Making Your Own Springs On The Lathe!

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Blondihacks

Blondihacks

Күн бұрын

This episode on Blondihacks, I’m making springs! Exclusive videos, drawings, models & plans available on Patreon!
/ quinndunki
The fixtures shown in this video borrow substantially from Kozo Hiraoka in his amazing book, The Pennsylvania A3 Switcher. If you thought this was clever, go buy his book for way more stuff like this: secure.villagepress.com/store...
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Пікірлер: 487
@JamesTM
@JamesTM 10 ай бұрын
"Because shut up, thats why" makes me laugh every single time.
@mspeir
@mspeir 10 ай бұрын
Sometimes it's the only appropriate response! 😅
@mattmanyam
@mattmanyam 10 ай бұрын
Needs to be on a coffee mug... Because Shut up... That's why!
@LRCXed
@LRCXed 10 ай бұрын
@@mattmanyam I'd buy one of those for sure!!!
@steveskouson9620
@steveskouson9620 10 ай бұрын
@@LRCXed, so would i! steve
@lewisheard1882
@lewisheard1882 10 ай бұрын
I also got that answer before teach said it! 😅
@frankward423
@frankward423 10 ай бұрын
The best springs are made of hope steel. It springs eternal...
@DH-xw6jp
@DH-xw6jp 10 ай бұрын
_[polite golf clap]_
@oldfarthacks
@oldfarthacks 10 ай бұрын
I can clap single handed for that one.
@theothertonydutch
@theothertonydutch 10 ай бұрын
@@oldfarthacks I just snapped my fingers a couple of times.
@RonCovell
@RonCovell 10 ай бұрын
Quinn - I have made some springs on my lathe, but you added so many steps of refinement I never realized were possible. Thanks for an enjoyable, and super-useful video!
@howder1951
@howder1951 10 ай бұрын
Like he said!
@nilzlima3027
@nilzlima3027 10 ай бұрын
might be time to make a sheet metal spring?
@ellieprice363
@ellieprice363 10 ай бұрын
@@nilzlima3027 What is a sheet metal spring?
@nilzlima3027
@nilzlima3027 10 ай бұрын
@@ellieprice363 a springey sheet metal thing intended to act as a spring for something.
@janami-dharmam
@janami-dharmam 10 ай бұрын
and each of them shall be costing half a fortune.
@beliasphyre3497
@beliasphyre3497 10 ай бұрын
That makes so much more sense why we studied where feathers and cannonballs would land if when dropped in the fall semester.
@brucematthews6417
@brucematthews6417 10 ай бұрын
I'm a fairly long time hobby spring maker since I need a lot of custom sizes for one of my other hobbies. I wind my springs differently than you but given your need to make multiple identical copies I would and will use your idea for when I need the same. Your method has more control over the initial shape than my own freehand method. One last step to suggest though. You want to "passivate" or post form relax the springs with a sub temper heat soak. Without this last step I found that my springs would easily collapse or stretch. After the relaxation heat soak the springs "remember" their new shape and return to it despite being stretched or compressed fully to the limit. The heat soak is a 450F at 20 minutes in my old toaster oven followed by a 50F reduction at 15 minute intervals until the oven is off. The wire comes out with a light to medium straw. So well below the usual "spring blue" temperature. And with that last step your shop springs will be as good or better than commercial springs. The idea for this came after watching a lot of videos to figure out why my springs were not as springy as commercial ones. A YT video in passing right at the end said "...and now off to a passivation heat treatment...." and left me hanging. That led to some searches and my trial of this 450F relaxation step which you'll find works amazingly well. If in doubt by all means fish a few of the discarded springs you showed at the end and test them both pre and post "relaxing" and see for yourself. I've even stretched commercial springs back to length and did this same relaxation treatment to them. And they hold the new length very well. For my arbors I bought a set of transfer punches. The punches are secured in one of three short 1" diameter blocks that have a center hole and an offset hole on the face. I secure the right angle bend of the wire in the offset hole with a screw from the side and the punch with another screw. The holes for the punches being different sizes to accept 1/3 the range of the punches. A little wobble but it's not a big deal. I'll make a few more at the inbetween sizes to go with your controlled feed method when needed. And for use with your tool post wire feeder I'd then use a cup center for the point of the punch to rest into. So far I've used a different tool that is self balancing so I don't need the tail stock support.. Springs are a key element of many of our projects. It's nice to see a different approach which is aimed at your specific need. Nicely done!
