Adam Savage's Favorite Tools: Machinist's Blue Layout Fluid

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  • čas přidán 7. 09. 2020
  • Starrett machinist scribe: amzn.to/2Zeidzf
    Dykem Blue marking fluid: amzn.to/332dTV4
    Dykem Red spray marking fluid: amzn.to/334y6t7
    Adam covers an essential tool he's been using a lot lately in his machining journey, and that's Dykem blue layout fluid for making precise marks on material when even a fine tip pen won't do. Adam demonstrates how to use layout fluid with his recommended scribe and explains why it's worth investing in a quality scribe for your projects!
    $37 workshop apron: amzn.to/3fHKdSs
    Dewalt Safety Goggles: amzn.to/330a4Bf
    Adam's Everyday Carry in his apron:
    Papermate Sharpwriter #2: amzn.to/2xSMaKL
    Pica Pen: amzn.to/2TcSep9
    Whiteout Pen: amzn.to/2YSrvSg
    Small Machinist Square: amzn.to/311GLLq
    Flush Cutters: amzn.to/3csoGuY
    Dial Calipers: amzn.to/3fGRSk4
    Giaco Maker Knife: giaco.com/products/maker-knife
    30-degree Multi-Blade Cartridge Knife: amzn.to/2LKyQvq
    Heavy Duty Multi-Blade Cartridge Knife: amzn.to/2Zm3DXy
    Multi-Blade Cartridge Snap Knife: amzn.to/3cJnJyP
    Extra blade packs: amzn.to/2X5hChw
    Shot by Adam Savage and edited by Norman Chan
    Disclaimer: Tested may earn an affiliate commission when you buy through the links here.
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    Intro bumper by Abe Dieckman
    Thanks for watching!
    #AdamSavage #FavoriteTools
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 836

  • @tested
    @tested  Před 3 lety +47

    Starrett machinist scribe: amzn.to/2Zeidzf
    Dykem Blue marking fluid: amzn.to/332dTV4
    Dykem Red spray marking fluid: amzn.to/334y6t7

    • @semievolvedneanderthal
      @semievolvedneanderthal Před 3 lety +1

      I love your work Adam 🙂

    • @safrsd1
      @safrsd1 Před 3 lety +3

      Hey Adam I believe engineers blue can also be found in broad marker form. I find it can be quicker to apply and more even than painting it on.

    • @jessejdanieljd
      @jessejdanieljd Před 3 lety +2

      Suggestion for the tool favorite tool series a page on tested and or tested amazon affiliate link page listing all of the favorite tools to go back to find the list as a whole for the favorite tools.

    • @subliminalvibes
      @subliminalvibes Před 3 lety +3

      Hi Adam! *Clickspring* fan here. Love seeing your brass work. Cheers from Australia. ;)

    • @thecaptain2281
      @thecaptain2281 Před 3 lety +1

      Adam, you have always been and will always be an eccentric and endearing character. Rock on!

  • @ricklynch
    @ricklynch Před 3 lety +6

    Aerospace machinist here, another very good way of marking parts, especially deep down in a pocket, is to use a Sharpie marker, blue or black and then spray your air gun on the tip of the marker and it acts like an airbrush. Been doing this trick for years as a machinist. 30+ years, and it works every time perfectly. Remember, hold your Sharpie marker point at an angle and spray with your air hose gun at an angle and it acts like an airbrush, it works amazingly well.

  • @Haze33E
    @Haze33E Před 3 lety +720

    I can hear the singing of a young british blacksmith off in the distance.

    • @nathanharding7737
      @nathanharding7737 Před 3 lety +59

      BLUUUUUUUUUEEEEEEE DDDIIIIIIIIIIKAAAAAAMMMMM!

    • @sudo_nym
      @sudo_nym Před 3 lety +3

      🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @DreynHarry
      @DreynHarry Před 3 lety +2

      who doesn't :-D

    •  Před 3 lety +31

      I love that someone at Tested knows him as well :) Would love to see what Mr. Steele and Mr. Savage could build together...

    • @HellGoNet
      @HellGoNet Před 3 lety +18

      I can hear a fart at 4:18

  • @a.freeland179
    @a.freeland179 Před 3 lety +467

    Alec steele youtube blacksmith has a comedic video about his love of Blue D. And his hatred for Red D. Its great.

    • @chess4m796
      @chess4m796 Před 3 lety +3

      what video was it in?

