had my first close encounter with a milling machine in the Physics Department. They had some kind of clever alignment buttons. They were cylindrical mushrooms turned from steel. The small diameter was sized to fit into the table slots and the large diameter was large enough to sit on the surface of the table. If you have to mount your work to the table rather than a vice you would drop two of them into a table slot and butt the work against them. That starts you out with the work mostly parallel with the slot as long as the diameters match and the two sections are concentric.

  • @yenoh243
    @yenoh243 Před 4 lety +3

    Steve Jordan’s channel is worth watching, he’s always making things for small lathes

    • @MarkATrombley
      @MarkATrombley Před 4 lety +2

      I stopped watching him once he became a Banggood shill.

  • @ssboot5663
    @ssboot5663 Před 4 lety +2

    Cleanest recipe box in a shop I've ever seen! (NICE!)

  • @ManicSalamander
    @ManicSalamander Před 3 lety +1

    Re lathe rigidity: I have JET BD920N lathe. They are kind of floppy. You mentioned this as a trick others do, I second it: Machine/ weld very heavy steel blocks to support the toolholder, and to hold cutoff tools upside down at the back of the cross slide. (That I copied from Sherline)
    That way the cutoff tool is already mounted and usually out of the way, in addition to being very tightly held. Any problems I have experienced with the cross slide lifting on the dovetail have been well-deserved. There is latitude to do this. Also- when you make the cutoff tool holder, have it clamp the tool so its side is flush with the chuck side of the holder. That way you can cut things off very close to the chuck.

  • @Clough42
    @Clough42 Před 4 lety +9

    Loved the reference to change gear alchemy.

  • @douglascampbell9809
    @douglascampbell9809 Před 4 lety +6

    The Victorian engineer in me expected to see more brass.
    I heartily approve of The One Wrench to rule them all.
    Companies should design things with this concept.

  • @grahamwhite1656
    @grahamwhite1656 Před rokem

    Two chuck keys for 4 jaw adjustment makes life so much easier. Being able to adjust and then tighten from both sides cuts down the number of last minute small adjustments. I have used this method for the last 4 - 5 years having arrived at it by logic.

  • @johnbourg3388
    @johnbourg3388 Před 3 lety +2

    Great mod video. You mentioned having problems cleaning the chips off the magnets. Use a stainless steel wire brush and just brush them off.

  • @LawTaranis
    @LawTaranis Před 6 měsíci

    2:30 - i ended up taking a long M5 screw, some spare bearings, and a couple spacers to make a permanent slip handle for all my slide knobs. All things that most shops will have in abundance, especially if they have 3D printers (i used gt2 belt idlers for the bearings, they work nice and give it a futurey look!)

  • @marcseclecticstuff9497
    @marcseclecticstuff9497 Před 4 lety +3

    One great improvement for rigidity is to make yourself a beefier compound clamp that uses 4 bolts instead of the factory 2. You usually end up loosing easy sight of the compound graduations, but a protractor makes setting the compound angle easy. My first home shop lathe was a 9 x 20 so I know all about trying to make parts on a machine with the rigidity of cheese!
    Another great improvement is to get rid of the socket head cap screws they're using to adjust the gibs on that machine and install set screws instead so they won't stick out nearly as far. You can gain even more clearance by thinning the lock nuts since they don't require much torque to keep the screws locked then turning the set screws down to just clear the nut.. Locking the carriage is such a common operation I made an adjustable carriage lock handle for the 9 x 20 that's permanently installed. One of the most useful modifications I made on that lathe.

  • @davidede6721
    @davidede6721 Před 10 měsíci

    She is absolutely amazing. I have learned so much from her direct and clear approach. I particularly love her snipes towards the British "depending on how British you are" and " like a British car". Sad that she might not know that the best of British tomfoolery is not displayed on the likes of CZcams. They don't have the time for it.😊

    • @hankhill962
      @hankhill962 Před 10 měsíci

      Don't forget Bob's your uncle😂

  • @Galatiotis
    @Galatiotis Před 2 lety

    “Labels” is the best idea… I cannot believe that I never thought about this!
    Thanks!!

