The Largest Drill Thread We've Machined in 60 Years (It's Literally Off The Charts!)

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HAL Heavy Duty Machining Australia

HAL Heavy Duty Machining Australia

11 күн бұрын

We just broke our own 60 year record with a completely custom thread for drill rods that will end up weighing a TON.
Welcome to HAL Heavy Duty Machining Australia, a real live Aussie machine shop based in Central Queensland that specialises in the drilling industry. In short, we fix stuff that drillers break... and make all the heavy duty custom gear they need to get the job done.
In this video we machine up a completely custom thread for our upcoming Megadrill project - a VLD (very large diameter) rig capable of drilling 3.0m diameter hole to depths of 250m!
Due to the incredible torque created, we have to machine completely custom rods that are quite literally off the scale - 40% larger than anything readily commercially available. It dwarfs an 8 5/8 reg (about as big as it gets for standard onshore rigs to my knowledge).
OD is well over 300mm
Thread length is close to 200mm
Can’t share much more specifics as it’s a custom prototype.
It’s definitely a record for the 60 year history of the company (by FAR) and MIGHT just be one of the biggest rod threads machined with the intention of being spun off the back of a road registered drill rig.
No doubt the comments section will light up like a christmas tree if not.
Which is exactly what I want.
I can't find bigger, but if someone knows of it, PLEASE let me know. No claims of an actual world record in this video... we just don't know for sure. Yet.
Enjoy, and thanks for tuning in.

Пікірлер: 277
@karlpron
@karlpron 8 күн бұрын
Just discovered your channel. Great machining stuff. Don't let anyone turn you down by comparing to another channels like Bomber from Florida, Cutter from Australia, Infinite Precision Man from Germany. Remember it's your channel, your shop, your rules. We like them because they are different and you should be yourself too. All the best and keep up the good work.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
What a wonderful comment. I couldn’t agree more. My goal is to be as authentic as possible, share the interesting stuff we get up to, and God willing… add a little value to the conversation. I just love machining, and feel really fortunate to do what I do. Appreciate the comment mate. Wise words
@grahamkeegan2706
@grahamkeegan2706 Күн бұрын
Love seeing your videos - it takes me back to my younger years working in heavy machining and making proper parts ! I remember making some bespoke couplings for the north sea oil industry here in the UK many moons ago. we didn't have a lathe big enough to make them so we made them on a huge horizontal borer, and had to cut 1800mm diameter acme threads almost 1 meter deep. Much slower than turning but we got the job done and the customer was more than happy !!
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 19 сағат бұрын
Holy crap that’s a big thread! Yeah, there some mega gear on the North Sea oil industry. Thanks for sharing. Love it.
@shanemac1111
@shanemac1111 9 күн бұрын
I thought it would be boring, turned out to be nuts.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Haha. Cheers mate
@Honzishek
@Honzishek 7 күн бұрын
aren you dirty mind ? :D machinist jokes after 22pm :D
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 7 күн бұрын
🤣👌👊
@josematute6187
@josematute6187 7 күн бұрын
First time watching your channel, Awesome work! I´m an Industrial engineer from El Salvador, trying to expand my knowledge in machining and channels likes Kurtis and yours are a god send for that purpose. Keep it up, I´ll be waiting for more videos.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 6 күн бұрын
That’s fantastic mate. I met some wonderful people from El Salvador when I was living in Argentina. Glad you’re getting into it all. Machining is such an interesting profession to be part of. Yeah man, you’ll learn heaps off Kurtis’ channel. That guy knows his stuff.
@emkaythree
@emkaythree 9 күн бұрын
Ah yes, the forbidden pink lemonade 👌🏻
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
I’m sticking with Pink Panther juice 🤣
@backho12
@backho12 7 күн бұрын
Just ask Jim Jones !
@jameskilpatrick7790
@jameskilpatrick7790 2 күн бұрын
Just ran across your channel. Very nice and interesting video, and I like your attitude. Nobody anywhere knows it all. As long as we keep learning, we keep growing. Cheers!
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 2 күн бұрын
Thanks mate! I find that the more you know… the more you realise you DONT know 🤣 Especially in machining. Half the reason why it’s so fun for the endlessly curious kind of person.