    • @KironKhashnobish
      @KironKhashnobish Před 3 lety +2

      Probably FAQ

    • @blackmetalbanjocore
      @blackmetalbanjocore Před 3 lety +24

      BLLUUUEE DYYYCUM

    • @chartle1
      @chartle1 Před 3 lety +15

      I expected Adam to break out in the song. I thought you had to to make it work. :)
      Pretty sure Alec has a T shirt.
      Ok just checked must have been special run. :(

    • @christophe7723
      @christophe7723 Před 3 lety +2

      Not just a video, it's a running gag

  • @ahobbit225
    @ahobbit225 Před 3 lety +23

    In my first machine shop class, OMG, 43 yrs ago now, the instructor had us, as our first mid-term test, build a scribe body like the one Adam is using. Just the body and nothing else. One of the projects on the final was to finish the scribe, complete with the replaceable tip. I have had mine for 43 yrs. I was a very good at welding and so chose that life path, but my son now has all of my tools and still uses them to this day.

  • @RedHillian
    @RedHillian Před 3 lety +99

    As an avid follower of Clickspring as well, I've seen so much beautiful deep blue marking fluid and layout (and even used a little myself) - so hearing Adam enthuse in detail is wonderful!

    • @tested
      @tested  Před 3 lety +12

      Thank you, Tom!

    • @ERNesbitt
      @ERNesbitt Před 3 lety +16

      I'm convinced that the Venn Diagram of Clickspring, Alec Steele, and Tested viewers is pretty darn near a circle.

    • @TheDarkalkymist
      @TheDarkalkymist Před 3 lety +8

      @@ERNesbitt Alec tends to grate on my nerves so don't watch him very often

    • @jamesrogers47
      @jamesrogers47 Před 3 lety

      You are most likely correct. I watch all three.

    • @willynebula6193
      @willynebula6193 Před 3 lety +1

      Haven't seen any new vids from clickspring in months.

  • @Jaqen-HGhar
    @Jaqen-HGhar Před 3 lety +62

    I love how even though how he's still trying to get people to buy the more expensive tool unlike most YTers Adam understand that $20 is still a lot of money to some people. Which is saying something when you think about how famous Adam is compared to most of them, he could've easily lost touch with what it's like for people just starting out.

    • @citylockapolytechnikeyllcc7936
      @citylockapolytechnikeyllcc7936 Před 2 lety

      Certain tools are worth getting the best, when they either are the only tool that will work well, or where the premium item does not really cost much more than the cheap alternative. A Common nail can be made into a poor man's scribe on a bench grinder and 30 seconds..... it will work just fine.

    • @smallblockchevy1022
      @smallblockchevy1022 Před rokem

      In reality Adam is not really all that famous. There are many many MANY CZcamsrs out there, much much MUCH more famous than Adam is, and a whole hell of a lot wealthier than he is.

    • @mgee6301
      @mgee6301 Před 7 měsíci

      ​@smallblockchevy1022 yep. You are absolutely right. But he is still more popular, wealthier and interesting than you

  • @TheSilent333
    @TheSilent333 Před 3 lety +27

    Adam, I've been a fan of yours for so many years, and you've helped inspire in me the desire to create and to build things. Thanks for keeping me company all these years, and especially during this pandemic.

  • @chazfinch4564
    @chazfinch4564 Před 3 lety +8

    I like how this show gives Adam a chance to really show his appreciation for the behind the scenes tools that make his everyday making life easier.

  • @duck3y27
    @duck3y27 Před 3 lety

    I first watched you use this in a build when I was probably in middle school, now I'm an engineer and use this stuff all the time. Keep up the great videos guys!!! I learn so much from your videos and cannot thank you enough for sharing your knowledge!

  • @lelduayenr
    @lelduayenr Před 3 lety +1

    Hi Adam, I’m a huge fan of yours. Maybe I’m kind of crazy but I cannot tell you how much I appreciate this tips, not only for the tip itself but because this content is a result of lot of experience, try and errors, etc. And that’s a shortcut, a way to build more experience on top of what you teach. Thank you

  • @pirobot668beta
    @pirobot668beta Před 3 lety +99

    Have you ever seen stress-reveal lacquer?
    A lot like layout fluid, it covers the metal surface but it has a special party trick!
    The stuff dries extremely brittle, the slightest bend or flex to the base metal results in patterns of cracks in the lacquer, revealing the amount and direction of the flex.
    How sensitive is the stuff?
    A shotgun barrel seems pretty rigid, but this lacquer can 'see' the temporary bulge caused by the bullet/gasses passing through.

