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01-08-2024, 05:49 PM | #1 |
Dismantled
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: East Molesey
Bike: Multiple Monsters
Posts: 2,246
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Must Stop Agreeing to dumb jobs
I know there are some of you lot that like to play with a lathe or mill occasionally, and I am definitely in that number, well until this week anyhow,
the lesson learned for me is to ASK “what is it made of” and I don’t mean steel, alloy, Ti etc I mean specifically I had thought a small modification on a small alloy part would take me a max 20min’s in fact probably longer to set up the job than to machine it Having broken seveal inserts scartched my head a lot drank a lot of tea and a visit to a mate who knows This innocuous looking light alloy part turns out to be made of something called Haynes 188 a cobalt-nickel-chromium-tungsten alloy, apparently used extensivley in gas turbine engines the stuff work hardens as soon as you look at it and required the ordering of crazy expensive inserts, and I was right job took 15 mins but nearly broke my lathe and my sense of humor must learn to stop helping people ASK “what is it made of” and DO NOT AGREE to machine it for anybody
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"Political correctness is just intellectual colonialism and psychological fascism for the creation of thought crime" |
01-08-2024, 06:22 PM | #2 |
Lord of the Rings
Join Date: May 2013
Location: Norwich
Bike: M900sie
Posts: 5,973
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Wow. That's the best one of those I've ever see.
What is it? Have you flipped the photo or is your lathe the opposite hand to all the others I've seen?
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01-08-2024, 10:42 PM | #3 |
Silver Member
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Poole
Bike: M900ie
Posts: 513
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This reminds me of when I was a self-employed landscaper, during a lean period I accepted a job for a friend of my sister to fell a tree in their field. The price I accepted was based on seeing the tree from a distance, big mistake, it turned out to be bloody huge, multi stemmed, plus it was some weird species full of resin. The whole job turned into an absolute nightmare, it took ages, wrecked the saw blade, ruined a pair of boots, in all it knackered me, cost me, and the customer realised what the situation was yet still used the friend of a friend situation to get me to shift the wood back to their barn. I have hated them ever since.
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Bitza |
01-08-2024, 11:05 PM | #4 |
No turn left unstoned
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: leicester
Bike: M750
Posts: 4,561
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I have sympathy with your situation and indeed I've been in similar myself but it would be a shame if your generosity of spirit were to become hardened too much by this.
On the other hand it is quite common for folk who don't do such work themselves to totally underestimate the time that most machining jobs take. As you suggest, the set-up time nearly always massively outstrips the actual machining time and while commercial operations can recoup this over large batch quantities, on-offs are a different kettle of fish entirely. The mere mention of cobalt strikes fear in my personal machinist heart though ... but much like titanium, I'd guess that slow speed and heavy feed with plenty of cutting oil would be the way to go. |
02-08-2024, 07:45 AM | #5 |
Dismantled
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: East Molesey
Bike: Multiple Monsters
Posts: 2,246
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Exactly right Jeff, slow and heavy but you need a machine with huge torque to avoid chatter, I'd take Titainium all day long over this stuff its evil
Gazza: it's a coupling from jet engine that sits in a drag car
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"Political correctness is just intellectual colonialism and psychological fascism for the creation of thought crime" |
02-08-2024, 09:11 AM | #6 |
Lord of the Rings
Join Date: May 2013
Location: Norwich
Bike: M900sie
Posts: 5,973
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Wow! Well some kudos in that even if it was a swine to do.
I still can't figure out which way round your lathe works, unless the tool post is wound out right past the workpiece?
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02-08-2024, 09:24 AM | #7 |
Dismantled
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: East Molesey
Bike: Multiple Monsters
Posts: 2,246
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Not my lathe as had to borrow time on a way more powerful one than I own, plus pic taken from a weird angle and somehow got scewed
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"Political correctness is just intellectual colonialism and psychological fascism for the creation of thought crime" |
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