@paulcurtis2779
@paulcurtis2779 9 күн бұрын
Kong is big but I hate to tell you, Kurtis from Down Under at Cutting Edge Engineering has it beat by 3 miles. . Specifically, it weights 209.5 lbs or 95 Kilo's and is 125 MM (4.9 inch) bar and 1100 MM long (3.6 Ft) with 900 MM (2.9Ft) of reach. . It's King Kong of boring bars. . Has to use an overhead crane to get it off the floor. . It's so big it's funny.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
I watched him make that bar on one of his videos. It’s awesome! Kurtis does some great work and his channel is the gold standard as far as I’m concerned. Thanks for the comment 👊
@mehmettemel8725
@mehmettemel8725 9 күн бұрын
I have seen that as well but don't bet on it because it's no where near as big as the boring bar I've seen in engineering magazine which was on a big CNC Lathe in Albury,just can't remember the name of the company.
@user-rc8oy1nm1d
@user-rc8oy1nm1d 9 күн бұрын
Saw him make it but l haven't seen him use it yet.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
There’s some insane gear out there. It’s one of the reasons why I love this profession so much. It just never gets boring
@Amduscias13
@Amduscias13 8 күн бұрын
Pfft!!...Nothing compared to bars used on Horizontal borers(Which you have just described)..but king is a toddler yes!
@arisskarpetis
@arisskarpetis 8 күн бұрын
"now we gotta cut 30 more of them" 🤣
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 7 күн бұрын
I know right…
@MachiningandMicrowaves
@MachiningandMicrowaves 4 күн бұрын
It's all a bit bigger than the stuff I make, I use a Simtek boring bar that fits easily into the bore of a 1.8 mm mmWave feedhorn. One of my upcoming jobs needs an even smaller tapered bore, only 800 micrometres diameter. Great to see some proper-sized machining for a change. I'd be interested to see what you do about metrology and QA inspection in a future vid. Can't exactly buy a go/no-go gauge for that thread! Totally with you on the nerdy side of CNC, I've been coding since 1972 and recently treated myself to a new SYIL X5 mill. Huge fun programming what is effectively a two-ton killer robot!
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 4 күн бұрын
Holy wow! Micro stuff like that would do my head in. Mega respect to all the precision machinists out there. Nice work re the mill. I haven’t had any CNC milling experience yet, as we just don’t get enough work to warrant buying one. I’d love to… but it’d spend 95% of its life as a 4 tonne ornament. Wow. You’ve clearly got some experience in the field mate. Well done!
@Wyllie38
@Wyllie38 9 күн бұрын
People always are shocked by the big stuff. I’ve only ever worked in a heavy machining shop so an M580 nut (a samllish for us) isn’t really that big. Great video. Love a shop made tool also.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
That’s awesome. Love that you’re doing the heavy stuff brother. Thanks for the kind feedback. Much appreciated.
@Wyllie38
@Wyllie38 9 күн бұрын
@@halheavyduty 💪 keep it up bro
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
💯👊
@andrewguy1249
@andrewguy1249 6 күн бұрын
Talk to you regularly great to see my tooling working
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 5 күн бұрын
Your extra long drill sub was the test material in the HTS drill video bro 🤣
@normsweet1710
@normsweet1710 8 күн бұрын
I recall as a kid watching my Dad cut 7/8 14 tpi for an old Allis Chalmers Combine. To go next size up cause 3/4 was chewed up. soooo long ago. Thank You for keeping the craft up and running 😉👍❤️
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
That’s so cool. I have similar memories as a little kid watching my grandad Hal work making drill subs by hand. Thanks for tuning in mate
@paulcurtis2779
@paulcurtis2779 9 күн бұрын
Looks beautiful. So very shiny. Can't wait to see part 2 for the other part. . very exciting.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Really happy with how it turned out. Can’t wait to see them screw together in the next video. Thanks for tuning in 👊💯
@markoreilly3414
@markoreilly3414 7 күн бұрын
I've machined 8" Drill Joints years ago, But nothing close to that beast ! 👏👏👏
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 7 күн бұрын
Nice work Mark! We very rarely go past 7 5/8 Reg for the rest of the rigs… so if you cut 8” connections you were def at the max end of it. This thread is a real outlier… we just had to create it to handle the crazy torque when cutting a 3m diameter hole. Thanks for commenting and for tuning in. Appreciate it brother 👊
@markoreilly3414
@markoreilly3414 7 күн бұрын
Only recently found your channel. Great to see an Aussie Machine shop showing their workmanship to the World 👍 Where in Qld are you guys based ?