    • @MrEazyE357
      @MrEazyE357 Před 3 lety +4

      Shotguns don't shoot bullets. A slug would be the closest approximation. Cool product though. Never heard of it.

    • @stickshaker101
      @stickshaker101 Před 3 lety +4

      @@MrEazyE357 I shoot saboted 50 caliber bullets in mine.

    • @stickshaker101
      @stickshaker101 Před 3 lety +4

      Never heard of it, don't ever foresee needing it, yet now I'm headed to Amazon to order some!

    • @xani666
      @xani666 Před 3 lety +5

      .... sensitive to EXPLOSION INSIDE THE MATERIAL isn't very sensitive

    • @jetaddict420
      @jetaddict420 Před 3 lety +4

      @@MrEazyE357 shotguns can shoot whatever you stuff into a cartridge

  • @nattojelly8349
    @nattojelly8349 Před 3 lety +5

    His enthusiasm reminds me of my pattern drafting teacher in fashion school. A lovely fellow as passionate about the most delicate work in pattern making

  • @mega7157
    @mega7157 Před 3 lety

    I grew up watching you on mythbusters with my grandfather who is a macgyver type person and we loved watching the science and crazy fun every week. I also got to go to your exhibit at MOSI Florida and it was so awesome as a kid. It really got me into science and made it fun. I was your video and as I watched it I thought man he is a little crazy, but then I remembered to love science we all need that little bit of wild thought and energy. Thank you for all you do Adam 🙂.

  • @obsidian7644
    @obsidian7644 Před 2 lety

    I have gotten countless ideas and new tool additions from watching you adam for along time. The time and fingers ive probably saved. Thanks my man

  • @brendanlangord1687
    @brendanlangord1687 Před 3 lety

    I love how you talk about a tool that just feels right, and talk Starrett making things that feel right. I recently found an old Starrett cabinet scrapper at a junk sale and found it to be a tool that just felt right in my hands. It was probably 70 years old and was well worn, but it was in good shape and just had that feel to it. Also interesting is another one of favorite CZcams channels by Rex Krueger, who does a woodworking for humans series, also talks about how good Starrett tools are and how good they feel. Plus me being from Massachusetts, and Starrett being a local company gives me a small sense of pride. Thanks for your enthusiasm in what you do, and hope to see you out on the road do live shows again, you really are inspiring.

  • @alansmith4734
    @alansmith4734 Před 3 lety +166

    Adam Savage: I am a Machine Operator.
    Hospital: We have the records to prove it! =P

  • @familytruckster2009
    @familytruckster2009 Před 3 lety

    I bought some marking fluid and scribes earlier this year because I've seen Adam use it all the time. Made creating stuff so much easier and more precise.

  • @damienr735
    @damienr735 Před 3 lety

    I made my first scribe in vocational school 25 years ago. It was the first final we had. I still have and use it to this day. Our instructor told us this is your most important too you’ll ever make or own. So true.

  • @jsanti1000
    @jsanti1000 Před 2 lety +1

    Adam, You are one of my favorite tv personalities. I enjoy your spirit and positivity. You give legitimacy to my never ending desire to tinker and build. Be well.

  • @thundercricket4634
    @thundercricket4634 Před 3 lety +1

    It's always fun to see someone so gleefully enthusiastic as Adam gets.

  • @danplourde7853
    @danplourde7853 Před 3 lety

    I love how passionate you are about the simplest tools.

  • @michaelmcguire7687
    @michaelmcguire7687 Před 3 lety

    Back in the early 90's when I was an Engineering Technician - Sheet Metal Apprentice working at NASA Langley Research Center, we used the spray on Machinist's Blue layout fluid. Loved that stuff...worked awesomely.

  • @Forexfox99
    @Forexfox99 Před 2 lety

    My Starrett scribe came in the mail today and it is a beast!
    Definitely recommend.

  • @cycoholic
    @cycoholic Před 3 lety

    My old man was a machinist in a workshop owned by my grandfather, and I remember them using blue marking fluid when I was a wee tyke. Seeing someone using it now makes me feel all sentimental.

  • @techbox5600
    @techbox5600 Před 3 lety

    You don't understand how much I love this channel.