  • @Lesfac
    @Lesfac Před 3 lety +1

    The most effective mod I made to my Chinese lathe was to add a rear parting off tool holder. I have to reverse the spindle to use it but it totally transformed the parting off performance. Without a saw to cut large diameter bar, parting it off didn't work but the rear tool holder was a magic solution. Also for the Miller a chip guard made from a 2 litre pop (soda) bottle was effective. I just cut a curved line in a piece of plywood and then used wood screws to screw the two pieces back together sandwiching the edge of the piece of clear plastic cut from the bottle. The plywood just sits on top of the vice. I added two wooden guides to the bottom so it snugly slots onto the vice.

  • @rossfudd256
    @rossfudd256 Před 4 lety +25

    ONE WRENCH TO RULE THEM ALL!!!!

    • @mikecurtin9831
      @mikecurtin9831 Před 4 lety +2

      That's what was going through my mind at that point, too.

    • @Blondihacks
      @Blondihacks  Před 4 lety +10

      There can be only one!

    • @SeanBZA
      @SeanBZA Před 4 lety

      Only change is to plasti dip it so it fits more comfortably. A bright colour as well, so it is easy to spot when it inevitably drops into that big pile of assorted swarf in a bin as you lean over. Before dipping hit it with some 80 grit paper to rough it up, and wash in acetone to get it oil free, so the dip has the best chance of holding. If you can do powder coat then a couple of dips in powder will work as well, and will be a lot harder wearing, but all I have is plasti dip, so that is what I use.

    • @criggie
      @criggie Před 4 lety +1

      Get the quote right - it is from Tolkien, and reads "One ring (spanner) to rule them all, one ring (spanner) to find them, One ring (spanner) to bring them all and in the darkness bind them."

    • @mikecurtin9831
      @mikecurtin9831 Před 4 lety +5

      @@criggie This is a friendly place and nobody said anything wrong. Why the hostility?

  • @raynaldbrassard1126
    @raynaldbrassard1126 Před 4 lety +3

    Hello Quinn, personnally I use my M fuel 12 volts Milwaukee ratchet for the draw bar and I love it, really faster than the key that come with the milling, a lotvof saving time when changing tools 😉

  • @SeanBZA
    @SeanBZA Před 4 lety +2

    For shields try some old vinyl advertising, as it is fabric with a plastic covering, and has the advantage of being easy to sew, and you can also put a bar on top to hold it, and at the bottom a loop of fabric to catch the stuff that hits it, making collecting it a lot easier. Find a local signage company and see about getting old advertising sheet, as those often are thrown away, and com4e with a top already for hanging. Might have to pay, but often they are free, just come with whatever was printed on them, so put it as the back, or give it a clean with acetone to get the ink off, or simply paint it again to a flat colour.

  • @danemslie5058
    @danemslie5058 Před 3 lety +1

    Hey blondie hacks. Dan from port colborne Ontario Canada. New to this but just acquired a lathe and mill in my hot rod / race car shop and must say your videos are my daily go to. Keep up the good work! Love the channel

  • @robbytheremin2443
    @robbytheremin2443 Před 4 lety +2

    I learned machining on a 90’s vintage Milltronics CNC with flood coolant and 120” (yes, 10 feet) of X axis travel.
    Being an open machine, chips and coolant went EVERYWHERE.
    I tried all manner of plexiglass shields, but what wound up working the best was building a simple frame out of electrical conduit and hanging cheap shower curtains.

  • @tobybishop8895
    @tobybishop8895 Před 3 lety +2

    Excellent video as ever, thank you. Regarding the access under your lathe for drain plugs and cleaning, you could consider a set of raising blocks between the lathe feet and the main chip tray. I have 1.5 inch blocks under my Myford and they make things so much easier. Cheers, Toby

  • @jameslechner4233
    @jameslechner4233 Před 4 lety +2

    Had some issues with a quick change tool post purchased from my mini lathe's manufacturer. Just received some stock a week ago to make a spacer to replace the compound and finally make the new tool post useful. Great suggestions!

