FIXING DIES AND GUIDES for the power hammer - Nazel 3B Rebuild - Part 2
2021 ж. 25 Нау.
35 094 Рет қаралды
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Thanks to everybody who joined me in the premiere, that was fun! Make sure to head over to my website if you want an axe! Look forward to seeing you in the next one!
How is it going...?
After six days you uploaded the part 2 Can't think 🤔 when will be part 3 is going to upload...!🤯
4:42 it shuld be solid bronze and it is supposed to be that way
Martin listens to some good music!
Tim and Martin are getting creative with ads xD
Tim it’s awesome that while your talent clearly shines through, your humble and honest enough to admit you don’t know everything. Yet you are clearly smart enough to learn what you don’t know and find the solutions as needed. Your skills continue to grow and impress.
BEST ad of Kove I saw. Great restoration video too. Loving your content!
I hope you're still making axes when I'm out of college, because I couldn't think of any other I'd want! Also, this video's music selection was particularly awesome! Cheers gentlem....uh, cheers guys!
That’s the biggest mill I’ve seen in a home shop. You got some nice stuff!
The milling sequences are so awesome.
I really enjoy these power hammer refurbishment vids!
13:07 never knew you were a twin !
Here we go
Great video, at 4:00 I didn't think you were going to say "Shim's" :-)
I could watch this stuff all day, great videos
Love the content!! I hope to own one of your pieces one day
nice to see a little more of Martin
Glad you decided to go ahead and work on it!
great work, I can't wait to watch the rest of this restoration
That was fun to watch during a premier. First time seeing one. Good work so far!
Nice touch leaving the tooling sounds under the music!!
Great work as usual Tim you are really growing!
Yee i live in BC to💪💪
This was a really interesting one. I was lost most of the time. But I got the gist. I love machining.
LOL got a commuter 2 last year when Hoonigan advertised it, great segment btw!
Nice work bro
Enjoying these types of videos, thanks.
Everytime Tim talks about the hard to remove wedges I think of Hand Tool Rescue's Odyssey.
Honestly i think power hammers just look so cool
Hey Tim, good video👍 I have a couple of suggestions though, you might want to invest in a hydraulic lift cart. I would hate for you or Martin to hurt your back lifting thing too heavy. Princess Auto has them at reasonable prices. Also, a Noga or Mitutoyo hydraulic mag base are awesome for easy setup because they have only one nob to tighten to lock all segments. Great job and some very nice old equipment too. Nice to see a fellow BC Boy can find some good equipment, it’s not always easy to do out here. Looking forward to your next video Ray
Love the little spiel with Martin,also from what l can see you are a pretty good machinist. To save a lot of time you should get yourself a 6 inch milling head for that really nice old mill. It would save you a lot of time. You are definitely a better machinist than I am a blacksmith. The one thing about the trades is we are always learning.
I think some hand scraping would have done well getting the guides set. You should look into scraping for machine repair. It's a very interesting subject.
Love this
Very interesting episode !!!!!!!!!!!
Blacksmith, welder, power hammer fixer, etc. etc. Do you have any automotive skills? I need a starter replaced on my old Ford Explorer and need some help...
Hey Tim. You are just amazing at your work. Did u think about a mobile crane in the shop like somewhere to 500 kg? I work with one and I think is what u need. The type that u can pull it yourself to the spot u need. The remote is only for up and down. I could send u some pics if u want to see it.
Talk about metal slivers. I never see you wear gloves. How long do the cutter heads last on the milling machine?
Awesome vid
Bro the in video ad was on fire.. It makes me want to buy one but it's not in my budget. I just broke a Muh*ucking part on my car fixing a part on my car lol LIFE!
Hi Martin 😄...!
I imagine Martin and Tim as an old couple. Tim is the old lady needing help with the pickle jar and Martin is her quiet old husband helping her out.