  • @Ferndalien
    @Ferndalien Před 2 lety

    The scribe and layout fluid are two tools that experienced machinists use from so early in their education that they stop thinking about it. Thanks for making this video.
    I like and use the General Tools scribes. Those have replaceable carbide tips. The carbide tip stays really sharp for quite a while.

  • @ronstar8857
    @ronstar8857 Před 3 lety

    Yet another excellent and informative video. Thanks, Adam! I have used Dykem for years. I use isopropyl alcohol to remove the dye. It works great and is less toxic than some of the alternatives.

  • @BrewPub
    @BrewPub Před 3 lety

    A height gage with a carbide scribing tip very valuable instrument to have, other measuring dimensions, you can use it to transfer scribed lines onto your part that has been coated with Dykem. A roller to apply the Dykem for flat surfaces is also another very usefull tool.
    I am in a CNC machining program at trade school. Last semester we were first on manual Bridgeports then conversatonal CNC Bridgeport style mills that could also be used in manual mode; the Dykem was used extensively to mark out locations for holes and features.

  • @jbilletz
    @jbilletz Před rokem

    I took 3 years of machine shop in high school. It’s one of the first things we learned to use. It’s good stuff.

  • @jaypeder7984
    @jaypeder7984 Před 3 lety

    I'm a machinist and one of my favorite projects was to make my own scribe. There are plenty of videos here on CZcams, I manually turned a body on a lathe, knurled the handle, drilled and tapped a hole for a set screw so I could make replaceable tips from old carbide tools! Most little end mills come with 1/8 shanks so if you break one and have leftovers, chuck it in a drill and grind on a tip. One of my favorite tools to see the beauty of others, but making your own is just a little more satisfying.

  • @MyAvitech
    @MyAvitech Před 3 lety

    One of the projects I had to do for training was to make a scribe. It was made to plan and was made up of several parts. Some were sent out for heat treat. It was a test for us to do small dia int. and ext. course and fine threading along with fit and finish and dimensional accuracy.

  • @jozetkrekel7625
    @jozetkrekel7625 Před 3 lety

    Mr Savage, you truely make me a better maker with your tips. Much love from The Netherlands.

  • @matjownz
    @matjownz Před 3 lety +3

    Ha “peeking above the clouds” is such a great way to describe using a good tool!

  • @NewfieMan98
    @NewfieMan98 Před 3 lety

    I'm not a machinist, I do not own any type of machines, but I certainly know quite a bit about Dykem Blue thanks to Adam and all these videos

  • @2Dumb2Show
    @2Dumb2Show Před 3 lety

    That stuff is also great for boat manufacturing. It helps show scratches and imperfection in the boat gel. And sometimes a guild cutting into stuff, but I always used it for tiny scratches.

  • @87FordMudder
    @87FordMudder Před 3 lety +61

    Adam: Good tools will last a lifetime.
    Also Adam: Uses perfectly good calipers to scribe a line.

    • @Sanyaenyenwa
      @Sanyaenyenwa Před 3 lety +9

      That's one of the very first things I was told *not* to do when I learned basic metalwork all those years ago. I guess that's the difference between being self-taught and having a formally trained teacher.

    • @5thearth
      @5thearth Před 3 lety +15

      Some calipers are high precision measuring instruments. Some are semi-disposable tools for quickly marking parts to a useful degree of precision.
      Accuracy is time is money, and sometimes time is worth more than finding, "correctly" using, and maintaining a pair of calipers that's accurate to .0001".

    • @sleepib
      @sleepib Před 3 lety +5

      ​@@5thearth That is about 50x more accurate than you should be using calipers for. A micrometer with vernier scale will read that low, but you should verify with gauge blocks.

    • @christianscustoms6429
      @christianscustoms6429 Před 3 lety +12

      I’ve heard this too but personally I don’t agree. Any precise measurements should be taken with a micrometer so I’ve never seen the benefit of high end calipers. I use the cheaper ones to scribe and do whatever, and get me close enough. From there I use the mic, but that’s just my take. Plenty of ways to do things and everyone has a right to their opinion.

    • @glennnicholls8510
      @glennnicholls8510 Před 3 lety +2

      Yes. That was 20 pushups of punishment in our high school shop.

