I'm newish to the trade, so videos like this help me tremendously. Thank you.
@tracylemme13753 роки тому
I have been using insert tooling for one half of a century, and I must say that I gained an appreciable amount of knowledge from this video. Thank you very much.
@ilikewaffles36892 роки тому
Y would u say half a century like that
@ehss192Рік тому
@@ilikewaffles3689 y wuld u tipe with 1 lehter like that.
@ilikewaffles3689Рік тому
@@ehss192 my guy...
@maxwellmuhlebach59214 роки тому
very good Video! Im new in machining since 1 Year and I am doing my apprenticeship in the next 3 Years now. Its amazing to have this video. I learned alot to create a better chip action etc. . Thx alot!!
@rameshtripathy59785 років тому
Excellent description & demonstration ! It is very helpful to students ,technicians ,engineers & manufacturers ! Thanks a lot for your valuable explanations !
@ronmiller6826 років тому
I absolutely love this video. Very informative. Thank you so much. I'm trying to get back into machining parts and pieces.
@mohitadlakha9828 років тому
Very informative. Being new to this field, was looking for something like this. Thanks !
@userwl28508 років тому
really good explanations.
@movax20hРік тому
I never used a cutting machine (other than maybe a drill and a saw), but modern machines always fascinate me, and this video did bring some light to design decisions and how it works.
@gangleweed4 роки тому
It is with great sadness that after 60 + years of active machining I realise that I really know nothing when it comes to turning and milling with today's modern insert tooling...…...but all is not lost, I just invested in a bunch of tool holders and inserts on Bangood and am set to relaunch my career.....in terms of years, 80 is the new 40 so they say.... just gotta get outta my chair more often.
@gangleweed4 роки тому
@Tony Wilson Everything you wrote ignores the fact that it is money that drives the engine of commerce. What is the point of producing goods that you cannot sell because the Chinese are selling the same thing just as good and cheaper. Old skills are as they are.....old and out of date and they will never compete on the playing fields of todays manufacturing or marketing. It's good to know how to sharpen a HSS tool blank but when the factory is heavily into carbide insert technology HSS has no place on the menu......unless you're a hobby worker in a backyard garage scratching a living. I'm a golden oldie, extremely long in the tooth but I detest old fashioned ideas and methods. To solve the problem of supply you must cater for the market or die in the dust......nobody wants or loves a hasbeen especially in high tech manufacture......you have to compete, but more so you have to be a better competitor than your opposition, and you have to be able to exist on a bowl of rice and 2 bucks a day to stay in the race......metaphorically speaking. The end message is do what you do best and don't look at the stars when you are still crawling around on the ground.
@gangleweed4 роки тому
@Tony Wilson Well one thing's for sure, even if I have 60 + years at the coal face, working with 2020 engineering methods still doesn't make me a wunderkind because I can read a drawing or grind a tool.....that is old school and if you want to exist in the modern workplace of today you have to be in the know with current practices.....my experience is basic, learned in the late 50's, but so was Trevethick's when he invented steam engines that pumped water out of deep mine shafts.....that was with beam engines and despite all his know how nobody would employ him today if he was still around. In essence, one must grow with the technology, embracing it as it evolves and improving and promoting it for your personal agenda. I don't think anyone can accumulate all the past knowledge and be a jack of all trades.....I would say that if you evolve in your job description you will soon lose the basic skill ability due to lack of practice and unuse. Who would want to still do CAD designing when you get promoted to seniority and guide the ship instead of working on it. Engineering is one area that is expanding in new ways to make it more profitable for manufacturers, and that means if you can't keep up with the flow you will be sitting in the back row watching it happen. The other side of the coin is profitability, no matter how you get to it the bottom line will always be the deciding factor in manufacturing. The Chinese have hit the button square on the jaw.......but their culture and wage structuring has a lot to do with their prosperity and the West will not match that scenario while they are driven by money for time.