@martinswiney2192
@martinswiney2192 5 күн бұрын
I like how the chips off Kong are so heavy they just sit at the bottom of the bore. Too heavy to spin around and foul up your cut. Also like the rack for your tool holders. Neat set up.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 5 күн бұрын
Cheers mate. Yeah it’s a really fun tool to run. Going to do a cut depth testing video at some point. We had him cranked up to 8mm cuts today and the chips were insane. Little weapon blasted through it. Thanks for the feedback re the tool racks too. It def makes working on a CNC like ours way more efficient.
@brendancopsey4216
@brendancopsey4216 5 күн бұрын
Thank you for the video and explanation 👍
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 5 күн бұрын
Most welcome! Thanks for tuning in 👊
@ypaulbrown
@ypaulbrown 9 күн бұрын
loving this, cheers from the other Sunshine State, Florida USA...Paulie
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Cheers brother. You’ve been here since the very start and I appreciate your support. All the way from the other sunshine state 👊
@gregoneill9194
@gregoneill9194 9 күн бұрын
Excellent vid bro
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Cheers mate. Appreciate the feedback
@Dug6666666
@Dug6666666 9 күн бұрын
"Vid bro" requires a "translate to English" , nice one cobber.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
🤣👊👍
@philjjordan6197
@philjjordan6197 8 күн бұрын
Love the videos, not to many ads, so i watch till the end, Not GREEDY LIKE SOME. no bullshit just great content. Thanks. Look forward to next week.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 7 күн бұрын
Thanks Phil. Glad you enjoyed it
@braddobson2060
@braddobson2060 9 күн бұрын
You make excellent videos.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Thanks for the kind words Brad. Very grateful to be able to share what we do. I find it really interesting work, so glad people out there seem to appreciate it too
@GavinFreedomLover
@GavinFreedomLover 9 күн бұрын
Nice work brother !!
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
Cheers Gavin!
@abramfriesen9834
@abramfriesen9834 5 күн бұрын
This is what I've been trying to do just 3inch
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 5 күн бұрын
Nice work. Hope you’re having a win with it. I really enjoy cutting threads. Something mesmerising about it.
@Rafale123killer
@Rafale123killer 9 күн бұрын
Hey dude new subscriber here. Gotta say I really enjoy your content and seeing someone passionate sharing makes it even better. It’s nice to see all the machine work in Australia like cutting edge engineering if you heard of him. Keep up the good work Best regards from Switzerland
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
Welcome to the channel brother, and thanks for the kind feedback. CEE is excellent. Kurtis & Karen are about as good as it gets when it comes to machining channel in my humble opinion. Love watching his stuff. Guy is a genius on the manual machines
@alexbuilds706
@alexbuilds706 9 күн бұрын
Cool stuff. Definitely subbed.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
Cheers mate!
@karlwinter2680
@karlwinter2680 5 күн бұрын
Those Alpha's look great in the background mate.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 5 күн бұрын
Big fan of them brother. Thanks for all your help setting them up. Very grateful for all the support - especially considering how remote we are.
@Lokimyrottie
@Lokimyrottie 9 күн бұрын
Lovely video
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Thank you very much 👊
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Thank you very much 👊
@Imba-gt7qi
@Imba-gt7qi 9 күн бұрын
Nice thread, seems a good surface finish, I have now only a 4" lathe. I do boring bars on the opposite site, so the insert faces down. doing it that way, my maschine tends to spiraling and blocking. Biggest i made with this lathe was 60 mm dia, 0.5mm per rev. (around 2 1/2", 0,02" per rev) in early 80 i made a screw, used as pylon with 3.5m dia and 25m long.. 6m thread lenght, pitch 4 inches. 40 tons if i remember correct. took an whole day for fit testing the nut. but it fits smooth :-)
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Nice work! Nothing more satisfying when it finally screws up properly.