@aimlessdude9735
@aimlessdude9735 10 ай бұрын
Thanks for the tip @brucematthews6417 I’ll keep this in mind if/when I need to make a spring
@oldfarthacks
@oldfarthacks 10 ай бұрын
A well tempered thing to remember.
@Broadpaw_Fox
@Broadpaw_Fox 10 ай бұрын
One quick thing - on that passivation treatment, you can use sand to help control the cooldown. If you preheat the sand and throw the springs in, give it a couple minutes and then kill the heat and it'll cool slowly like you want but without requiring constant monitoring. Let's you carry on with other tasks while the springs do their sauna time and get all relaxed. 😉 You just need some kind of small(?) metal container for enough sand to surround the springs by at least their diameter. The sand holds all the thermal energy and cools slowly from the outside in, so don't go shallow and wide here - think more cube shaped if you have the room (this obviously depends on the size of the springs being made). The nice thing is that almost any basic sheet metal box is sufficient for the task, and any method of getting it up to temperature is also perfectly acceptable. Another side benefit is that if you're measuring the temperature of the sand first, you have 0% chance of overheating the springs and ruining their temper. 😉 This is actually an excellent way to temper literally anything you want to - the mass of the sand helps to control the temperature and also helps to heat the item more rapidly and thoroughly. And in the case of springs, allows that slow cooldown that is so important to their functional temper.
@brucematthews6417
@brucematthews6417 10 ай бұрын
@@Broadpaw_Fox That's true. But the trick is to hold the spring at the 425 to 450F temperature reasonably accurately for around 20 minutes or more before the slow cool down. I'd want to pre-heat the sand in a tray of some sort to temp first and then push the spring(s) into the sand, soak for around 30 to 40 minutes and then turn off the oven. While this would certainly work just fine I'm thinking that the same amount of energy used to pre-heat the sand is roughly what I use up during the graduated cool down. And if you're suggesting using a torch of some sort I simply don't have the temperature measuring or controls to manage that. So it's a toaster oven for me.
@Broadpaw_Fox
@Broadpaw_Fox 10 ай бұрын
@@brucematthews6417- yeah, I wasn't so much worrying about energy savings - I realized a while ago that it's not beneficial for that, but the smoother temp control and the ability to just leave it be IS a definite benefit. Get it up to temp and ready, set your timer for the soak, and go do something else for a couple hours. Sort of automation, without having to buy an expensive kiln/temper oven. 😀 An old adage I tell myself often is "keep it simple, stupid", and a basic setup with something like a toaster oven (or regular one for larger parts) is an excellent example of simple, but effective. 😉
@jimjmcdonnell62
@jimjmcdonnell62 10 ай бұрын
Well that was worth it just for the 'Spring semester' gag and the understated badum-tish in the background... 😂
@Oberkaptain
@Oberkaptain 10 ай бұрын
I have something similar, but I made my wire feed able to accept MIG torch tips then I can use the same feed bar for various sizes.
@jimsvideos7201
@jimsvideos7201 10 ай бұрын
Also, petition for merch with Sprocket playing with one of those ball of fluff on a long coil spring toys with the caption "Spring Semester". 🙏
@DH-xw6jp
@DH-xw6jp 10 ай бұрын
The algorythm decided to show this channel to me after my most recent ToT binge. Bravo, good springs.
@ron827
@ron827 10 ай бұрын
Spring semester? Boooooooo! :-)
@gordondick9634
@gordondick9634 4 ай бұрын
I enjoy your videos Quinn and have watched many. When I need a spring that isn't in my salvaged springs container I'll come back to this one. I've never made a spring but back when I was teen working for Dad in his repair shop we used the lathe to wind 20 foot lengths of 1/4" round hot rolled mild steel into a tight helix with an ID of approx 2". The helix was then cut apart to make rings for coat hangers. These were for the school unit and we made them in batche4s of 100 or so. The idea was that once the hangers were hung on a pipe they wouldn't come off. Thought you might find this interesting.
