Jade has been used for various uses for thousands of years. From Jewelry to tools, but is is hard enough to machine metal? #Machining #Machinist #Engineering
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@teardowndan5364Ай бұрын
Anything crystalline that isn't a monocrystal will shake itself apart when attempting to cut anything hard using typical feed speeds for standard bits. You would likely be able to go much further with the jade endmill by running it 1/10th as fast.
@SplaynАй бұрын
this
@Scott_CАй бұрын
Agreed! It feels like the Operator didn't do any post cut analysis of the plastic and wood then went into the aluminum at "full speed" almost as if the Opp was trying to break it.
@teardowndan5364Ай бұрын
@@Scott_C To be fair, breaking them was an implied goal and likely inevitable even if they slowed down to completely impractical speeds.
@garrisoncaseАй бұрын
@@teardowndan5364impractical!? What if I’m trying to machine my way out of some sort of Jade prison? Now what’s impractical?
@machinedragonАй бұрын
Hear me out. It's not how fast the job gets done. If the tool kept cutting. Steel razors are still inferior to obsidian glass knives in terms of edges and sharpness but obviously obsidian as a crystalline slush formed in a natural volcanic pyroclastic event would result in random cracks . I guess what I'm saying don't give up on this horse. A synthetic jade run at appropriate speed with the right cutting lubricant and monitoring the piezoelectric effect to detect if the crystal is near its fracture limit and possibly possibly. Mill out incredibly accurate stone and ceramic parts using a synthetic jade bit . But requires a system to monitor the temperature and electrical conductivity of the crystal as a signal for fatigue. Possibly even a custom chuck holder thats refrigerated because the nature of that crystal like quartzes is that it dosent make clean cleavage peices it shatters out into deathshards of chaos .. I bet a quartz bit would behave the same way also.
@idhdjuhdjhdh3817Ай бұрын
I love the way you all made a "boring" video about endmill geometry and functionality into something much more entertaining. Well done!
@snacpopАй бұрын
To be fair it was still pretty boring. We’ve all seen endmills and the relief on them.
@bobbytables4305Ай бұрын
nope it is a boring video...
@triple7988Ай бұрын
I've learned more about endmills in this one video than I ever did in school
@patrickday4206Ай бұрын
I like holes should be a good video
@leovodica9975Ай бұрын
I skipped like 1 minute 3 times and I saw still the same video and heared the same words :D Six flutes, notchnes, K lines, becouse of 6 flutes we need K lines or wathever etc etc... this could be a reel.
@melgrossАй бұрын
I work with jade. I’ve machined it but never tried to cut with it. It’s pretty strong due to the crystal structure and is 7 on the Mohs hardness scale, so it’s hard. But the sample used here isn’t the best. You need to try with a piece that doesn’t have that multicolored structure. That’s not as solid as you would want. It would work a “little” better with a less pretty sample that’s just pure green. Rounded flute tips would also work much better. I would also recommend a shorter, much stubbier bit.
@madmurdoch2000Ай бұрын
i understand that jade is hard but isnt it also very rigid with no flex in the material? i guess what i'm trying to say it that jade is hard but to brittle to do this type of work isnt it?
@melgrossАй бұрын
@@madmurdoch2000 jade has traditionally been used for hammers. It has what’s called a twinned crystal structure which makes it very tough. Sure, I wouldn’t try to use it to make a mill bit with, but it’s also used for knives and such. Milling metals is a very unusual use though. Last time he tried glass. That didn’t work at all.
@kylewellman402Ай бұрын
I feel like a rounded tip would break easier unless no plunging or milling with the tip was done. Even HSS/carbide tools that are ball nose break/dull more easily due to the whole "essentially 0 RPM at the very center thats trying to cut". That being said, i would like to see your example though of good pure jade as opposed to the marbling like impurities. Ever since i learned i can make my own rubies in my garage, its been on my project list to build a hydraulic chamber to try and make a ruby lathe insert tool. I feel like that would have a greater chance at surviving just given what direction the forces would be in. Seeing that jade end mill break in half tells me it really just couldn't take the flexing from that cut. I think he could have gave it more of a fighting chance to actually cut. He basically stacked everything against it by taking what looks like at least a 15 to 20 thou depth of cut and doing climb milling. At least see if it would survive like a 5 thou DOC while convential milling
@melgrossАй бұрын
@@kylewellman402 rounded tips soften the initial jump in cutting force the edge sees. That’s different from a ball mill, which isn’t what I meant. I’m talking about maybe a 0.05” radius at the flute tip. I find that whether HSS or carbide, those last longer. But also, you’re right about the depth of cut. I was going to mention that before, but didn’t. I don’t know what rpm a jade cutter could withstand, but the higher, the better. I don’t see that he tried to determine what the cutter could do. He just took some moderate average setting and went with it.