@paulwatson6013
@paulwatson6013 9 күн бұрын
Just gotta love the incanink! Lotsa talented people out there. Some are really good when it comes to offering up sound advice. Yeah big stuff always attracts interest. Interesting vid. Don't see a lot of Aussie stuff, so all good. In small scale manufacturing myself, but vastly different field.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
It’s amazing the diversity in machining. I find it all so interesting. Thanks for the comment, and for tuning in 👊
@briangarland9883
@briangarland9883 9 күн бұрын
Very nice! I still use a lot of top notch style tools.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
I find they’re pretty good. Only two sides per insert is the major downside, but they do the job just fine in my opinion.
@briangarland9883
@briangarland9883 8 күн бұрын
@@halheavyduty We also make special profiles with them.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
Nice one. Yeah, I find the blanks really good for that. We grind up a lot for strange once off threads too.
@Nathan-vq9ch
@Nathan-vq9ch 8 күн бұрын
Bore / Core sampling very deep , outer being's would use larger on scale , keep up the good work
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 7 күн бұрын
Yeah, from the comments there some pretty big blasthole gear out there too. Going to research it all some more. Fascinating what’s out there! Thanks for letting me know. Appreciate it mate 👊
@BramBiesiekierski
@BramBiesiekierski 9 күн бұрын
Im an auto spark and did a few rewires on drills over the years. The size of the gear on some of the rigs blew my mind. I cant even imagine the rig thats gonna run that
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
Nice one! Yeah, it’ll be a wild setup that’s for sure
@brucejenner5856
@brucejenner5856 6 күн бұрын
Don't be running yourself down m8, from what I see you're doing fantastic work with the machinery you have.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 6 күн бұрын
Thanks for the kind feedback mate. Appreciate it
@garytelling397
@garytelling397 8 күн бұрын
Great vid, it really does make 8 1/2-inch Reg look so small and next is the pin 😀. I had a laugh😆 about the comments on the size of Kong and Curti's boring bar, everything is relative to the size of the lathe you have and the work you perform. Where I work our largest boring bar is a Sandvik anti vibe bar and it is 200mm (8 inch) in diameter and has a max working length of 2 meters (79 inches) and that doesn't include the rest of the bar held in the tool holder mounted on the cross slide, so that makes it over 3 meters long and it's still not long enough as we have to turn the component around and bore it from the other side as well.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
I know right 🤣 Bro that bar sounds wild. I didn’t realise that Sandvik made a bar that big. The things I’m learning from these comments is wonderful I’ve gotta say. What kind of work do you do?
@garytelling397
@garytelling397 8 күн бұрын
@@halheavyduty We support the mining industry, mainly hydraulic cylinders.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
Nice. Heavy gear when you get into mining hydraulics. Some of the lathes they use are monsters on the big cylinders.
@sweetpeaz61
@sweetpeaz61 9 күн бұрын
Hi Great video, be great to see a wider shot of the machine included whilst its machining. It looks like a Harrison alpha. I bought my first Alpha in 1996 an Alpha 400 so just a small shop lathe with a 55mm spindle bore. Loved that machine, ran it for 10 years and had to part with it sadly. ventually bought another secomd hand 1997 model i rebuilt in 2012 and use hard every day , great for one offs and repair work as you get best of both worlds with manual/cnc combined. look forward to seeing more great content from you
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Well spotted! We have two Harrison Alphas and I love working on them. Exactly as you said - great for small run parts and good for repairs in alpha mode. We have a 1560 and a 1760 (the one in this video). Will be sure to get a bit more of them in upcoming videos. Thanks for the idea.
@paulsim7589
@paulsim7589 5 күн бұрын
OMG - That's how Slinkys are made!
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 5 күн бұрын
💯🤣
@semperfidelis8386
@semperfidelis8386 7 күн бұрын
Didn't see you gauge those threads.....must've been too busy watching the pretty pink coolant
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 6 күн бұрын
Haha. Pink Panther juice for the win. These are just the pilot threads. We wanted to see the “in the flesh” before committing to a big run. Testing will be developed once we are happy with them.