@TheAces1979
@TheAces1979 9 ай бұрын
"Spring Semester" is the best 'Dad Joke' of 2023. RESPECT!
@kevinsellsit5584
@kevinsellsit5584 10 ай бұрын
When I took the left front coil spring out of my 1955 Studebaker President Speedster for the first time, I was amazed at the length, quality, and squareness, despite having been bent and compressed for 45 years. As I was working on the car I kept hearing a strange noise until I finally got up to find it. The spring was literally dancing across the concrete in tiny vibrations. It did this for about 12 hours as it tried to grow back to its pre-loaded length. I have done a ton of suspension work in my career but never experienced this before. Respect big springs, they can kill you.
@UnlikelyToRemember
@UnlikelyToRemember 10 ай бұрын
Especially the one(s) on your garage door. Super dangerous. One of the few things I won't d-i-y.
@oldfarthacks
@oldfarthacks 10 ай бұрын
Yep, the forces in coiled springs can really be interesting. Not so much with the flat ones, they generally have room to move when they are installed.
@GrayRaceCat
@GrayRaceCat 10 ай бұрын
@@UnlikelyToRemember The roll-up doors aren't so bad, with the spring captive on the rod. It's the cantilever doors that'll get you. I re-sprung my garage door back in 2001. I ran a wire rope through them and secured it to the frame to keep them from flying if they got loose.
@UnlikelyToRemember
@UnlikelyToRemember 10 ай бұрын
@@GrayRaceCat You're a braver man than I!
@GrayRaceCat
@GrayRaceCat 10 ай бұрын
@@UnlikelyToRemember Not so much brave as desperate. I needed to build a wheelchair ramp for my wife, all my tools were trapped in the garage, and I was broke, having sunk all my cash into materials for the ramp. (They were stuck in the garage too.) The door had to get fixed and I couldn’t afford to hire someone.
@oldestnerd
@oldestnerd 10 ай бұрын
Because "Shut Up That's Why"! Gets me every time.
@bigmike3250
@bigmike3250 10 ай бұрын
My toxic trait is me telling myself I can learn to do this in a weekend on the 75-year-old metal lathe I have in my garage that I have never turned on! All jokes aside, this is some amazing instruction, thank you for sharing it with us. New subscriber because of this video.
@izzynutz2000
@izzynutz2000 10 ай бұрын
She said because shut up that's why😂😂.... you go girl! Awesome content Quinn
@Kris_at_WhiteOaksFarm
@Kris_at_WhiteOaksFarm 10 ай бұрын
I love your gentle voice and humor, and your willingness to show how things can go wrong, and how to fix them. I'm always delighted to find you've made another upload regardless of the subject. I don't even have a lathe, but I love watching your work. You should make a springy, sproingy, toy thingy for Sprocket to annoy you with!
@jimmccorison
@jimmccorison 10 ай бұрын
8 springs. I thought you were done making 8 of the same thing. Great video and easy to follow. Thank you, once again, for showing that things don't happen perfectly on the first try.
@Broadpaw_Fox
@Broadpaw_Fox 10 ай бұрын
Oh honey.... I think Quinn would be fine if she only had to make 8 of these... there's like 3 or so on each truck, and there's several trucks on this locomotive. ;)
@djofnofame8292
@djofnofame8292 10 ай бұрын
Every now and then Quinn reads the minds of her followers and posts another great how to video. Making springs has been on my list of things to learn and do for some time.
@patcorrigan3624
@patcorrigan3624 10 ай бұрын
I’m 40years at various types of engineering and thought I knew how springs were made until I saw you make them. Your a super teacher and presenter really enjoyed looking at your work .😊
@JohnJones-cp4wh
@JohnJones-cp4wh 4 ай бұрын
If you think that`s how springs are made, you need to go to a springmaker and watch.