@pentachronic3 роки тому
@Tony Wilson I know your reasoning is well intended but from a realistic standpoint, using the latest CNC is way more repeatable and way more accurate than the old milling methods. Yes it takes an experienced Engineer to figure out the best profiles and methods to machine a part that has the highest quality/strengths etc. But at the end of the day it all comes down to what is NEEDED. We can philosophise about the good old days when we made hand crafted stuff that would/and has lasted a century, but if you're making a base for a frying pan that will be disposed of in 5 years, why worry about it ? I work in the electronics/semiconductor business and I have seen massive strides in automation and the workflow. The modern pick and place machines are incredibly efficient and accurate. Why would I want a factory floor with people hand placing when the economies and accuracies of CNC machines far far outweighs the cost of people ? We have to keep learning and have to accept that our industries change. It's the nature of the beast. Evolve or die, as they say!!
@pentachronic3 роки тому
@Tony Wilson I am over 50 and have designed a massive amount of electronics in my career. I have designed space systems through to consumer electronics and have designed a lot of products. I am a bench development kind of person and have a lot of hands on experience. Don't be so patronising please. The point is that one has to move with the times. If I had the attitude of I must do everything by hand I would not be designing muliti million gate asics and ICs. The tools, compilers, CAD and software along with the manufacturing technologies have changed rapidly in the last 10 years. I have to evolve and keep up with that. If I have to use automation, so be it. It's the same with mechanical engineering. Yes maintenance is an issue, but design in based on solid foundations. You now have 3D printing, metal sintering, SLA and 3D metal fabrication technologies. They bring in new techniques and better efficiencies such as completely enclosed manifolds which could not be machined using older techniques. New alloy fabrications with mixed ceramic technologies, lighter weight pourous materials, carbon fibre 3d printing. The world is changing. Whether you like it or not. There will always be a need to maintain older equipment however there will be a time where that equipment becomes obsolete and is replaced by newer/faster/better/more efficient designs. It's called progress. Mining equipment is changing. New CNC higher accuracy, higher speed techniques are/have been developed to improve efficiencies of mining too. Maybe slower than other industries but it is changing. This is not to say that solid engineering foundations should be ignored, but also, with that said, neither should new approaches using modern techniques be poo-poo'ed either. This is where we meet in the middle and make sure the new is better than the old and worth doing, which in most cases is true. Most modern companies are structured and work that way. They have brilliant people from all generations and cultures. BTW, you should check out AvE on youtube. He is a mining engineer and a brilliant guy but you know what, he has a Haas CNC milling machine for part design/fabrication. He's moving/keeping up with the times. Now as far as you working with "incompetent" guys, I guess you must just have shit management or you are the last of a dying breed of people. Maybe the world has moved on from people like us who can repair to a module replacement business model. I can't say in your field but it may make better economical sense. It most definitely does in my field. Maybe the precision of parts in your field now required swapping out machine components ? Maybe tolerances are a lot tighter now ?
@pentachronic3 роки тому
@Tony Wilson Watch this and tell me tha the old way is better !! ukposts.info/have/v-deo/haCQeoahn22co3U.html
@geoffankrett701220 днів тому
Brilliant informative video that will have left most of us with an open mouth and a look of utter confusion 😂
@davidking54683 роки тому
I have never used anything like this in my life but found the video absolutely fascinating!
@ammarmustafa19505 років тому
thank u for uploading this, helped me very mutch since iam new in cnc education thanks again
@robin2.7707 років тому
nice it's very useful to me with my study....thank you I appreciate that
@peterwilliams47952 роки тому
I follow Kurtis at CEE in Queensland Australia and he puts the type of inserts he uses in his videos and now I understand what he means after watching this video thankyou
@mohanm15875 років тому
Well expaination and covered more information ...Thanks a lot for the great video
@tomherd41797 років тому
Very informative and presented well. Thanks!!
@MrNemonsteri7 років тому
Thanks a lot! Great video, very informative.
@romanplutok62026 місяців тому
Good one! Found no mistakes and it covers some imporant, but not well-known things - great content for 25 mins video
@Phobos_Deimos3 роки тому
Thank you, now I know something about metal cutting.
@janakiraman88115 років тому
very usfull information I watch full video thanking you sir janakiraman
@chandrakantdange66663 роки тому
Very good video. Request to provide a small programme to select certain insert parameters by inputting hard points of machining process in question.