@weldmachine
@weldmachine 9 күн бұрын
I did my Apprenticeship in a Shaft Shop. All we made All Day was Shafts ??? ( what are we making today ??? ) IF you can Turn It. We made or repaired it. The business had it's 100 year anniversary when I was working there. When I first started working there we had a joke running where was most of the Rain ? Outside or Inside the factory 🙄 Not only that to deal with, the floor had large pieces of timber covering the huge pits where the Flat Belts ran the earlier machines. The positive of that was, when it Rained the pits would fill up with water ?? The place was huge and so were the Holes in the Roof and Floor ??? Thankfully after I started there with 4 other Apprentices the indoor swimming pools were finally filled in with concrete and they replaced the Hole Roof. The Old Tradesmen all hated us, because we made the place too comfortable. ( their words, lol ) Adding to that we were the first Apprentices to be hired by this company. The Lady who pushed us into this place was so proud of herself for what she accomplished ??? We only found out about the thing with the first Apprentices in the lunch room about 2 weeks after we started. Trying to find a way to stir up the Tradesmen ( as Apprentices are only good for ?? ) One of the Apprentices called out to the Tradesmen asking ... Have you ever had any Apprentices working here ? The Old Tradesmen started laughing and replied.. Don't wantem and don't need em. The Apprentice who asked the question only lasted till the end of the first month because the Trades wouldn't teach us anything. We were only the go for boys ( go for this, go for that or maybe hold this ?? ) Thankfully the same week as the other Apprentice left they suddenly started teaching us everything. They were Amazing to work with after that first month. We all learnt So Much from these guys. It was a tough job. We learnt the hard way to do it the easy way. ( something they always, kept telling us ) Apologizes for the Long Comment. I just wanted to highlight the Tradesmen who not only taught us Skills. But how to become Men too👍👍
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
I read it all! Great comment. Sounds like a bloody interesting workspace though. Old tradesmen make good young men. We have a few young guys in the shop and they’re great apprentices. It’s very rewarding to see their skilllset and confidence grow. We focus on three things 1) Have A Great artifice 2) Be Coachable 3) Work hard and be patient. Good things take time. Thanks again for the wonderful comment. Really appreciate it
@philjjordan6197
@philjjordan6197 8 күн бұрын
That's insane
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 7 күн бұрын
💯
@AndrewCisco
@AndrewCisco 7 күн бұрын
The only thread I know of that is larger is 8” and 10” BECO thread; they can be cut as 273mm or 343mm O.D. Invented by Bucyrus for blast hole drilling rods. I manufacturer these rods for larger diameter DTH drills. The only other place I’ve seen them used are on Atlas Copco/Epiroc Pit Viper drills. I have custom inserts made to the thread form.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 7 күн бұрын
Yeah wow. That’s pretty huge. My brother is a blast hole driller and they use some pretty big connections there too. I’ll check out the thread you mentioned. Sounds bloody enormous. Really appreciate the comment.
@jagracershoestring609
@jagracershoestring609 8 күн бұрын
I machined part of the Large Hadron Collider. Eight metre long six hundred millimetre tubes in stainless steel.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 7 күн бұрын
Dude that’s awesome. The LHC is one of the biggest man made structures there is. Very cool.
@Honzishek
@Honzishek 7 күн бұрын
what is that pinkie juice . :D its like from different world
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 7 күн бұрын
The pink panther juice is called Holemaker. It works pretty well and is just a standard drilling / cutting fluid
@willgallatin2802
@willgallatin2802 9 күн бұрын
Impressive!!! I do some small manual turning once in a while for maintenance/repair at work. Small question, why not modify Kong to have thru coolant? It may be a wee challenge, but well worth it in the long run.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Great question. To save time I’ll probably create a new 63mm bar with a WNMG insert in the near future. They just seem to cut better - especially on the finishing passes. That, and the inserts cost a fraction of the big 16mm CNMG ones. I don’t have the horsepower to maximise Kongs pontential anyway, and through coolant on that bar will actually be pretty difficult to do now. Kong has a bigger brother (an 83mm bar we call Godzilla) that’ll be featured in a future video. Godzilla has through coolant and can bore out holes 650mm deep. Kong’s limit is about 350.