@McTroyd
@McTroyd 10 ай бұрын
Never got to the spring semester. After fall I simply bounced. 😁
@howardsimpson489
@howardsimpson489 Ай бұрын
Hi Quinn, there are easier methods for making one or two springs to replace ones that got away. Lots of bolts have convenient diameters, put into the chuck with the end of the wire tucked into the gap between teeth. Mig welding wire, stainless or steel can be hardened by drawing it over a sharp edge. Winding the wire close together with a large strong ball bearing pressed hard against the mandrel. Run the wire in highly tensioned and close wound. The spacing can be by stretching later. When grinding the ends with a rig like yours, press firmly and the end turn will heat up and glow, just quench in the water. A final light touch will give a tapered end turn like commercial springs. Cheers from NZ where springs are expensive.
@CleverMonkey-jd3du
@CleverMonkey-jd3du 10 ай бұрын
In the summer time a young woman's fancy turns to springs.
@georgespeake5089
@georgespeake5089 10 ай бұрын
I always appreciate that you include your vulnerability in presentation. Makes me feel like a pro rather than a failure when the work goes in the bin! Thanks again and God bless!
@Adz599
@Adz599 9 ай бұрын
Spring semester got my upvote... bumper book of Dad jokes, page 101 :D
@Adz599
@Adz599 9 ай бұрын
...and having watched the rest of it, I'm really pleased I did. Transparent finger got a LOL. Great video! Thanks!
@henrytupper6959
@henrytupper6959 7 ай бұрын
Been a tool maker since 79, but enjoy learning things I have not experienced. Also enjoy your voice and no rock music.
@daveash9572
@daveash9572 10 ай бұрын
I bought myself some piano wire a few years ago, and it came in a reel. There was no warning on the packaging, but with hindsight I suppose I should have seen this coming, but wow do those reels contain a lot of energy! When I first unhooked the wire from the latch thingy which was holding it in, the reel unravelled, quite explosively, hurting myself a tiny bit. Thankfully I was wearing goggles, and a leather apron, otherwise I may have lost an eye and a nipple.
@johnmoorefilm
@johnmoorefilm 10 ай бұрын
Important story - i worry about my kid and eye-pro all the time! need more scary stories👍❤
@captainmurphy4720
@captainmurphy4720 10 ай бұрын
THIS STORY WILL HELP ME WITH MY KID AND THEIR WANTON DISREGARD FOR PROPER NIPPLE SAFETY.
@jeremiahbullfrog9288
@jeremiahbullfrog9288 10 ай бұрын
But you could have made a cool eye patch out of the detached nipple.... Ew i grossed myself out lol
@MrSmeagolsGhost
@MrSmeagolsGhost 10 ай бұрын
I've done similar with steel wire rope. The manufacturer had wound it tightly around the reel and i've just gone in with side cutter and sliced the banding. Like Dave my PPE saved me that day.
@machinistmikethetinkerer4827
@machinistmikethetinkerer4827 10 ай бұрын
Yep. Try working on watches, clocks or pocketwatches. The mainsprings can be deadly little buggers. Take out an eye, slice fingers...
@rafaelrodriguez-vx6ck
@rafaelrodriguez-vx6ck 3 ай бұрын
Your the Bomb. I'm 2 days new and you have taught me a lot.
@bighock2886
@bighock2886 9 ай бұрын
"That would be the spring semester." I literally laughed out loud! 🤣
@daveash9572
@daveash9572 10 ай бұрын
Always a treat to see a blondihacks vid
@tomp538
@tomp538 10 ай бұрын
Agree, and her, calming H.R., voice overs are the best!
@davecamilleri9411
@davecamilleri9411 5 ай бұрын
A new craft to practice on my lathe, THANKS
@jeremiahbullfrog9288
@jeremiahbullfrog9288 10 ай бұрын
Buying springs stinks when you want it *right now* Thanks for showing how to DIY it
@ronginger661
@ronginger661 10 ай бұрын
Instead of your L shaped metal part I use a pair of wood strips that go in place of a tool bit. They are two layers with the wire run between them. By adjusting the tool hold down screws you control the wire tension. One set of strips covers any size wire. With good tension control you get better springs.
@mahmoudmousavi9489
@mahmoudmousavi9489 21 күн бұрын
Greetings. Thank you for the short and useful lesson..