    • @ExtantFrodo2
      @ExtantFrodo2 Před 4 lety

      If you need to keep the compound on, then at least modify the anchor to use 4 t-nuts instead of just 2. Those darned things just love to rock back and forth about that fulcrum point. Tip: where the spacer meets the cross slide surface design in a tripod feature to it. That way it's much easier to assure a solid connection to the C.S. Also, I milled mine with integral rails to fit the t-slots. But that tripod feature made a world of difference for me. Before I had a heck of a time with chatter that I don't have anymore. It's also much easier to dial in to size when you don't have the slop to deal with. Surface finish is much better too. Seriously I can't think of a single downside.

  • @ManicSalamander
    @ManicSalamander Před 3 lety +1

    Re the new vise handle- I still use my cast iron one. Rapid travel is done by holding it nearly straight and turning the end in small circles quickly. Clearing the other crank is done by gracefully sliding it off and placing it in the slots made across the drip cavity at the ends of the table for that purpose. You never need to manipulate the vise and run the slides at the same time. Or do you ? I haven't.

  • @steamfan7147
    @steamfan7147 Před 4 lety +2

    On my small mill at home and both big mills at work I have sheet metal trays that cover the tables on both sides of the vise. They just have a wooden key screwed to the bottom that locates them to the center table slot. They catch a lot of swarf and keep the table slots from being filled up by it. Clean up is easy, just pop them off and dump in the trash.

    • @Blondihacks
      @Blondihacks  Před 4 lety

      Great idea! mill table guards are on my todo list

  • @user-mm9eh1yu3s
    @user-mm9eh1yu3s Před rokem

    53 years of machining and still learning new tricks. Loved your drawbar ratchet but added a knurled thumb roller to expedite on/off motions.

  • @JessicaKMcIntosh
    @JessicaKMcIntosh Před 4 lety +6

    I'm not a machinist but I love these videos. :D

  • @smellsofbikes
    @smellsofbikes Před 4 lety +3

    I really like the idea of a standardized bolt head for handling QCTP, hold-downs on the mill, and in my case, tailstock adjustment. That's fantastic.

    • @mikeking7470
      @mikeking7470 Před rokem

      Shopsmith, 5/32nds hex key for almost everything on the machine.

  • @keithnoneya
    @keithnoneya Před 3 lety

    For the Cross Slide Knobs and the Tool Post Knobs, I just bored them out then ran a cap screw through them into the original holes. Now when I turn them the outer shell, formerly the solid knob, turns in my hand. It's a quick and easy mod that stays on the knobs and I don't need a slip pipe or something else. Love the mods you made. My lathe is a 3 in 1 Multipurpose Machine Model 44142 by Central Machinery in China, (Harbor Freight). It's basically the same machine as a Grizzly G7929. Thanks for the fun videos, I enjoy them when you post them. Best Wishes & Blessings. Keith Noneya

  • @Bob_Adkins
    @Bob_Adkins Před 3 lety

    I used a metal machinists hammer for a long time. I came across a piece of 1" copper bar about 4.5" long just right for a hammer. I cross drill it about 11/16ths and made a wood handle. I love it, and will never again use metal!

  • @brianhaygood183
    @brianhaygood183 Před 4 lety +7

    Magnets: We have some decent sized magnets in the shop. I throw a towel or plastic bag over them and use them to magnetically "vacuum" up chips. Pull the towel off over the trashcan and the chips drop off.

    • @georgedennison3338
      @georgedennison3338 Před 4 lety

      But DON'T use terry cloth. I made THAT mistake once, and only once! LOL

    • @TXShelbyman
      @TXShelbyman Před 4 lety

      Thanks for the tip! Wish I would have know about it sooner. My fingers also thank you....

  • @kwk8363
    @kwk8363 Před 4 lety +7

    Solid toolpost is the best thing you can do. I've got a mini lathe and every tapper that i need i make with form tools. Way faster and the big boost of rigidity is priceless.
    Try to make one, you won't regret it :)

    • @bustednuckles2
      @bustednuckles2 Před 4 lety +2

      I would like to see that happen also. That dinky little compound drives me crazy.Especially because it's on a 7X10. The handle is constantly in my way for the tail stock.