@profpep
@profpep 3 күн бұрын
Just discovered your channel. Great to watch. Are my ears playing tricks; it sounds like the lathe speeds up on the facing cuts to maintain a constant cut speed?
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 2 күн бұрын
Thank you. Yes, you heard correctly. The Colchester Alpha lathes have constant surface speed (CSS) as a setting. Makes for a nicer finish on face cuts, and generally improves tool life.
@cncmachine202
@cncmachine202 8 күн бұрын
Good intro🎉
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
Thank you. Appreciate the kind feedback mate.
@rextransformation7418
@rextransformation7418 Күн бұрын
4:07 Dude, it was pretty risky to pick up the piece like that, the magnet should have been on only one diameter, covering more contact surface. Doing the way you've done you've had like two pairs of points of contact. I've been told by my ex supervisor (20 odd years ago) to lift it up just a notch from the floor, and purposely hit the piece to see if it would have stayed attached. It's like simulating bumping it on the jaws. You won't want that bad boy to fall from a height, especially in the lathe. Just an observation and a suggestion. You deal with it however you wanna.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty Күн бұрын
Oh I hear you brother. Prior to filming I actually had the billet about 6 inches off the ground and literally jumped up and down on it like a kids swing. Appreciate the comment mate. You’re not wrong in the slightest. I’m going to start banging it with the big bronze hammer as well just to double check. Excellent suggestion.
@rextransformation7418
@rextransformation7418 Күн бұрын
@@halheavyduty Hahahaha, pity you didn't film it, it would have been pretty educational. 😂😂 Am glad to hear you've put your whole body weight to test it, I've been thought to stomp it hard. Thanks for the update, overseas cuz. 😁 (Typing from Italy) By the way, what metal is that? I'm not sure I've catched it in the video.
@chrisleech1565
@chrisleech1565 9 күн бұрын
Always a good rule of thumb to bring your hand or some similar into the shot to scale size of the stock
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Great idea. I’ll be sure to do that in future videos
@madmodder123
@madmodder123 9 күн бұрын
Rule of Hand more like it
@chrisleech1565
@chrisleech1565 9 күн бұрын
@@madmodder123 10-4
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
👊🤣
@rcbohno
@rcbohno 8 күн бұрын
Kong is incredible
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
He’s a little animal 🦍 . Definitely bigger bars out there, but he does the job 👊
@peterhall6656
@peterhall6656 7 күн бұрын
You ought to get together with Kurtis from Cutting Edge Enginneering - that would be some real fabrication porn !!
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 7 күн бұрын
Goals for sure. Kurtis is a top bloke, very talented machinist and has a great channel.
@tonyroba
@tonyroba 7 күн бұрын
Hi ,you make nice content, however , i was wondering how do you measure this internal thread ? Do you have a thread gauge or something ? I do some thread milling , like a M162 x 3 or M 184 x 3 ,but at first i make a gauge witch i can meassure with 3 wire measurement to see if the pitch diameter is within tolerance , and then i make the internal thread to slight oversize so it will fit any part of that size any time .
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 7 күн бұрын
We cut the box first to exact measurements, and use a depth gauge to check thread depth. The box is then used as the tester for the pin connections. It’s still a prototype, so once we are happy with it, further testing will be developed to make sure they’re consistent.
@ypaulbrown
@ypaulbrown 9 күн бұрын
Love that Kong boring bar..........
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
It’s an absolute animal 💯
@onetireonfire2777
@onetireonfire2777 8 күн бұрын
What was that he was talking about the nose radius of the finishing cut? Junior machinist here.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
Excellent question. You want to make sure the depth of cut for finishing cuts is larger than the nose radius. Not a hard rule, but it tends to create a better finish and you still get chips to break. We run a 0.8 radius on the WNMG, so the finish cut is 1mm deep. Kong is a 1.2 radius so we do a 1.5mm finish cut usually. Hope that helps.