@devarshivyas5 років тому
Thank you very much for this great effort/ it is very useful video
@user-nj1wp1vl7b3 роки тому
Good information for lathe machining. 좋은 정보임 ^^ Thank you.
@Alicia376877 років тому
Uno de los mejores videos que he visto con diferencia.
@alisardo11195 років тому
Very informative video, amazing machine ingeneering work.
@BaradaGuitars3 роки тому
You can learn from this video more than what you can do in 2 years of studying these things!
@derick34823 роки тому
this IS what they teach in school at least in canada. but nothing is perfect and obviously outdated too. when is this from? early 2000s.....
@macgyver151478 років тому
Great video. Very informative. I epically like that part at the beginning where they leave a threat to sue if anyone shares this.
@sarfaraja22836 років тому
यह टूल कहां मिलता है
@FrustratedBaboon6 років тому
No. Thats not what it says. You cannot use this video without permission in your business and charge people by duplicating this video. You can send people to UKposts but thats it.
@flapperf42375 років тому
Lol
@jimburnsjr.7 років тому
Exceptional video. thanks very much for posting it.
@cossiedriverrs4 роки тому
Brilliant, thank you!
@rusticagenerica3 роки тому
This video is award winning. I just nominated it for the 2021 Oscars.
@gatorwing62313 роки тому
Thank You, I have many cutting tools that need the cutting triangles. Confusing to me.
@cossiedriverrs3 роки тому
Excellent, many thanks indeed... I learned a LOT :-)
@waheedahmed20937 років тому
A very good aknowlage able video. Briefing deeply machining machanisam.
@DSP_DJ6 років тому
Very very Nice knowledge ... really nice...
@saleempahthan5895 років тому
v good vidio sir
@GottliebGoltz4 роки тому
A wealth of information thank you's.
@goodsaw81997 років тому
Хорошее видео!Не понимаю я Английский язык-но по фильму всё понял!Такие резцы у нас в СССР были в 1985 году-сам я учился на токаря и работал ими!Названы они были по Фамилии изобретателя!Набор сменных победитовых пластин-до сих пор дома лежат!Спасибо за видео всем удачи и большой привет из России!
@stanbondarev92567 років тому
Leila. Habib He's written that he doesn't speak and understand english but this video carries back him graduating tech college 30 years past. So he wants to brag that he's keeping a set of such inserts since that time and yet no doubt that he is from russia.
@goodsaw81997 років тому
настроил переводчик-друг мой я понял тебя!Ролик озвучен не на английском языке!?right?Спасибо за притензию-буду внимательней!Смотрел видео очень тихо!Зачем слушать громко-если не понимаешь языка-если конечно это песни не Бон Джови!?Удачи восемь раз!!!!!!!!
@stanbondarev92567 років тому
на английском, конечно -- американский вариант, правда. Но суть в том, что невозможно "национализировать" Интернет -- и это большое благо. Даже "языковой барьер" оказывается не такой уж и непреодолимый -- быстрой найдётся кто-то, кто поймёт тебя и переведёт твою речь тому, кто не понял. Но английский учить очень надо -- это по факту международный язык общения. А машинный перевод ещё долго будет "курить нервно в сторонке". И такие видео -- хорошее средство для освоения языка: по видеокартинке и своему опыту понимаешь, что происходит, а по слуху сопоставляешь, как это описывается на изучаемом языке. Желаю успехов.
@miguelarevalo49866 років тому
Que mierda hace un ruso aqui!!!!. English or Spanish please...
@mrmissdestiny59535 років тому
@Leila Habib Because he does not know English, ma'am!
@KingBoneezee5 років тому
I may never use this information but it looks cool
@flaplaya7 років тому
Very informative video, thanks.
@halilyuksel15567 років тому
fla playa
@levangogichaev76234 роки тому
отличное видео !!было бы с переводом вообще было бы шикарно
@kennedy7503 місяці тому
Awesome presentation. Very informative
@rakeshjasud47855 років тому
very helpfull video thank you sir.