    • @kwk8363
      @kwk8363 Před 4 lety +2

      @@bustednuckles2 I've got 7x12 and it was a big problem also. If you want to make simple toolpost and get some parts for milling attachement you can take a look on this video:
      czcams.com/video/3xmEnJDaaQE/video.html
      Its not the best but i show my milling attachement and solid toolpost.
      After some extra mods you will be able to do this:
      czcams.com/video/1z7WctFry9U/video.html
      You should try to make it for yourself :)

    • @georgedennison3338
      @georgedennison3338 Před 4 lety +2

      @Phil
      Do a Google images search for 'allen nuts'. Ignore all the shiny bits, and look for the black oxide cylindrical looking things.
      I just got a QC tool post, and the first thing I did was replace the nut & washer on the hold down bolt with a Torrington (thrust) bearing and an allen nut. Torringtons are great to put behind nuts used to tighten something when you don't want the something to move as you tighten the locking nut.
      You may need or want the Torrington on the compound lock, but an allen nut will give you a durable connection point to loosen/tighten instead of the handle, when a stud is involved. If the handle has an integrated bolt, replace with a stud, and use an allen nut.
      They are great to keep around a shop, the row of knurling at the top is sufficient, (they are case hardened), to press fit them into soft materials which won't hold threads, but you need a threaded hole.
      Hope that helps. I have a Sherline lathe, which is even smaller than the 7 x 10, you REALLY have to figure out space savers with a Sherline!
      GeoD

  • @Neptune730
    @Neptune730 Před 4 lety +1

    Yeah magnets suck in a shop. When I was a machinist 25 years ago I used poly carbonate shields also. But instead of magnets you put an open slot on the bottom. Put a couple screws in your vice jaw. (The same place you stuck your shield on) Have the screws just tight enough so you can pull the shield on and off easily. Works great.

  • @thisstuffido9141
    @thisstuffido9141 Před 4 lety +1

    I have good results using a stainless wire brush and/or compressed air to clean metal chips off magnets in my shop. Stuff like my magnetic coolant thingies, magnetic enclosure door stickies, and magnetic welding squares. I don't suppose a stainless brush would be great on acrylic but compressed air may suffice.

  • @cossiedriverrs
    @cossiedriverrs Před 4 lety +1

    Hi Quinn, thanks for the inspiration! I made a carriage lock very similar to yours with one exception. I drilled and tapped the cap head screw, and drilled through the end of the Allen key, and then placed the lock handle in place and fitted it permanently with a countersunk screw. As I have a DRO fitted, I could only use 90 degree movement of the handle, but it was more than enough. I fitted a stop to the handle so that it could not come back too far and foul the tailstock. Perfect!

  • @stevebosun7410
    @stevebosun7410 Před 4 lety +1

    Hi Quinn, I got around the problem with the carriage lock and gib screws by changing the socket head screws for socket grub screws. That way, I was able to shorten the amount sticking out, and get rid of the socket heads.

  • @donkinzer5718
    @donkinzer5718 Před 4 lety +2

    I second the notion of making a spider. I've realized that I needed one for a long time and just recently got around to making one. Also, I modified the hard stop that mounts on the bed way to accept a long travel dial indicator. Since I have no DRO on the lathe this allows me to move the carriage precisely.

  • @nophead
    @nophead Před 4 lety +3

    Great tips as always. I discover things on my lathe I didn't know I had like what the tapped hole between the gib screws on my lathe's cross slide is for. But I also discover things my lathe doesn't have like a carriage lock or a compound lock. The compound is separate though, so I only install it when needed.

  • @Peter57808
    @Peter57808 Před 3 lety

    This is gold. I'm learning more here in each minute than I did back in the day (1975) at the machinists ATS!
    BTW I'm an electrician.

  • @Panrider4
    @Panrider4 Před 2 lety +1

    Love the idea of tape over the magnets - so simple (why didn’t I think of that🤔)

  • @andrewdoherty8847
    @andrewdoherty8847 Před 2 lety

    Several presenters have made some sort of chuck key holder but on reflection putting it in your safety apron is a natural.