@kylewellman402Ай бұрын
@@melgross oh gotcha. Like similar to the nose radius on an insert bit as opposed to a sharp nose. Hopefully I'm thinking if that right now. Maybe they should try it again and go to brass first instead of aluminum too. Aluminum is so gummy to cut if you dont have a proper coating meant for aluminum. I seen where when they were inspecting the end mill after it broke there was aluminum imbedded along basically every cutting surface. Im sure these guys at Titan are aware of that. Maybe that is why they chose aluminum for the torture of it 🤔
@Chrisg93Ай бұрын
Use an old Nokia as the end mill
@lidltraut8258Ай бұрын
Careful now, dont want to mill hole through reality
@The_Legend4720 күн бұрын
LOL
@akaHarvesteR19 күн бұрын
That could never work. How would you grind any flutes in it to begin with?
@solowingpixy829711 күн бұрын
@@akaHarvesteRIt is the flute lmao
@str44thond7110 күн бұрын
That would cut the fabric of reality
@bubbasplants189Ай бұрын
Don't even care if it works, that thing looks sick! Like a poisonous endmill.
@anonymouspersonthefakeАй бұрын
+10 poison damage
@drecknathmagladery9118Ай бұрын
it technically is poisonous. jade is a type of asbestos.
@ShooritАй бұрын
Please try making one out of carbide. I’ve got a feeling it will work great.
@fastmover45Ай бұрын
Make one out of Boron Nitride :)
@JohnFrazier007Ай бұрын
🤣🤣🤣
@athmaidАй бұрын
Silicon carbide would be interesting
@918guy29 күн бұрын
Titanium nitrided high speed steel? may be some promise there
@Turboy65Ай бұрын
Now make one out of a single large quartz crystal.
@larrymashburn7789Ай бұрын
Then sapphire, then diamond.
@stasi0238Ай бұрын
With crystalline Al2O3
@jimsonjohnson3761Ай бұрын
All of which are very brittle. That's why we don't use quartz in so many places
@aidenwallin3523Ай бұрын
@@stasi0238Sapphire is Al2 O3. Corundum.
@GoldenBoy-et6ofАй бұрын
Jade is the most durable of all minerals , its not the hardest but it's the least brittle of all gemstones , quartz is hard but incredibly brittle and will shatter just as easily as glass while jade can be hit with a hammer as hard as you can many times before it will finally split
@NVMDSTEvilАй бұрын
very low quality jade, and why cutting from the side and so deep like that? Could at least have given it a fighting chance ..
@viggo_wiberg13 күн бұрын
Your right. Now let’s see you do it properly…
@NVMDSTEvil13 күн бұрын
@@viggo_wiberg would love to have the equipment to do it
@jamesfair975111 күн бұрын
Cause side cutting is a huge thing that endmills are made to do. If all you need is a plunge cut you could mostly get by with drill bits if you just need to drill a hole !!!
@NVMDSTEvil11 күн бұрын
@@jamesfair9751 not side cutting like that.
@aguy60228 күн бұрын
Probably they were simply not confident with it from the beginning, so i guess they decided to go all in with the stress test.
@realJohnLabАй бұрын
The amount of joy Barry gets from destroying things; warms the cockles of my heart.. even tickles the sub cockles.
@marcusrauch4223Ай бұрын
The what?
@waaa141995Ай бұрын
@@marcusrauch4223 hes talking about his nuts
@shifty1016Ай бұрын
While handicapped people make handicapped faces.
@seancollins9745Ай бұрын
I await the pre cockles
@12th.jahlilАй бұрын
I beg your pardon?