@onetireonfire2777
@onetireonfire2777 7 күн бұрын
Right on, thanks for the reply. I’ve been learning by doing and watching. Just bought a “newer” lathe to replace my old slow one. I enjoy how a person can start to get a feel for the machine and its work. Good luck with the channel, cheers from Canada!
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 7 күн бұрын
That’s great to hear mate. Well done on the newer lathe. I hear you re getting familiar with the machines. Always takes a while, but once you get experience on a particular machine it’s like playing with an instrument. Just a joy to work on some machines.
@bhekidlamini51
@bhekidlamini51 9 күн бұрын
Thanks for a great video . Is that a Colchester lathe ?
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Well spotted! Sure is. It’s a Colchester Alpha 1760.
@brucejenner5856
@brucejenner5856 6 күн бұрын
Biggest in the world? What about the drill pipes used on the Glomar Explorer, the ship that raised part of a Russian submarine?
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 6 күн бұрын
Im almost certain that some of the big offshore stuff makes our thread look like a child’s toy… And some of the blast hole stuff is similarly sized too. From what we can tell, it’s the largest RC tool joint there is, but I have no doubt some of the custom deep sea stuff must be bigger. The comments have been really helpful. It’s off the charts when it comes to standard gear, and much bigger than anything our little shop has done before.
@onemoredeadman
@onemoredeadman 9 күн бұрын
Channelling Crocodile Dundee? That's not a thread, this is a thread
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
🔪🤣
@zorlacskaterfreak
@zorlacskaterfreak 8 күн бұрын
Hi Mate, I did my apprenticeship and worked as a 1st class Machinist at Boart Longyear in Adelaide during the late 80's and throughout the 90's/2000's and cut some pretty big threads especially API threads! Why do people call your coolant the forbidden pink lemonade?
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
We run a brand called Holemaker and honestly it does a great job considering what our basic needs are. Someone last week commented “omg you ground up the pink panther” and I lost it laughing. Now I can’t get the bloody theme song out of my head. You would have cut some big threads at Boart Longyear. Any standard Commerical sizes bigger than 8 5/8 reg that youre aware of??
@zorlacskaterfreak
@zorlacskaterfreak 5 күн бұрын
@@halheavyduty Thanks for your reply mate! I cut literally thousands and thousands of HQ,NQ,BQ and AQ, AWJ ,BWJ as well as casing and innertubes as well_ love your videos bro!
@warrenjones744
@warrenjones744 9 күн бұрын
This is pretty cool. There is no API standard for that thread I would assume. (is there a world standard, DIN I suppose, now for drill threads?) I am also going out on a limb and say it was engineered along those lines, however I didn't notice much taper. . I am an former water well driller and we usually used threaded connections around the 3" range. We did have a few tools that subbed on to the drill stem with the 8 5/8 thread and it was pretty large stuff especially for our application. thus seldom used. Looking forward to the pin. Cheers from the Northeast USA.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Hey Warren, Thanks for the comment mate. The big thread as sort of evolved over time. 8 5/8 reg was the highest we could find, but it wasn’t strong enough to handle the immense torque loads. There was another thread we had before this one, and it’s held up great for up to 1.8m But we are entering pretty crazy territory now… so fingers crossed it holds up. Yeah, most of our water drilling threads are around the 3” range as well, although the big artesian deep wells go larger. I betting money that there’s oil well / deep sea rod connections that make this one look like a kids toy… but haven’t been able to find them yet. Fascinating stuff. Thanks for the great comment brother 👊
@flikflak24
@flikflak24 9 күн бұрын
One question. Why no through cooling in Kong? Btw if you can prevent or have a guy with some fire suppression gear ready at the machine. Then nothing beats running straight up oil ( like the strub's vulcan futura cf2915 ) and run it as a as close to room temp as possible would be optimal ( witch can easily be done by running it through a normal pc/car radiator/ condenser with a fan taped to it before going through the nosel out to the part. We did it and it worked surprisingly well )
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Interesting concept re straight up oil. Haven’t heard that one before. Sounds like you’ve got some solid machining experience brother 👊 The Kong bar was all welded up like that when I took over, so I’ve just left him as a solid bar. Ideally if I made it from scratch, I’d go for through coolant for sure.