  • @DavidKutzler
    @DavidKutzler Před 4 lety +1

    The shop-made, low-profile, hex wrench that you demonstrated at 1:12 is the same solution that I came to for my rotary table. My 4-inch rotary table was too small to mount some parts, so I made a fixture plate to mount on top of my rotary table out of a six-inch round, half-inch aluminum plate and mounted it to the rotary table.
    The only problem was that the fixture plate covered the two M6, hex-head cap screws that are used to lock the table. I had to use a needle nose pliers to lock/unlock the rotary table, but it was really inconvenient. I made a very similar low-profile hex wrench that I now leave in place to lock the table.
    Replacing the lever-style, table-locking screws on your mill with brass knobs is an excellent idea that I'll adopt. I've had to replace two of these handles already on my mill breaking one and bending another.

  • @BobJones-cr1pl
    @BobJones-cr1pl Před 4 lety +1

    That's a LOT of hardware for cross slide and compound gibb adjusters. Correct length set screws with thin jam nuts will certainly do the job and probably give the clearance you need for a square head carriage lock bolt with corresponding flat wrench.

  • @josearamirez2018
    @josearamirez2018 Před 2 lety

    ¡Five years do happen!
    The temporary/permanent. You are the best. Thanks

  • @lewisl5985
    @lewisl5985 Před 4 lety +2

    mill table covers, super easy and will save you cleaning the t slots and protects the table

  • @chrisatkins5931
    @chrisatkins5931 Před 4 lety +2

    Thanks for the response. Makes me feel less isolated and useless in lock down

  • @terry6131
    @terry6131 Před 3 lety +1

    I use mini corrugated roof sheet cut down for the sides and back. Very flexible - so long as you have the ridges going vertically!!

  • @jas20per
    @jas20per Před 3 lety +1

    Fit a length of silicone rubber sheet from the lathe saddle on the chuck side covering the lathe ways and the lead screw. This will stop swarf dropping between the lathe ways and on the lead screw. Use a quarter of an inch thickness silicone sheet it will stay straight and as you work closer to the chuck it will flex and slide under the rear of the chuck fitted one on my 20 X 10 lathe from new twenty years ago has worked perfectly ever since. A mod definitely worth doing.

  • @jerrywilson9730
    @jerrywilson9730 Před 4 lety

    Enjoyed. a couple of ideas, #1 replace gib adjuster screws with set screws, just long enough to still have lock nut. # 2 cut slots in mill chip guard and install two large head bolts in threaded holes in the end of vice. Remove magnets. Great ideas and easy to watch. My Honda car jack instructions say place jack under neath. Where's the neath
    Keep um coming.

  • @pherdantler707
    @pherdantler707 Před 4 lety +6

    Re: "Who is Don?" There should be a contest for most outrageous 'English' label on a machine. My lathe, "Flame Hardened Bedwats." Keep up the good work. Nice prsentations.

    • @d00dEEE
      @d00dEEE Před 4 lety +2

      What do you get when you cross a bedwat with a wombat?

    • @pherdantler707
      @pherdantler707 Před 4 lety +1

      A 'wom' bed of course

    • @ExtantFrodo2
      @ExtantFrodo2 Před 4 lety +2

      It wasn't on a machine, but the one label that still cracks me up is the way a store clerk abbreviated "assorted razors".... think about it.

    • @keithprocter141
      @keithprocter141 Před 4 lety

      I have a "Millimg" machine, according to the label.

    • @ExtantFrodo2
      @ExtantFrodo2 Před 4 lety

      @@keithprocter141 are you sure that's not a "Nanodrop"? www.thermofisher.com/us/en/home/industrial/spectroscopy-elemental-isotope-analysis/molecular-spectroscopy/ultraviolet-visible-visible-spectrophotometry-uv-vis-vis/uv-vis-vis-instruments/nanodrop-microvolume-spectrophotometers.html

  • @vaderdudenator1
    @vaderdudenator1 Před 4 lety +12

    I have modded many tools but I’m not sure I’ve ever done it to make things safer 😛

    • @SeanBZA
      @SeanBZA Před 4 lety

      I had a machine with a 17mm spanner modded for it, where it was the open end, ground down to 3mm thick, to be able to hold the jam nut while tightening it. I actually used a good quality spanner there, because I had a few rusted Gedore ones from auction, so chose the one with the most pitting as the donor.