  • @willardyost3227
    @willardyost3227 Před 3 lety

    So weird. I use to watch mythbusters as an 11 year old kid. Now im a grown adult watching a hero of mine as a kid show some of his tips and tricks. Sooooo Cool Adam! Thanks so much for doing this content!!!

  • @charltoncarswell9977
    @charltoncarswell9977 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks, Adam. I am seeing you as not just a ‘myth buster’, but as an experienced, genuine and wise patriarchal Journeyman of your trade(s), Thank you for giving back this hands-on knowledge and wisdom!

  • @Blowinshiddup
    @Blowinshiddup Před 3 lety

    What to do today... ooh, a video on blue dye. I'm in! That's why Adam is the king.

  • @andrewthemetalworker2595

    Adam, what you said about buying a quality tool brought back a memory of when I first started in metal working, my boss told me the same thing . I bought my first micrometer 27 years ago , on his advice I spent more than I could really afford at that time and bought a Brown and Sharp . 27 years later it still is accurate to .0001 .

  • @kevinbreckenridge6729
    @kevinbreckenridge6729 Před 3 lety

    Got a Starrett 4 inch tri square for about 20 bucks one time,the guy who messed up figured it out as he was ringing me up!

  • @MattTester
    @MattTester Před 3 lety +1

    Watching Chris of Clickspring applying this fluid to a slowly rotating part in the lathe is incredibly satisfying. I need to get some of this, I've had it on 'the list' for a while.

  • @peterarnt
    @peterarnt Před 3 lety

    I Really like this video, Adam. Your passion for tools is infectious. Cheers!

  • @johncrea9395
    @johncrea9395 Před 3 lety

    Adam
    Love my Starrett 70b, and a GREAT improvement/mode is to add a pocket clip so I keep it handy in my shirt/apron pocket, just use a pocket clip off a Pentel mechanical pencil, with a little careful bending it fits great on the Starrett.
    Also, the 70b uses a 3/16 in diameter scribe point unit, and I bought a 12in cobalt HSS aircraft drill bit, cut it into approx 3.5in lengths and grind the points, and you have a lifetime supply of replacements. You can also find 3/16 carbide rods on line for around $3-4 each, makes a super hard, long long lasting scribe point replacement as well. I know Starretts offers this scribe with a carbide point, but they really charge an arm and a leg for the privilege of having the carbide If you want a 3/16in x 3 carbide rod, drop me a line, I bought several to save on shipping and would be happy you send you want for YOU to sharpen
    John

  • @Kiz027
    @Kiz027 Před 3 lety

    at 6:00 mins in........... to about 7:00 mins..........that's the best explanation of how a maker progresses through their evolution of tools that I've ever heard. Well said.

  • @tmurray1972
    @tmurray1972 Před 3 lety

    It’s also very helpful on the lathe when using multiple drill
    sizes in the same hole or form drills. The dye will let you know if your depths are correct and your leaving material for the finish tool or tools. Also for diameters to clean up. Dykem is a must for machinist, but it has many uses for other stuff.

  • @philschopshop4591
    @philschopshop4591 Před 3 lety

    I love it. It helps people make much more accurate marks! This is a wonderful thing to share. It’s so simple and so practical! I have to make parts for ww1/WW2 airplanes. This is what I do.

  • @solidacid1337
    @solidacid1337 Před 3 lety

    I've had Dykem on my mind all day, trying to remember what is was called.
    I've never used it myself, only seen it in videos.
    And of course I come home from work to find a video about it the top of my feed!

  • @thevulgaralchemist6589

    I recall that in the Replica Props Forum, Adam was the one who identified layout fluid as being used for the blue on a Zorg Industries weapon in "The Fifth Element"

  • @thisisnotascreename
    @thisisnotascreename Před 3 lety +1

    Every time I learn something new!! Thank you, Adam!

  • @hermnarciso2423
    @hermnarciso2423 Před 3 lety

    Thanks for this Adam! Just got my Starrett delivered! I have a smaller scribe which was my dads and looks almost identical but it’s not a Starrett, (inscription is from “ The General Hardware Co NY”). It’s quite old. The Starrett tool certainly does feel more substantial.

  • @GoetiaTV
    @GoetiaTV Před 3 lety +1

    I've never fantasized about having a machine shop until Adam's videos.

    • @chuxmix65
      @chuxmix65 Před 3 lety

      Check out "This Old Tony", "Ca Lem", and "Clickspring" on YooToob. I think you'll like them.