@Forensic1Man
@Forensic1Man 5 ай бұрын
Hi! This is a very nice video for making strong springs. However, for my work, I need to make very light springs for chiming door bell hammers. I use the lathe, but also place two pieces of leather in the tool post and clamp the 0.001" stainless wire to cause resistance as the lathe turns and winds the wire on the mandrel. As the wire is pulled through the leather pads, the frictional resistance also helps to maintains the spring diameter. I do like your technique to flatten the ends of the spring. You always do such great, well calibrated work. Thanks so much for your videos!
@MrGuttepjokk
@MrGuttepjokk 9 ай бұрын
This video changed something inside me! I'll try once more! 😅You just proved that devil is in the details.. but you kicked him out and decided to reveal the secrets. Then you made this magic instructional vid!!! No waste of time with joking and THANK YOU FOR MAKING A DIFFERENCE IN OUR WORLD. It's highly needed :)
@usd25674
@usd25674 10 ай бұрын
Not sure which was better , the technical ability or the humor. Did subscribe and thanks for the video.
@ohjoannabanana
@ohjoannabanana 9 ай бұрын
Hahahahahaha you totally got me and my husband with your Spring Semester joke! 😂🤣😅😂
@meteorplum
@meteorplum 10 ай бұрын
"Spring semester" 👏👏👏
@gav1njackson
@gav1njackson 7 ай бұрын
You had me at 'Spring Semester' 🙂
@LovesM855A1
@LovesM855A1 4 ай бұрын
Wow you made some great springs! The fact you are on this equipment blows me away, you are super interesting so thank you for the content and Im now subbed and will join patreon
@dazyalaska8713
@dazyalaska8713 10 ай бұрын
I stumbled on this channel by complete accident and I love it, btw thx for the metric numbers.
@generessler6282
@generessler6282 10 ай бұрын
Haha. Brings back memories. As a kid building models, I found I could do much the same thing with a drill press set for lowest revs. Not nearly as precise as your setup, but all we owned. Chuck up a bit of rod (nail, bold shank, or even coat hanger wire for the tiny ones) for the mandrel. Bend a 3/4" right angle on the end of a 3' length music wire. (The extra length helps with pitch angle.) Grip the other end hard with a vice grip. Insert the bent end between the Jacobs chuck jaws and the mandrel. Pull hard on the vice grip and make the first 1/2 turn of the chuck by hand. Eyeball the angle to get the right pitch. Goose the power to wind the spring. With practice, I could actually get fine results most of the time. Tension springs are particularly easy this way. You want a negative winding angle to pre-tension the turns. The 3/4 end becomes the hook. Up to .04" wire was fine. Yeah. I think this convinces me you could make the mandrel with no taper, but a slot parallel to the axis rather than the cross-hole. Removal would be much easier.
@MAsWorld1
@MAsWorld1 Ай бұрын
New Fan (and experienced mechanic) great videos, great educator ✅
@BeeGeeTheImp
@BeeGeeTheImp 10 ай бұрын
You are absolutely right! Coiled helix technology is an ever-growing body of knowledge. My undergraduate engineering degree had 5 spring semesters. When I went back to earn my master degree 10 years later they required another 2 spring semesters. 😜
@zdcyclops1lickley190
@zdcyclops1lickley190 10 ай бұрын
You can make spings without a a lathe. You will need a vise., a hammer, a file, a propane torch and spring wire. Caution does not work well for small diameter spring wire. It tends to melt. Great for making micro steel balls. First heat the spring wire to red hot then let it air cool. this softens the wire. Next wrap the softened wire around a rod of the right size to make the size io spring you need . If you use a threaded rod you can get as many wraps per inch as you want. After making the spring, heat to a even cherry red over the entire lenght of your spring. Quench your spring in oil or water to make the wire hard again. Volila homade spring. An oil quench will make a slightly softer spring than a water quench.
@fishfreak911
@fishfreak911 5 ай бұрын
I freaking love your vids! I learn tons, and every once in a while we get, "Because shut up, that's why!" LMAO!