  • @toolbox-gua
    @toolbox-gua Před 4 lety +1

    Great video for early Sunday. Any day. Thanks for sharing.

  • @pauldevey8628
    @pauldevey8628 Před 4 lety +2

    That is an awesome apron

  • @gregstrenzel3940
    @gregstrenzel3940 Před 4 lety +2

    At least you had good sense to buy a lathe with the feed & threading levers on the right hand side. Unlike a lot of machines with them on the left. Value your hands when threading & swarf comes out over your hand. GREAT tips.

  • @greevous
    @greevous Před 3 lety

    Love the hand gestures, makes a information packed video much more entertaining

  • @rpederse
    @rpederse Před 4 lety +3

    Thank you, Ms. Hacks.

  • @ravingquail4503
    @ravingquail4503 Před 4 lety +1

    Another piece of blue masking tape on top of the one used for the magnets will contain the shavings nicely for removal.

  • @drickard67
    @drickard67 Před 4 lety +1

    The chip tray! Why didn't I think of that... You may have just made my lathe a lot cleaner.

  • @markg5894
    @markg5894 Před 4 lety

    Magnet cleaning hack-- use a rag to get off as many chips as possible, then use the sticky side of your tape to pick up the rest. Put the tape over your chip covered magnets, and the tape will pull the chips off. Rinse and repeat as needed.

  • @mousemade1
    @mousemade1 Před 4 lety +2

    Nice vid, ta. If you are going to make a tappy - tap - tapometer and an extra plastic screw-in face, can I suggest you mount the third face in the butt of the handle. This is what I do with mine and when I need that third face it is always with me ready to be swapped out.
    Keep up the great work.

  • @mattagnew206
    @mattagnew206 Před 3 lety +1

    Those anti-spill paint pottles that they use in preschools are good for cutting compound, I keep Rapid-Tap and a small acid brush in one. I took one of the handles off my Emco Compact 8 compound. I have a small square of 4mm rubber sheet I put under the mill spindle when taking bits out of the collet so they don't do the kiss of death on the table. I have 150mm rules stuck to both lathe and mill with magnets so I don't have to go looking for the one I forgot to put back in my apron. The digital display on my Chinese DRO has bright green digits with very little contrast forcing me to squint to see them. I taped translucent green plastic over the display and they are now perfectly legible.

  • @clydedecker765
    @clydedecker765 Před 4 lety +1

    Always good to see great mods to aid other travelers...Thanks Quinn.

  • @shadowdog500
    @shadowdog500 Před 4 lety +3

    I chuck one of my T-handle Allen wrenches into a drill to drive my compound for tapers. No need to make a special tool.

  • @jacobmotum
    @jacobmotum Před 3 lety

    “This thing is built like a British car”
    I lost it. Being a British car fan and currently working on a couple MGs and a Triumph, you’re dead right!

  • @billyhooks99
    @billyhooks99 Před 4 lety +2

    I would totally agree with you on the compound rest removal. If you need to chamfer the the ends of parts you could grind a couple of dedicate tool bits. It dawned on me today just how small your mill is. I am used to a 6 inch Kurt vise.

    • @Blondihacks
      @Blondihacks  Před 4 lety +1

      Yah, most people don’t grok how small it is, based on the comments people make about how I should be climb cutting more. 🤣😂

    • @billyhooks99
      @billyhooks99 Před 4 lety +1

      @@Blondihacks absolutely you have to work with the limits of your machine and adapt, which you are extremely good at.

  • @johnward5890
    @johnward5890 Před 4 lety +1

    You can get longer Allan set screws and replace the Gibbs setscrews which will make the shorter and out of your way.