That's the politest way I've ever seen a shop work relationship described lol
I realize I'm way too late on this (going back and watching this series!), but I can't help but think I would have re-machined the ram guide-slots in the casting. Unfortunately, the only tool that would do it is a big shaper, and you're a bit away Abom and other famous youtubers with big shapers :) I have a large one that might have cut it (~28" length), but BC to Oregon is a bit of a ride anyway. I'm glad you were able to get the guides managed the way you were anyway though! I'm sure it'll simplify shimming when you get to it. Though... based on the size of the shims and the amount of material you took out of that braising, I fear you're going to find yourself wanting to re-make those guides. Anyway, on to part-3 to see if you ran into further problems. Thanks for the videos!
Just watched part -3: I saw a big horizontal shaper in Eric's shop I think! In case you ever decide to do it, looks like he has the tooling to skim-cut that square pretty quickly.
Those guides are seldom braised more often than not glued and screwed epoxy and brass screws the hammer I rebuilt I went through that collar assembly and hand scraped the pockets to be equal so whatever guide you put in it can be also equal not just have some chunk of metal whatever damn size it is it's probably the biggest thing that I did to the whole machine is trying to normalize everything so that you don't have to have handmade individual perfect parts everything could be standardized to some degree so that my guides could be parallel and still fit the ram perfectly the other thing I did is grind the ram so that the flats Were equidistant from the center of the ram and parallel to each other. Machine we were working on had no plug for the up direction so we had to do some messing around to come up with a form that would work as no one could really tell me what it was supposed to truly look like we got all that just fine checked all the oldies and IDs made sure all those were running true to each other took a light skincut on the ram to get rid of the dents and dings on the OD of the ram that you can see like a thousand and a half total to true it up and pretty it up it had been running slightly crooked in the bore the difference between the upper cylinder that's part of the machine and the lower collar that guides the RAM and holds the guides. To line them up I got like a dozen foot long shims in various thicknesses so that I could stack shims all around the ram and the piston that runs in the upper bore to get the lower collar aligned as best as possible before tightening bolts. Spent quite a bit of time getting the pocket in the ram to be as perfect as possible make sure the radiusies we're good and not beginning to crack as well as there was some clearance between the tool and the ram. And I ground all the surfaces on the tool made a new key I have a thing about symmetry and make everything a symmetrical and equal as possible so there's no weird parts that have to be hand massaged I have a very large lathe and Mill that helped immensely bringing this machine back to life it's amazing the tolerances they held just wanted to put some of that back the biggest problem I found were the pockets for the guides they were not parallel to the ram or Central to the ram. That was probably the biggest hand scraping I had to do shy of the tool pocket on the table that receives a massive amount of abuse with the key having to be kicked in and out all the time in all that abrasive oxide skin crap that falls off the parts. It's really critical to keep those pockets for the upper and lower tools as good as they can physically be don't want to let them fall into disrepair it will cause cracks in the pockets you don't want to have the ram pocket cracked it's particularly susceptible to cracks as it's fairly thin in the area where the cracks occur typically that repair is ugly at best lame at worst you are certainly better off to make a new ram if the pocket is cracked can you say $$$ a shitload of toonies.
Merci bien !
What up my brothers!
What song was that Martin was playing? Sounded nice but I couldn't get enough to lead me in it's direction.
I have that same punch set
I have 2. One has two As but no Bs the other has two Bs but no As!
Everyone needs a Martin.
The whisperer !!
This may be of little to no help for the future; but they make AR steels for the very purpose of not wearing. Also there are loads of composites, vinyls, and Teflon that work in high wearing tracks too
Dude, I'm moving to BC really soon. I'll be on Vancouver Island close to parksville. You on the main land?
I'm with Martin on this one lol
WAIT U LIVE IN BC?!?!?! WHAT, I live in the tricities, lets goooooooo
great
Lol fuck I love your sense of humor. Are you disorganized and your life a mess? “yes it is actually, that was intentional” hahaha
Home working can be a good thing.
Can you please post these videos to Rumble as well? Thanks!
cool
No country music haha 😂🤘🏼
Dang it, click to watch and see a premier notification. You little tease you!
Hmmm
Try making makume gane
I'm surprised the new die is not made of titanium
Laidlaw forgworks am i right 🤔
I had no idea those axes were $500 I wen't to buy one and left empty handed =[ big sad
Hi
Hi
Hi
67% Discount ... not 68% ... #bummer
I agree just stop it with the honorable background music.