  • @jpolar394
    @jpolar394 Před 3 lety

    I remember using that stuff in metal shop in the early 70s, Man, what a buzz we got from it.

  • @stoneinthefield1
    @stoneinthefield1 Před 3 lety

    Just bought some for the first time. Was tired of painting sharpie as fluid to scribe on. worth every dollar.

  • @FlyChuckyFly
    @FlyChuckyFly Před 3 lety

    Adam, the other quick and convenient use for the Starrett scribe is to use the point as a quick alignment point in the mill by chucking it either in your drill chuck or collett to then center over a mark. Maybe not quite as precise as using an edge finder but can be pretty good and pretty fast.

  • @snoopu2601
    @snoopu2601 Před 3 lety

    I worked with that blue in high school metal shop class one of the first thing we used for making a metal box. Year's later when welding for a shop they had the blue there but rarely used it.

  • @jacekgospodarczyk4384
    @jacekgospodarczyk4384 Před 3 lety

    Dykem Blue marking fluid is great and resistant to high temperatures during machining, unlike Sharpie marker. I use both of them as needed. Thank You Adam.

  • @WanderingLostMC
    @WanderingLostMC Před 3 lety

    I have 4 of those pocket scribes by Starrett. Love them. (multiple work spaces and one in my tool bag)

  • @RaymondPerry77
    @RaymondPerry77 Před 3 lety

    Before the pandemic, I worked in an engineering shop, and not only do we use Dykem fluid quite regularly, but Dykem also sells a "Prep and Remover fluid", that is really good at cleaning the metal surfaces before applying the marking fluid, and also removing it afterward without any film or residue all in the same fluid, that I am sure can be purchased just about anywhere the marking fluid is also sold.

  • @silverbullet7434
    @silverbullet7434 Před 3 lety

    After vocational school during my apprenticeship I had to do metrology and drafting mechanical drawing ore on hardening metals. But I enjoyed laying out my materials to be machined. No CNC back then tape run machine was our first introduction to them. Had many big shops calling to hire on. He'll even the army offered grade E5to sign me up. Feels good to do layout its lost art now.

  • @handydans482
    @handydans482 Před 3 lety

    Hey adam thnx for inspiring me to become a machinist i found my calling thnx to YOU!!! im a lifetime subscriber.. p.s your show is the best. Nothing like a good video after a long day machining..👍

  • @fatalicus
    @fatalicus Před 3 lety +26

    Can highly recommend one of the latest videos on the main Clickspring channel, where he tries out different alternatives for what they might have used instead of marking fluid in the ancient world. a very informative video on what properties of marking fluid is important, and what could have been possible in the past.

    • @Astilath
      @Astilath Před 3 lety

      That was fascinating 😍

  • @georgeboyes864
    @georgeboyes864 Před 3 lety

    When i did metalworking in school as well as the pots with a brush, we had marker pen type things with the blue in to use aswell

  • @scholyg
    @scholyg Před 3 lety

    I'm an electrician but man, i could watch you talk about tool like its a movie lol, respect A.S

  • @izarekrih2749
    @izarekrih2749 Před 3 lety

    For marking on layout fluid i use one half of an old jewelry compass with interchangeable tips
    In case of importend surfaces i dont want to scratch, even polished surfaces
    I have made tip inserts out of steel, copper, aluminum and brass wire

  • @mzmegazone
    @mzmegazone Před 3 lety

    Wow, as soon as he applied the fluid I was hit by a massive sense memory of the *smell* of the solvent evaporating from the fluid as it dries. I haven't used it in 25+ years, since I worked in a metal shop, but boy that's still in the neurons.

  • @rexmundi8154
    @rexmundi8154 Před 3 lety +1

    When I started out as a machinist, I had to buy tools second hand. The Starrett stuff I got is by far the highest quality tools I’ve ever owned. The older stuff wears so well, they last several lifetimes.

  • @Indy509
    @Indy509 Před 3 lety +1

    I forgot about this stuff! Back when I was a machinist, we used to use this with veneer calipers for precise hole drilling. Well as precise as you can get on an old clapped out Bridgeport from the 50's.

    • @Cienega32
      @Cienega32 Před 3 lety

      I still have a 40+ year old metal can of Dykem from an old love affair I had w/ a Bridgeport in the late 70s. We also had an old clapper in the shop but we used it as a hogger when needed. It was kept in the "rough room" next to an old convertible Cincinnati that could run as a vert or a horiz mill. Made 3 F-14 wing hinges on that big green ugly thing. I miss those days.