  • @joshlamotte9318
    @joshlamotte9318 Před 4 lety +1

    I used one of the chuck backplate from littlemachineshop to make a faceplate mini pallet hybrid for my lathe. And, more of a repair, I reamed out the tailstock to 2mt from the 1/2" hole a previous owner had butchered into it. My lathe is a craftsman 109.21280 by the way

  • @ethanmye-rs
    @ethanmye-rs Před 4 lety +3

    One of the better things I did with my smaller 7x14 is bolt to a big slab of concrete. Just cast some lag bolt holes into a 3 bag mold of concrete, and put some big washers in. Ground it flat, bolt it down, and the lathe is about 10x as rigid. Dirt cheap too!

  • @thingmaker3
    @thingmaker3 Před 4 lety

    Don not? Oh! Don Knotts! He was a really fun entertainer!! I had no idea he was also famous in China.

  • @kimber1958
    @kimber1958 Před 4 lety +2

    Blue painters tape on my magnets as soon as I get home from work. Thanks

  • @bobd.
    @bobd. Před 3 lety

    One wrench to rule them all! Good idea Quinn.

  • @jimsvideos7201
    @jimsvideos7201 Před 4 lety +2

    Also, you could cut notches in those shields about where the magnets are and put some fasteners in those holes in the back of the moveable jaw for it to slide onto.

    • @robertpearson8798
      @robertpearson8798 Před 3 lety +1

      Or replace the magnets with little pictures of Lindsay Lohan, she’s rather attracted to vices.

  • @jimstamper7062
    @jimstamper7062 Před 4 lety +12

    the chip tray is one of those.." why didn't i already know that" things.. Thanks

  • @eastcoastandy2905
    @eastcoastandy2905 Před 4 lety +1

    Those chinese machine-tools were sent to teach us workarounds!
    2 tips from my machine room,
    I'd put the chip screen on a mag-base and make an indicator clamp for the lathe bed to keep magnets from making trouble... with your travel dial.

  • @bulletproofpepper2
    @bulletproofpepper2 Před 4 lety

    For the air compressor we made a very small weather proof outside cupboard yours may need to be heated too. A new light switch powers a plugin for the air compressor cupboard for a remote on/off. The air will be piped into your shop with manifolds at your work stations with an air gauge. Thanks for sharing your tips and tricks.

  • @joemcgarry1106
    @joemcgarry1106 Před 4 lety +1

    I have pneumatic draw bar, and vise on my mill. I have a 100' hose on a reel to use outside. You are clever enough to figure out where to put a compressor. Mine is remote with a timer switch to shut it off automatically.

    • @Blondihacks
      @Blondihacks  Před 4 lety

      You underestimate how small my workshop is

    • @marcmckenzie5110
      @marcmckenzie5110 Před 4 lety

      Joe, I have this as well. Quinn, this might not fit, but I have a nice little two-tank mini compressor due to space limitations. Yes, a giant efficient compressor would be nice, but these new units work great if you’re not running a shop with lots of pneumatic tools. Mine hides behind a small trash can.

  • @DavidLindes
    @DavidLindes Před 3 lety +1

    Well, I'd say yes please on the hammer video, but I see it's already in my watch queue, so... yay!
    (And alas, I didn't make it to fully up-to-date in time for your 2-year Q&A... but I'm getting there, still...)

  • @assessor1276
    @assessor1276 Před 3 lety

    Loved the three-jaw-copper sequence. Very TOT-esque .

  • @stephenrose8188
    @stephenrose8188 Před 3 lety +1

    Another nice video Quinn, some nice little mods too but hey there! I have to draw the line at your comment about 'Built like a British car' that's just not righ we make them much, much more damned awkward than you suggest, I know I've worked on 'em all my life. Have to make special tools for everything.

    • @Blondihacks
      @Blondihacks  Před 3 lety

      Yup, proud owner of three British cars here (not all at once) and turned all my own wrenches on ‘em. Said with love. 😀

  • @bwave57
    @bwave57 Před 4 lety

    Wow Okay...maybe I was not paying attention to that segment so much after the nice and quiet pen caps but your ARC welding almost made me have to clean my chip tray!