@The007Weasel5 років тому
A very good video, but I came here hoping to find info on whether to 'invest' in a face mill cutter for my hobby mill. At 16.40 the parameters to consider when choosing a facemill surprisingly do NOT include available horsepower of the machine. I'm worried that replacing a single point flycutter with a 4 or 5 point face mill, means that I'll need (theoretically) 4 or 5 times the power.
@farmersonly7002Рік тому
The channel "NYC CNC" is a pretty good resource in terms of finding the correct hp for a tool. They even provide a spreadsheet that calculates the hp required for a specific tool and cut size. The calculations are tailored to endmills so they may not fit perfectly but hopefully this helps.
@1287898427 років тому
Thanks for the information.
@tinh40757 років тому
Thank you so much!...
@piotrmajor1126 років тому
It was soo coool! Thx you! Sub , and Like. It is the best movie about tool's what have I ever seen.
@donaldnaymon32704 роки тому
Great info. Thank you
@amandastek69755 років тому
Absolutly great video
@josmellsalcedoeguizabal2586 років тому
Excellent video (Cutting Tool Geometries Lathe and Mill SME) could you give me one in Spanish please
@flobeeonekinobee23536 років тому
Shame I couldn't get my boss to watch something like this.
@mcozpda33924 роки тому
tanks for the info . cheers .. simplify the life ..
@horvis1varnsdorf3 роки тому
Great video, thanks!
@kreasiumum3 роки тому
thank you, nice to see and learn about it
@TheMetalButcher7 років тому
All these leave me with is more questions. Although it did help some. I need to find some good cutters for small lathes and a bridgeport.
@tomherd41797 років тому
Agree. Great video, but targeted for higher end industrial cnc type users. I came away with the same thoughts as you as well. But still worth watching and learning.
@mohdafiq23957 років тому
try mini lathe tool in market
@kv43027 років тому
For the Bridgeport I would only recommend high speed steel end mills. 2 flutes for aluminium, 4 for steel. A single point fly cutter with a carbide insert could work, too. Such machines don't have the power or rigidity to make good use of multiple insert face mills. For small lathes again high speed steel is just fine. it is significantly cheaper and you'll learn a lot more about cutter geometry while grinding your own tool bits. Abom79 has a great video on HSS tool bits with a chip breaker. Cutting tools with brazed on carbide can be very useful for steel as well. If you must get carbide inserts, DCGT is a good one to start with. I'd strongly recommend using different inserts for steel, alu, and stainless steel. It makes a huge difference in performance. Hope that helps! Source: machinist
@jeancampbell83607 років тому
mohd afiq
@soarster7 років тому
Too: mohd afiq, "Mini lathe tool in market"? Please expand a little. Searched and got me nowhere good. Thanks.
@garyr70273 роки тому
I learned enough to attempt a project, and just enough to probably screw up a few times.
@hannibal2.0673 роки тому
Me too...
@saidabdulle45927 років тому
wich machine made this cutting tools, I want how to make it Not how to use, anyway it is great video thanks for sharing with us good job
@alantovey81987 років тому
Said Abdulle benb
@nadeemtajraja23134 роки тому
Very good information Thanks
@mrcpu99993 роки тому
I enjoyed this.
@dheereshsharma87976 років тому
Sir please also let me which type of chips should form in continuous peeling machine
@spatialguy55715 років тому
Excellent!
@shazzadhossain43945 років тому
good n informative video
@srirams61654 роки тому
Very good
@mva80824 роки тому
this is a damn good video
@avijitroy92564 роки тому
Thank you for unique vedio
@dheereshsharma87976 років тому
Sir we have a continuous bar peeling machine and the dia of the bar is 10.00 mm and depth of cut is .50mm but I am not able to tool as on the surface tool marks observed .
@curiosity63208 років тому
good explaination
@michaelbabatunde39154 роки тому
Very good and instructive
@tomaskn7 років тому
thank you for this video
@yogindernathsharma42596 років тому
Tomas van eccelpoel ..
@souadzh12727 років тому
I really love Mechanical Engineering am I teach and I hope to succeed in it
@alirezaamiri795 років тому
hahaاha.... but I love kpop insted.... sdnd my beautiful queens
@bunga877 років тому
how are made the tools , what kind of ingredients have?