@ahmadshaabanabu-yousseff911Ай бұрын
It's all about vibration and tool's resonance frequency , and giving the tool enough time to dampen the vibration, For example glass has very low natural frequency for small stuff between 200-500 Hz Steel has much higher frequency in the KHz range for the same size . Increasing number of flutes decreases overall fluctuation in vibration , but since the flutes are thinner the natural frequency decreases making it more brittle, . For example a glass sheets crack easily a glass cube will not crack easily because it has more girth and more volume to dissipate energy To increase the probability of success using glass or jade feed speed must be ultra slow and maybe make the flute channels narrower to allow for more girth to withstand vibrations also increasing fluting angles will help make forces and vibrations more axially aligned (radial vibrations break tools ) . Tips High helix angles High number of flutes Slow feed rate Narrow channels Maybe bulkier or conical tools
@damianfitzpatrick3465Ай бұрын
A future where Kennametal just sells you a CNC program for their endmills
@jmowreader9555Ай бұрын
That's more like a trip to the past. In the old days when people set type for printing by hand, type was made out of lead. Since lead is soft it wears out pretty quickly, so a lot of printers just bought molds - they were called matrices - and cast the type they needed for every job.
@therealchaydАй бұрын
@@jmowreader9555 Then along came LinoType...
@PaulWalker-zk2ddАй бұрын
Hardness of the material is important, but not the only important measure. Tensile strength and notch sensitivity are also important. I love your videos and learn a lot.
@honda-5422Ай бұрын
BRING BACK THE CHEESE TEST 🤣
@WbfuhnАй бұрын
Materials I'd like to see turned into tools. Obsidian, rock, petrified wood (you can petrify by soaking in water for several months) and gems such as Sapphire, Emerald, Topaz, Ruby and Amethyst.
@coreytaylor5386Ай бұрын
theres also a lot of natural petrified wood you can get online thats fully harded into rock
@melgrossАй бұрын
Petrified wood isn’t just soaked. You just get soaked wood. It’s when the wood is replaced by minerals over long time. You can force that process, but it’s not the same thing.
@GregsStoneYardАй бұрын
@@melgross Months, millions of years, what's the difference? 😀I'm currently cutting a 42" diameter 60" long petrified wood log into slabs... have all the slabs cut, doing the polishing now. The petrified wood is pretty much pure quartz. It's the hardest stuff I've cut and is brutal on my diamond tools.
@melgrossАй бұрын
@@GregsStoneYard because it takes a long time for mineralization to take place. We worked on trying to make a petrified wood using some modern techniques, but it doesn’t produce a compactified deposit. It needs to happen very slowly. Even though we used dissolved minerals, and heat and pressure, it just doesn’t produce actual rock but a more crumbly substance. The real thing is a very nice material, but it’s true, it’s brutal on tooling. It’s very tough and breaks the diamond right off the blades.
@felderupАй бұрын
@@melgross vac chamber cycling then high temp baking and another few vac cycles perhaps would speed it up?
@chrishayes5755Ай бұрын
seems like a pretty aggressive cut into that aluminum. looks like it could have made it with less load on the end mill.
@toshinakae6397Ай бұрын
wasnt super aggressive, look at the size of those chips, basically powder! though the tool was getting dull too so its hard to tell. But looks like the depth of cut is not even an 1/8th of the diameter deep. Might perform better with different speeds/feeds, but that cut into aluminum was pretty mild.
@enzochoi923Ай бұрын
Looked like it was dulling too fast. I think they could have made it 3-4x farther with the correct speeds and feeds, but that's still not much
@usb6000Ай бұрын
@@toshinakae6397 I think he meant by aggressive meaning it really needed to be slow The feed was too high in my opinion as well.
@dareelistwhoreala21 күн бұрын
At the end of the day tho... it's just not a viable or effective alternative.
@markalvarez1827Ай бұрын
It's crazy how much you know about endmills 😂 Great video, love listening to people who know what they are talking about.
@CaptainCarrotzzАй бұрын
Appreciate you running through the CAD at the beginning. A lot of pop engineering channels skip over that stuff, but that's what I'm interested in seeing. Also, Barry is such a card. Love the energy he brings😂
@legochamp1Ай бұрын
i would buy this as a dekor for my desk! love it
@jaredkennedy6576Ай бұрын
That was pretty wild. It's also good that this is now a known tech, there might be some material in the future that requires a jade cutting edge.