@rhadden8976
@rhadden8976 10 ай бұрын
I really enjoy watching your videos. I not only learn from them but you make it so interesting and fun. You are one fantastic person and thank you for taking the time to share.
@MrPallingo
@MrPallingo 10 ай бұрын
Quinn is wonderful, sharing and instructing. Smart. Methodical. Well, if you're a machinist ya better have a method.
@rotorhead5000
@rotorhead5000 10 ай бұрын
The thing about most things we make on the lathe at home; most of them are commercialy available, but take a few days to get, where as the thing we can make when we are Johnny (or jenny) on the spot, that's where it shines.
@Amerikanin2numarali_ustasi
@Amerikanin2numarali_ustasi 10 ай бұрын
Spring Semester!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@lesmaybury793
@lesmaybury793 10 ай бұрын
I recoil at the thought of spring injuries.
@mrimmortal1579
@mrimmortal1579 10 ай бұрын
I don’t like injuries ANY time of year…
@spokehedz
@spokehedz 9 ай бұрын
The thing with being able to "buy a thing" is that only works if a whole bunch of conditions are met: The store is open, you have enough money, you can get there, it has the thing you need, and it takes less time to do all that then it does to make the thing. And, the best part about making 1: You can usually make 2 or to as much stock as you have.
@johnapel2856
@johnapel2856 10 ай бұрын
I was literally going to comment "... because shut up, that's why" makes me laugh every time, but others beat me to it, so I won't say that. Wait, what? That's a neat operation. It does look kind of simple, but I'm sure it isn't. Nicely done. Thanks, and Meow to Sprocket.
@andersjjensen
@andersjjensen 10 ай бұрын
Sometimes it's simply a matter of not wanting to leave the workshop, to get a spring, in the middle of a project, or wait for one to arrive in the mail. Especially repair jobs tend to fall in that category. Sure, if it's a long project with lots of drawing things up ahead of time foresight will kick in and you might as well order the springs when you order stock anyway.
@kevinpulver4027
@kevinpulver4027 8 ай бұрын
Transparent finger! Love your dry humor! The finish grinding jig was new for me. Great idea, thanks!
@brad3378
@brad3378 10 ай бұрын
You know you made it when Ron Covell watches your videos!
@Bob_Jones_
@Bob_Jones_ 10 ай бұрын
I feel inspired, now Im going to go cut the strings out of my piano and make a spring today :)
@0ADVISOR0
@0ADVISOR0 10 ай бұрын
As a non-certified spring aficionado, I must say, your springs look terrific!
@FarmerKen355
@FarmerKen355 9 ай бұрын
Spring Semester... thanks got a nice chuckle out of that.
@WireWeHere
@WireWeHere 10 ай бұрын
Starter anchor hole can be drilled inline with the jig making removal easy. Occasionally this becomes a feature you need anyway.
@brouettebredouille8320
@brouettebredouille8320 9 ай бұрын
How tf did I not find your channel earlier. This is gold content, well explained and with many ways to do things. Thank you so much.
@skyclaw
@skyclaw 9 ай бұрын
Don’t make springs out of gold. It’s much too soft.
@ClintsHobbiesDIY
@ClintsHobbiesDIY 10 ай бұрын
I didn't have a clue how. Now I'm like..... I have a Lathe; I can make springs some day. Thanks Quinn.
@simonhoey6575
@simonhoey6575 10 ай бұрын
Quinn, I truly hope you’re “don’t be a buster and cut your springs” was a fast & furious reference. Nice jig, love the channel. 👌
@jmyler
@jmyler 8 ай бұрын
Your videos are just so good. The perfect amount of explanation, not overly concerned with being perfect like most on youtube, admission to mistakes, great cadence...wonderful content. Keep up the good work.
@phillipmetcalf9404
@phillipmetcalf9404 10 ай бұрын
Wow, this video sure sprung up for me to watch.
@JustJimWillDo
@JustJimWillDo 10 ай бұрын
It's the middle of winter Down Under so it was nice to see a bit of spring in the air.
@SeriousSchitt
@SeriousSchitt Ай бұрын
You’ve not seen nothing like the ‘Mighty Quinn’!