@dheereshsharma87976 років тому
please suggest me i have a rotating peeler machine but can't find the best tool bit. we want to tool nickel alloys but we dont know which design is suitable for us. Please suggest me if you have some suggestions
@elijahopoku90274 роки тому
I like you excellent work, but please how can I get those cutting tools, am a leaner, and am lack of tools please help me to get some
@1287898427 років тому
Are those industrial diamond ?
@arpeggi2999Рік тому
I wish I had a 16mm projector to watch this on.
@sreelu236 років тому
Sir ... I want another 43 videos of SME... Fundamentals of manufacturing process video series
@sreelu236 років тому
Sir, pls send the link for remaining videos .. sreevasthava.3323@gmail.com
@The_Joker_7 років тому
Reverend Lovejoy 👍👍👍
@zaz4667Рік тому
17:50 A right hand cutter rotates counter clockwise. And left hand cutter rotates clockwise? Yeah if your looking at it from the bottom up! But I always thought you look at it from the top down! The videos statement about the hand of a cutter is backwards isn't it?
@salmanmns38757 років тому
effective knwldge thank you
@guillermobautista72437 років тому
FUE MUY EDUCATIVO EL VIDEO AUNQUE ESTE EN INGLES LAS MAQUINAS HERRAMIENTAS ME FASCINAN SOY ING. MECANICO ESPECIALISTA EN MAQUINAS HERRAMIENTAS
@nickhulme53317 років тому
"each insert edge alternatively enters the cut" Punk? New Wave?
@Parfen_Rogojin7 років тому
Although your video has a very clear accomplishing voice it would be grade if you wrote your English subtitles down, because it's slightly difficult to understand a lot of your technological terms for foreigners. In the whole it's a good introducing video.
@origamimavin6 років тому
In the settings on the bottom right, you can now change the speed of the video to slow it down or speed it up. Slowing it down can help comprehension, and speeding it up is good when the person talks slow or takes too long to give the information you're looking for.
@surajkumaramishra6 років тому
Whats the difference between chamfer and radious on the edge
@omkarmadekar15877 років тому
Thanks a lot ....
@gengizkirkuk72557 років тому
beast job
@Gabriel-qo4ih9 місяців тому
I like this videoclip. G...❤
@dudaprates17 років тому
obrigado, vou traduzir isso.
@user-xu9rm8ps9z6 років тому
Хорошее видео, знаю английский но принципиально писать буду по русски, хочу также предложить учить русский язык пригодится когда совместно будем жарить барбекю на Марсе, не всегда же нам какашками бросаться. Хочу напомнить что только русский может себя подорвать гранатой если видит перед собой врага. Давайте дружить. GOOGL вам в помощь для перевода.
@r.s.h15234 роки тому
So nice.....👌
@jr5401234 роки тому
Not even a minute in and I've seen nothing but kennametal tools lmao.
@irredeemabledeplorable52272 роки тому
kudos to those who stayed up nights and broke a lot of carbide perfecting this stuff...
@jg001632067 місяців тому
that seems like it was cobbled together from other videos.
@piyushthakare34955 років тому
I am facing a trouble of machining SAE8620 material. I can't find a suitable tool
@19MadMatt72Рік тому
Are we allowed to show this at my shop?
@SurendraKumar-mu5pq7 років тому
good job
@christopherclark84545 років тому
Thank you
@piyushthakare34955 років тому
Kindly suggest me a good turning tool the blank dia will be 25 mm Turning Dia will be 20.1. I am searching tool for my Traub machine
@babasahebkalepatil13994 роки тому
piyush Thakare call me
@shridharsirivirat3 роки тому
Hi sir please give one video about tool momentum calculation
@musallamarwani21677 років тому
thanks too much
@jambukiyasahdev72205 років тому
Face taper 8.53angal 163.0 to 74.3255 dia 6.65 height
@durgagaranja2572 роки тому
sir any hard tool kit they cut hard bering
@aliiraq31795 років тому
Gooood
@joeallen22866 років тому
Federal law you say? FUCK IT! Just gonna send it!!!!