  • @miken87p
    @miken87p Před 3 lety

    I like the extra weight in quality small hand tools like awls picks and scribes. More stable in the hands and just feels not flimsy.

  • @HunterRodrigez
    @HunterRodrigez Před 3 lety +207

    Me after watching most tool tip videos:
    "Oh, that seems like a tool I could use... alright... time to figure out what the hell it's called in my language and if it's even a thing in my country..."

    • @hardpack187
      @hardpack187 Před 3 lety +2

      USA! USA! USA!

    • @HunterRodrigez
      @HunterRodrigez Před 3 lety +66

      @@hardpack187 buddy, I get to use the metric system...
      REST OF THE WORLD! REST OF THE WORLD! REST OF THE WORLD!

    • @JackrabbitCrafts
      @JackrabbitCrafts Před 3 lety +15

      I've used nail polish for the vaguely related purpose of etching metal. Nail polish is also a paint that comes off with acetone and can be scratched into.
      If you have no luck finding the official stuff, you can at least find that.

    • @hardpack187
      @hardpack187 Před 3 lety +2

      @@HunterRodrigez "Get to"? Like it's a privilege?

    • @HunterRodrigez
      @HunterRodrigez Před 3 lety +15

      @@hardpack187 compared to basically being forced to use the imperial system? Yes, yes it is.

  • @Dandoright82
    @Dandoright82 Před 3 lety +4

    I used a spray version when I worked at ThyssenKrupp cutting circles and rings.

  • @joshuaschisser2967
    @joshuaschisser2967 Před 3 lety +11

    Dykem also comes in a bingo-dobber style bottle. This is an awesome application that I find makes less of a mess for me. Your results may vary.

    • @wbfaulk
      @wbfaulk Před 3 lety +3

      *dauber

    • @stevenvohl
      @stevenvohl Před 3 lety

      Someone else makes one that looks like a large square end sharpie.

  • @matthewdaigle7302
    @matthewdaigle7302 Před 3 lety

    my first scribe was a needle scaler needle I found in the scrap bin at work and sharpened the tip

  • @davez8801
    @davez8801 Před 3 lety

    Great to see this, it teaches the basics. We use to claim 0.010” accuracy on small layouts. 0.030” was easy.

  • @chrisosh9574
    @chrisosh9574 Před 3 lety

    On metal or wood (or anything else), I always mark the waste side of a cut, I learned that in the metal working class as an eleven year old in the 60s and have never forgotten it.

  • @kiwdwks
    @kiwdwks Před 3 lety

    Love your tool tips! Always a must see.

  • @MartijnBeekhuis
    @MartijnBeekhuis Před 3 lety

    Glad I watched it, you never know if tomorrow it suddenly became a members only vid.
    I was looking forward to finish the Q&A vid from yesterday but NO cigar apparently :-(

  • @j.cooper2246
    @j.cooper2246 Před 3 lety

    As a former machinists for 12 years. We used dykem daly. What was better for gags was transfer blue..bench hands used all the time for spotting. Us machinists used it to get laughs .lmao..had some great times and learned a ton...we custom wrote our programs and no lazy button pushing. Funny 24 years later my brother is still in the trade and ask me all the time.come back and work with him again.. i dont miss the slivers..

  • @kjhoskins
    @kjhoskins Před 3 lety

    Great stuff. Thanks, Adam.

  • @ZFISHTANK
    @ZFISHTANK Před 3 lety

    I'm getting a three in one and two work bench set up and thank you for reminding this is another thing I forgot I need to get lol

  • @firegutnevyn4553
    @firegutnevyn4553 Před 3 lety

    Secret sharpie tip: useful for marking flame cuts on glasss. After initially burning off, the marks become visible again at a higher temperature. This second stage of visibility burns off at working temps. Super useful for component uniformity

  • @johncrea9395
    @johncrea9395 Před 3 lety

    Adam
    They also make Dykem in a dauber format ( part #190523) which for small parts is a lot less messy than the brush form. You can also buy refillable dauber bottle on Amazon and fill from your big can of Dykem for a lower total cost than the pre-packaged dauber version
    John

  • @MAYERMAKES
    @MAYERMAKES Před 3 lety

    A scriber is agreat first lathe project, I made mine myself fro ma brass rod and a piece of stainless steel salvaged from a whisk and it served me well ever since. Clickspring did a great tutorial on the Make: channel a few years back.