@tmagrit
@tmagrit 9 ай бұрын
I've loved you from the first two seconds of this video 😂
@jeffstiles7850
@jeffstiles7850 9 ай бұрын
This was super cool, thanks for showing us
@dennythomas8887
@dennythomas8887 10 ай бұрын
I'm thinking Tender suspension, to go along with the wheels and those cool little boxes you made in the last video. 🤔😁
@gekojoe
@gekojoe 9 ай бұрын
SPRING semester jajajajaj that killed me jajajaj
@MrCubflyer
@MrCubflyer 3 ай бұрын
I do a lot of music wire for my RC airplanes and I have a cutter designed for music wire I have cut some pretty big stuff before and its pretty effortless. Love your channel that was just a little info for people that may need to cut a lot of music wire.
@devjock
@devjock 10 ай бұрын
As a chainmail enthusiast; Can confirm, anything above 1mm stainless is absolutely crazy dangerous. Powerwinding springs for making rings for chainmailing is one of the top things giving me permanent skin scars. Worth it though. Safety glasses and thick leather gloves and you'll be fine. Ofcourse, as chainmail goes, I just made a bunch of jewelery, so my rings weren't that big in diameter. As such, I just used a battery powered drill and knitting needles with the knobby bit sawed off, and that netted me an awesome variety of diameters for coiling. Thriftyness ftw!
@phuzzygreene
@phuzzygreene 10 ай бұрын
Another wonderful episode, thank you. You need to expand you merch to catch phrases. Because shut up, that's why - chamfers are what separate us... - Imperial fist shake, and so on.
@Dartfreak75
@Dartfreak75 4 ай бұрын
This is awesome! Love this channel!
@johnslugger
@johnslugger 10 ай бұрын
*Great tool for gun repair!*
@promess
@promess 3 ай бұрын
I appreciate your content. Thank you. I've never done much machining work, but I'm learning a metric ton from you.
@mike0rr
@mike0rr 10 ай бұрын
Funny enough, I found this channel all because of springs. I needed a spring for small robot Im making, but it needed some specific dimensions. So I needed to make it. But the more I looked the more I needed a lathe. Then I slowly drifted to mills and ended up on this and a few other channels for mills and lathes : P
@firebird8600
@firebird8600 10 ай бұрын
Yay!! It's Blondihacks time!!!
@mxm650
@mxm650 10 ай бұрын
This was great! I loved the fixturing tips. Thank you, Quinn. I have made springs with music wire and a drill bit, but never anything this nice. The "Spring Semester" in my mechanical engineering degree talked a lot about calculating spring rates and selecting wire and coil sizes. It would be a stretch to say they covered making them, though.
@tyrannosaurusimperator
@tyrannosaurusimperator 10 ай бұрын
We had one class that was supposed to cover springs, but the professor was tired of teaching springs, so we learned bolts instead. Why only one class covering both? Because the university decided that everyone had to take 7 different humanities classes, a "science" class, and a math class to graduate. Got to say bolt calcs have been a lot more useful than designing springs.
@charliespann3967
@charliespann3967 10 ай бұрын
Another awesome video. I'm with Kris at WhiteOeks Farm, you gentle voiceand humor is a great way to teach machine work and you do a great job. Thanks I have been a so called (Machinist) for a long time. I consider a beginner compared to people like Joe Pie and Abom. The only problem with your channel is you got me saying "YATSEE" when I cut a piece of metal. I guess there are bigger problems out there. Thanks again for years of very enjoyable videos. I'm still learning at 72.
@alexharvey9721
@alexharvey9721 10 ай бұрын
So good! It's surprising how often you need specific springs for diy projects and they're not actually that easy to find (conversely, I'm usually building the part around the dimensions etc of a spring I already have). So much practical knowledge in one video! That's a sub from me!
@dale1956ties
@dale1956ties Ай бұрын
I was tuning a guitar when I first started playing, around age 10. A string broke and stuck in the soft part of my hand between thumb & forefinger. I looked at it amazement as it happened so fast it didn't hurt. The really interesting part was when I pulled it out. It was in there a good half inch! I couldn't believe how it just kept coming as I pulled. Music wire under stress can be pretty dangerous.