@deths1679Ай бұрын
I have been making natural sharpening stones and I think it is pretty amazing what can be done with stone tools once you learn the properties and geometry to mitigate the weaknesses of stone. I keep getting surprised with how difficult it can be to work with hard stone, even with modern tools.
@KinoTechUSA69Ай бұрын
I love how you guys are asking the serious questions 😂 👍
@KnowArtАй бұрын
would love to see more optimizations for crystal endmills. I imagine wider, shorter, more flutes, less sharp angles, etc
@EPEPEPEP05Ай бұрын
i didnt expect to meet you here! well, i did! but still in shock!
@ConcreteBombDeepАй бұрын
If you haven't done it yet you need to make a endmill out of sapphire crystal. Lab produced sapphire is already the perfect shape and being just under diamond in hardness should make it interesting.
@jimsonjohnson3761Ай бұрын
Hardness doest = durable. Otherwise we'd use diamonds and quartz for a lot more. And before you comment, no diamonds really aren't that rare.
@ggeorges5135Ай бұрын
these grinding videos are sick
@max_eleyАй бұрын
One of the best video ideas I have ever seen, awesome!
@adamhayes2528Ай бұрын
What an interestingly cool video!! Nice one Chris and Nate!
@bobbytables4305Ай бұрын
In case you missed it... They created a 6 flute jade endmil and put a kayland on it with a notch...
@Tezza120Ай бұрын
Try ruby or sapphire next. The man made ones with no flaws. I think they call them a boule. At least they have a hardness close to carbide and a uniform crystal should give it more toughness
@shaniegust1225Ай бұрын
Y’all crazy over there! Nice video. Everyone loves Chris 💪🔥
@CraigHollabaughАй бұрын
That was cool seeing the operations needed. Thanks
@animus3d663Ай бұрын
I wonder what “part materials” could cut. For instance, maybe inconel could cut aluminum
@Sara-TOCАй бұрын
Third time is a charm!! You’re getting closer, Chris!!! I can’t wait to see what you come up with next. 😁
@marcus_w0Ай бұрын
I really was rooting for that little endmill! Keep on going trying materials! Thumbs up!
@huseyinaynaci1752Ай бұрын
Guys, you have to use coolant when you milling alluminium material 🥲Thus, you can extend the life of the cutting edges by preventing sticking chips from being deposited edges of the endmill.
@GabbyVillarreal-dm1ct2 күн бұрын
Awesome video, Chris !
@TheRcfighterpilotАй бұрын
NGL these would be neat gifts for machinists!
@nathanbieri7060Ай бұрын
Chris always getting creative with his grinds!
@alt5494Ай бұрын
A super fine grit mill driven finishing stone would be interesting for the leftover piece. If a h13 steel core was added for support could actually be a fine tool.
@shawnbonning8848Ай бұрын
You should grind the od's from shank to end of tool, your wheel will stay sharper longer. Lower your plunge percentage so it doesn't jam into the tool.
@sportswolf1Ай бұрын
I should send you my wife's roast beef. lol
@MF175mpАй бұрын
Would make a good end mill?
@BrilliantDesignOnlineАй бұрын
@@MF175mp Toughest substance known to man 🙂
@cncwoodartsАй бұрын
I have an idea! 1) Make a hybrid endmill from tungsten carbide or something like inconel 2) cut flute sections from a hard crystal like Mossanite. Or synthetic sapphire. 3) braze flute sections into the metal core, then finish cut the whole mill on the grinder. Tough, shock resilient core with super hard edges…use it any non-ferrous. Material with coolant…it will last!!!
@cncwoodartsАй бұрын
I bet it lasts longer than your Kore 5 in aluminum if the brazing is strong enough!
@classtilton871Ай бұрын
I carve pounamu, its a type of jade only found here in new zealand. I was actually surprised how well this held up! Great video!
@phillipmillay8645Ай бұрын
Thanks for showing Walter Grinder programming, I am just starting programming ours for our regrind shop on the same Grinders. We have trouble getting the K land adjusted in correctly. How are you doing the K land? Our process was programmed to K Land with a differ wheel than the gashing wheel, so it makes it hard to adjust them both. I’m am thinking about changing it to rough and finish the path, dedicating a rough gashing wheel and a finish gashing wheel. I think that if the same wheel does the gash and the L land on the point angle edge it will be easier for the team to control. It will just be a matter of wheel wear then. Let me know your thoughts on this.