  • @illmounturmother
    @illmounturmother Před 3 lety +1

    My pops thought it was a good idea to leave on the discovery channel to put me and my sibling to bed.. well long story short.. my whole childhood was looking up to the mythbusters team. HANDS DOWN THE BEST SHOW EVER! thank you, mythbusters for showing me the difference between blowing stuff up and science.. (writing it down) lol

  • @showcase-me
    @showcase-me Před 3 lety

    its funny that I started studying engineering and during the workshops, I started using a similar method to make a plan for complicated parts by scratching the surface, but with no liquid.
    I think ill mark them with a blue sharpie and scratch them from now on. Its genius! thank u Adam :):):)

  • @masterkief628
    @masterkief628 Před 3 lety

    2:12 those wheel squeeks were genuine. Adam is awesome!

  • @12012004
    @12012004 Před 3 lety

    Adam, you are the best!! Thanks for sharing so much

  • @Graciepie420
    @Graciepie420 Před 3 lety

    They also make Dykem bottles with a felt/marker like pad under the cap so you only need to rub it on the surface instead of having to paint it on with a brush! I know we use those all the time at the shop I work at.

  • @charlesthomas1142
    @charlesthomas1142 Před 3 lety

    Our shop uses Blue marking fluid to paint chisel bevels before grinding, particularly woodturning chisels. The Blue sticks to the steel better than a Sharpie or felt tipped marker.

  • @InteractiveDNA
    @InteractiveDNA Před 3 lety

    Yep! tools matters big time. But what matters most is to lesson from those with great experience and skills set. Knowledge here does not apply much, but knowing the tools yes, experience them, connect with them as one. So he gave you great tips that knowing your tools matters. And getting the right tools is the key or you end-up spending more to create less.

  • @skeletonboxers7336
    @skeletonboxers7336 Před 3 lety

    We use something very similar to this called ground in printmaking. For chemical etching we use hard or soft ground which is a brown lacquer

  • @Ziz62266
    @Ziz62266 Před 3 lety

    Side bit of trivia - ILM used Dykem Blue to paint R2-D2 back in the day. There's all kinds of discussions and efforts among R2 builders as to how to recreate that color via standard paints.

  • @abc-pn6yi
    @abc-pn6yi Před 3 lety

    I am an electrician and I do a lot of layout work on panels for cutting holes and I never knew about a scratch awl until I worked with an old timer and now I can't help but carry an awl and a punch with me everyday.. its not as precise as this but its something I can't go without having now..

  • @TheChosenOne690
    @TheChosenOne690 Před 3 lety

    In my machining class we made our own scriber tool with a replacable tips so you would make one that is comfortable to your own hand

  • @charlie9ine
    @charlie9ine Před 3 lety

    It looks like it feels good. Weigh, balance are really critical. Price is often important but not always. It’s what makes the best of your skills

  • @davedunn4285
    @davedunn4285 Před 3 lety

    Good advice Adam I wish I had known about Starett years ago

  • @jonnyphenomenon
    @jonnyphenomenon Před 3 měsíci

    I've found that a tungsten electrode for TIG welding makes a perfect scribe, and making a scribe holder is a great project for a new lathe owner. even on a small lathe. totally worth it.

  • @JimOHalloran
    @JimOHalloran Před 3 lety

    As I got more experienced at wood work, I found that I usually the skill I needed to build what I wanted to build. But, if I wanted to level up the quality of the build, I needed to be more precise with my cuts. Which gets to the thing Adam has said before about what side of the line you cut to, but also taking care in measuring and marking out. It's the difference between using a blunt carpenters pencil, vs a fine mechanical pencil or marking knife. That's the time you're really going to get the best value from really good marking tools, when your skills let you cut to/on the line, and you now need to put the line in exactly the right place.
    Adam needs to take a trip to Montana to do a colab with Alec Steel. Every time I see Alec hand tool a collet into his mill, I think of the air tool kit Adam did a tested video on years ago. And both Adam and Alec have a fondness for making things and blue Dychem.

  • @thisguy1520
    @thisguy1520 Před 3 lety +2

    When I upgraded my layout tools, l went with all vintage Starrett squares, scribes, and dividers.