@FerdausAlAmin
@FerdausAlAmin 9 ай бұрын
A quality spring making by hand.. that's what you have taught in this video.. Quite a number of steps.. Thanks for the video
@brianhostak3961
@brianhostak3961 10 ай бұрын
Quinn , you amaze me ! What a great educator you are . Thank you for the videos you do !!
@jappyled1394
@jappyled1394 10 ай бұрын
That's the new source of springs! Thanks for ideas & 'how to'
@KX36
@KX36 10 ай бұрын
essential for elevating your thingamabob into a springamathing.
@cannbudo
@cannbudo 10 ай бұрын
You are a rock star in my beginning machinist world. Thanks for the videos over the years.
@hhe5218
@hhe5218 10 ай бұрын
I haven't wound stainless springs, but music wire does absolutely require baking in a oven otherwise it will change dimensions (taking a set). Mark Serbu made an excellent video on this.
@tweake7175
@tweake7175 10 ай бұрын
Mark Novak also has quite a few good video's on custom spring making.
@Broadpaw_Fox
@Broadpaw_Fox 10 ай бұрын
One thing I'll add to this - if you know you're going to be making a few copies of a certain size spring, you can get a rather close measure of the length of wire needed by using something soft as a mock up spring. Copper wire if you have it laying around, safety wire, hell - even string can be used. You're just looking to get a measure of the length you need to form the spring correctly while having enough tail length to keep it in the guide tool. Once you know the length you can save some material by not cutting quite so long for safety, and this can save a bit of money if you're making a fair amount of springs. Just throwing out ideas. Loving the videos. Quinn. Have fun!! 😃
@timhooper8617
@timhooper8617 10 ай бұрын
I see springs in my future. Super and relevant video - thank you!
@robertoswalt319
@robertoswalt319 10 ай бұрын
Quinn, thanks for the laughs as well as the tips on how to make quality looking springs.
@mrimmortal1579
@mrimmortal1579 10 ай бұрын
If you add a threaded hole in long side of the “L” shaped piece that you clamp into the tool post, then you can use a bolt and a couple of washers (one of which has a small groove cut into it) to tension the wire (which would free up a hand from having to hold pliers). Then all you would need is some sort of mechanism between the bolt and washers to add tension (which could be adjusted by tightening the bolt).
@NiVofHiR
@NiVofHiR 9 ай бұрын
I LEARNED SO MUCH in 20 minutes! Mind BLOWN! Keep up the good work!
@dirkroggeveen5764
@dirkroggeveen5764 10 ай бұрын
Thanx for sharing, very clear explanation and I like your way of working very much. Friendly greetings from Holland. 👍👍👍
@dandare1001
@dandare1001 5 ай бұрын
Great and entertaining tutorial. Thanks.
@glennschemitsch8341
@glennschemitsch8341 9 ай бұрын
You can also close a spring end from a longer spring, by using a small hand-held butane lighter that is like a blow torch when lit. you just need to get the last coil red hot and then squeeze with a pair of needle nose pliers. you can then grind the end square. This will work for even heavier springs other than just music wire. If you had an old electric marking pen, transformer type, that's used for 'writing ' on steel surfaces, it will also collapse the last open coil on a music wire spring. Obviously, you have to compensate for the last coil collapsing. Winding springs under power can be dangerous, slowest speeds are best, AND stay away from the wire end when releasing the wire! it can cause you serious damage with all of the pent-up energy from winding. nice video!
@sesra5076
@sesra5076 10 ай бұрын
Thank you once again for a very informative and entertaining video, Quinn. It's amazing how many incredibly useful "little things" of method and process one learns watching these videos you make... __AND__ I cant thank you enough for posting and mentioning the missed steps as well! While failure is often the best teacher, and thus I can't guarantee I won't repeat similar mistakes, it sure adds significant context and emphasis behind choices made in those processes and methods!! ♥
@devtasingh
@devtasingh 10 ай бұрын
Amazing process, thanks for teaching us it.
@markmonroe7330
@markmonroe7330 10 ай бұрын
Excellent presentation. Thanks for sharing.
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