@rcnewman51.Ай бұрын
That shop is gorgeous!
@michaelpiper8198Ай бұрын
this is nice for some labs I imagine, in the case of needing different bits that won't shed particulates that would be reactive in nature of whatever goal they are attempting to achieve. ie. metal shedding from a bit and bonding with processing materials before intended reaction can take place.
@bardesteck17 күн бұрын
Nice video .. how did you determine the cutting conditions for a tool not in the market without the research behind it? What was the rpm or fz used in this experiment? for machinist it would have been interesting seen this values on screen .. thank you, it was entertaining seen how you took the time to make the endmill
@jaredlepore9Ай бұрын
Does Machinery's Handbook have suggested feeds and speeds for jade endmills?
@guilavo4131Ай бұрын
This is just a random thought, but if you tried to do conventional milling instead of climb milling. I think it might have survived the aluminum since the force on the tool while climb cutting are a lot higher.
@atruceforbruce5388Ай бұрын
Just got to do a jade tool and add some diamond dust on the cutting edges. You got this.
@prjndigoАй бұрын
I think you should have mentioned the Startec tools twice as often... I have no idea what they currently cost but you could get a sapphire alloy phone screen blank that hasn't been sliced up yet and have a go with it. They come in about 3"9"10" but might be veeeery pricey.
@BestructionАй бұрын
I’ll see you guys at the Kennametal roadshow! I’m a Kennametal applications engineer, and I’m working the event
@dbdbdbqpqpqpqpАй бұрын
I’m curious what the flute rake is vs the k land rake. I work in cutting tool manufacturing and just found your channel, cool stuff!
@_GOD_HAND_Ай бұрын
Obviously when making a tool it's not just hardness that counts. There are many other material properties that need to be considered like tensile strength, compressive strength, elastic modulus, etc. These tests on various minerals are pointless, but I guess it's good content for social media.
@SPUPRR28 күн бұрын
I would love to buy a couple of those Endmills as a conversation piece. They are Beautiful.
@leviarias5281Ай бұрын
How much is the raw material for the jade and the price for end if it would be manufactured? It cut delrin they did should how well but if it's cheaper to manufacture then carbide and HSS might ne with it
@Mikkel.RS.1Ай бұрын
i would expect the jade to be cheap, but the time and energy gone into it the same as carbide-that would last decades longer than jade, means its not a good material for a cutter :)
@verakoo6187Ай бұрын
Jade prices are insanely wild, and based on quality/shape. Can range anywere from $3 per carat to millions per carat
@user-yl3en6qo5uАй бұрын
You make great videos, it would be very interesting if you showed the method used to achieve a very tight tolerance on the first try such as a G6 on an internal diameter of 20mm for example, with a tool which has just been gauged and which It doesn't have any proofreaders yet.
@elnoey8 күн бұрын
IT WILL WORK! NICE WORK
@thanumgamingАй бұрын
Looks like a work of art!
@paulmilligan1808Ай бұрын
Hi guys I saw this video and I think I might be able to make this endmill run in my new line of tool holders it would be interesting to try this endmill because the thing that caused the failure is the standard concentricity that you get in an ER collet holder. I think that the failure was due to being off in runout and the harmonics are off because of this. even if this endmill is off by .0002" or more it would probably fail.
@thespacedude8420Ай бұрын
Do an endmill of hardened polyester next! I work with polyester in my restoration projects and I'd really love to see how it'd hold up as an endmill. Although I imagine it will behave like quite a brittle material in a high-torque high-speed operation.
@anthonyfigueroa2395Ай бұрын
If you slow down the piece going into the drill bit but keep the bit speed up, I bet it will cut n not break also a shorter jade piece n it will work.
@thepain32129 күн бұрын
Would like to see hard minerals optimized. Lab ruby, sapphire. Machine speed, feed rate, depth of cut, twist on the cutting edge. Do a core bit of mineral, fed with grit too.
@Stonehaven2112Ай бұрын
Looks like the aluminum started to gall before it broke (sticking to the cutter). The galling would have loaded down the bit. Would cutting with fluid or a different bit geometry prevent the galling?
@jamiefowler2329Ай бұрын
Man when he said j made me feel like I was watching how to make a joint tutorial 😂
@phillhuddleston9445Ай бұрын
An interesting material to try would be basalt, it is from my understanding basically a manufactured rock like material that they actually make rebar out of, it's flexible like steel rebar but will not take a permanent bend like steel and has good tensile strength. With it's relative hardness and flexibility it might work on aluminum at least longer than jade and glass.
@BeetleBunsАй бұрын
basalt is a volcanic rock, not man-made.
@phillhuddleston9445Ай бұрын
@@BeetleBuns They manufacture products made using basalt, not sure how they do it though but yes it is a naturally occurring rock so I did misspeak.
@BeetleBunsАй бұрын
@@phillhuddleston9445 ohhhhh got it, thought you were saying the rock itself was man made lol
@denisrobertoheuser4279Ай бұрын
Im not an expert of cuting tool materials, but my guess about the faliure of this one is related to the sise of the Jade grains. Smaler the grain, biger te bond betwin them. Does it make any sense?
@NOBLEArbiterАй бұрын
The most beautiful endmill
@calvinchabot2528Ай бұрын
Would love to see you guys do one out of sapphire, and one out of aluminum oxynitride 👍
@jessicaconАй бұрын
*BRUH* the noise the glass drill bit made when it died as it touched the metal made it *1000X FUCKING FUNNIER XD*
@chincemagnetАй бұрын
Interesting to see how you machine that end mill, the tooling I use is similar to that only a much sharper twist, press tools for forging helical gears. I was told they machine them on an EDM machine though. I don’t know what grade of steel it is though tbh. We can’t use carbide because of the heat, 1800F + or -
@Abyssal313Ай бұрын
Would gem-quality or lab-created stones work better since they have fewer flaws? Something like lab created sapphire rods?
@freddyfingerz985428 күн бұрын
Try with a large ruby. Conundrum is even harder. If your lucky u can still find large dirty 1 piece crystals around natural or make one with a induction setup and aluminum oxide
@globuseric899829 күн бұрын
This just made my day👍
@Handles_AreStupidАй бұрын
"Because it is a natural mineral, it will have a mohs hardness of 6 to 7" Diamond and ruby are natural minerals that are mohs 10 and 9 respectively. A "natural mineral" doesnt have a hard and fast rule like that...
@marcosdheleno9 күн бұрын
also, what the hell is a "natural mineral". feels like when people talk about organic food.
@Handles_AreStupid9 күн бұрын
@@marcosdheleno We are capable of making synthetic minerals, too. Natural just means that it isn't sythetically produced, but they are chemically identical, so it doesn't matter. The new iphone models actually have synthetic sapphire screens. That "sapphire glass" marketing gimick isn't just hyperbole, it is literal sapphire.
@alexdalton7290Ай бұрын
I resin printed a 2 flute em out of htmv 140 v2 (ceramic like) Envisiontec material but no sharp edges but curious if it could be sharpened
@joshuahuman1Ай бұрын
you should try making one out of a synthetic ruby laser rod
@CalthecoolАй бұрын
I second this
@thehackofalltrades1630Ай бұрын
Excellent Voice, demonstrations, visualization and explanations - You do repeat facts/things over multiple times which makes this video a bit long - I am intrigued by the subject/ thumbnail with this is trimmed a bit it would be perfect - Great video and if you need to do it to make it longer for monetization reasons then no biggy -> u do what you gotta do - Cheers
@sannyassi73Ай бұрын
I wonder- if you could somehow produce synthetic jade without all the inconsistencies, how might that work? Although, I've never heard of synthetic Jade (maybe it exists?). Neat video! How about Sapphire?
@BrilliantDesignOnlineАй бұрын
The structural integrity of the core is just not there; if it was a composite of something to make the overall blank less frangible, it seems the hardness is there. How about a steel rod with the end bored or splined out with a Jade cylinder inserted/bonded into it then ground; steel structural rigidity, capturing the hardness and geometry of the jade.
@kumaaddi513928 күн бұрын
The outer harmonic forces are a tricky dilemma you have to consider when making bits, that's the majority of why these break. Higher density and less space between the molecules are going to be the money when it comes to any type of drill bit. The jade could be a decant bit, just not by itself as a material, though I've never worked with jade. I'd guess if you could combine it somehow with another material it could be viable on certain aluminum's. Neat venture into jade tooling guys thanks!
@chrisstott2775Ай бұрын
Greenstone was a prized and valuable resource for the Maori as adze heads (and nasty weapons) used to carve canoes and hew timber. Very tough but very time consuming to shape and sharpen.
@chrisstott2775Ай бұрын
Just to add, greenstone is a type of jade
@peacefulscrimp5183Ай бұрын
You should have done an old school star trek enterprise glamour camera pass of that bit once it was finished 😳 That thing was a work of art 😔 RIP .
@Ric_19858 күн бұрын
I invite everyone to the Jade Museum in Costa Rica, might not have Jade end mills but pretty cool stuff there.
@growbikebuild3032Ай бұрын
Try Ruby ranks 9 on the Mohs hardness scale
@kurlyfry7916Ай бұрын
The probe shot at around 1:15 looks like it collided with the workpiece pretty quickly. What happened?
@schmurisworld20 күн бұрын
You should sell some of them it looks awesome as decorations
@avilhelm1697Ай бұрын
Would be cool if you made a CNC-version of an ancient Egyptian tube drill. They used those for hours and days to cut holes into hard rocks like granite. I bet you could cut down the work time a lot, and maybe use your expertise to add some bells and whistles to it too.
@darndarn99Ай бұрын
Can I ask what your quoting process is like? How fast do you turn an inquiry into a quote ?
@tristenagar4360Ай бұрын
i would love to have this piece, it looks so cool and i love the basic pieces of jade that i have. if you see this and are ever thinking of parting with it i would like a shot at it. You atleast have a subscriber from me lol, keep up the content
@St0RM33Ай бұрын
Next try Aluminium oxynitride and Sapphire ..if you can find something to grind it with
@danielm.3383Ай бұрын
Diamond to grind it?
@deths1679Ай бұрын
I have been making natural sharpening stones and experimenting with different hard stones. I think stone works best for cutting with wide angles for the cutting edge and a lot of mass behind that edge to prevent shearing of the stone. So maybe a single edge end mill with 90 degree cutting edge and very shallow flute might work alright. Maybe in Texas Chert, it is very hard and very tough, it is the hardest stone I’ve worked with and even diamond grinding is not easy for me with it.
@deths1679Ай бұрын
Im surprised the six flute got as far as it did. A stone endmill might also need to be a lot shorter with so much torque generation.
@michaelgrabbe8954Ай бұрын
Cool looking project.
@blaze00366Ай бұрын
Do a Sapphire endmill its pretty hard, then try depleated uranium, tungsten would be cool also but I dont know if you could do it.
@minimal_ltdАй бұрын
I would buy one to put on my desk
@zacwebb5738Ай бұрын
Nephrite jade has a fibrous grain structure, contributing to its extreme toughness. I had hopes for the alum cut, but it is still a natural stone material. 😅
@chettiarsirusraj9501Ай бұрын
You tried to cut solid piece of metal with a Jade stone endmill it was gonna break but maybe concrete or bricks may just cut fine instead since they are just right in-between the line of solid as steel but softish like wood & plastic. You basically gave a strong enough material like Block of aluminum or any similar metal for the Jade endmill to cut-rub and vibrate like crazy on letting all the vibration from metal cutting to go right through the Jade endmill and crack it through inside out. Maybe if you make another Jade endmill drill a hole in the center of the cylinder through it's length drill it's center out and add a metal pin or long screw through the middle of the Jade endmill to dampen all the vibration going through it and increase it's sheer strength of the overall jade endmill. This method of putting a metal pin or screw through the center of a soft material dealing with high torque or high sheer strength loads also works for 3d Printed FDM & Resin printed parts especially for 3D printed tyre wheels that deal with high torque output of electric motors right into tyres which without a metal pin/screw will just sheer the center of the printed wheel making the whole wheel useless.
@steffen8446Ай бұрын
what chair is this at 7:51?^^
@Aeronaughtica12 күн бұрын
This is the ish I come here for!
@4pThorpyАй бұрын
The amount of knowledge behind this for essentially brand new technology is impressive, there's 3d modelling, obviously some proprietary gcode, feed speeds, material knowledge, simulations (and the tool knowledge about endmills). I hope there's a better title than "machinist" for this job.
@dh203222 күн бұрын
you have luugh! at 1:04, this computerised monster of a machine, has a "classic mode"? what classic if anything on the machine?