@flikflak24
@flikflak24 7 күн бұрын
@@halheavyduty cant you just bor through the weld and use the hole that is in the head already ? ( if there is one that is ) or brac a slim copper tube going down the side of the tool aimed at the insert ( basicly makeing a non through cooling into a "through" cooling ) if you want i could show you a few pics and short video clips of what i have done if machining things
@flinch622
@flinch622 9 күн бұрын
Think so... anything bigger is likely casing. A go/no-go gauge for this set in the works? Sooner or later, inspection arrives.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
That’s what I thought too re size. Definitely larger casing threads exist 100%… but it’s quite off the charts as far as drill rod connections go. I doesn’t really matter too much, I was just really curious. Re go/no go. What a great question. Yep, all being developed alongside. This is just the pilot tester so we can see it in the flesh, so to speak 👍
@ipadize
@ipadize 9 күн бұрын
12:03 Slinky!
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Yesss! Finally someone saw it. That’s what I thought too 🤣 👊💯
@peternewman958
@peternewman958 9 күн бұрын
I used to make videos for commercial equipment, you have way too many scene change’s and fades, the thread cutting section was quite good in fact the best part of your video as far as watch ability goes. Take your time with camera movements, nothing turns people off faster than quick shots as it gives them a headache trying to follow the view. Get a camera tripod for some of the shots it will allow stability and help greatly with close ups. Don’t zoom too much as you can overdo it. I see you follow CEE so pay attention to Karens work and how she films Kurtis at work, she is getting very good and her editing is great. I’ll wait and watch a few more of your videos before subscribing. Cheers.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Hey Peter, Thank you for taking the time to give that feedback. Highly useful and I fully intend to alter my approach in future videos. After rewatching, I agree. I’m going to sort a fixture that mounts on the toolpost to get some more consistent video that doesn’t shake. Please let me know if you can see visible improvements in future videos - and by all means let me know where I can improve. The goal is growth, and comments like yours are solid gold. Thanks again mate 👊 Matt
@MD-gc4xq
@MD-gc4xq 9 күн бұрын
Love these channels also watch CEE , keep it up
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Thanks for the comment. That’s great you’ve got such an interest! CEE is excellent. Kurtis really knows his stuff. He and Karen have built an amazing channel and set the bar very high.
@halfinchholes88
@halfinchholes88 9 күн бұрын
As a tool and diemaker, I love watching how this heavy work is done. Much of my work had to be verified to ensure the part was within specification. In this case(huge internal thread), how would you verify the threads you have cut? Do you have a part that you can test the thread fit against or a Go/No-Go gage? How do you measure the pitch diameter? Love the videos.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
Thank you. These are all just the prototypes under development. Once we are 100% happy with them, all the testing checks and balances will be created accordingly to ensure they’re consistent. Great question.
@mrnetwurm
@mrnetwurm 9 күн бұрын
You’re great on camera
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Thank you. Appreciate the kind feedback.
@kaelin000
@kaelin000 9 күн бұрын
that answered a question; can you alter the spindle speed to maintain the surface speed (and therefore finish) when taking facing cuts *(hears motor spooling up as it makes the cut)* apparently you can.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Yes, the machine has constant surface speed. Definitely gives a nicer finish, especially on facing.
@rodneymayfield3352
@rodneymayfield3352 9 күн бұрын
have look at Cutting Edge Engineering for his "Large custom made boring bar"
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
It’s a weapon. I watched Kurtis’ video on that one. Baby Kong’s got nothing on that bar!
@gags730
@gags730 5 күн бұрын
What kind of coolant is that machine running?
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 5 күн бұрын
It’s called Holemaker. They were using it when I took over the shop, and from what I can tell it works pretty well. It’s got good rust prevention properties, doesn’t leave residue (too much) and doesn’t seem to go off.
@axemastersinc3269
@axemastersinc3269 9 күн бұрын
Ground up the Pink panther. LOL.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
I literally laughed out loud when I read the original comment 🤣🤣
@axemastersinc3269
@axemastersinc3269 9 күн бұрын
@@halheavyduty For sure. Good stuff.
@axemastersinc3269
@axemastersinc3269 9 күн бұрын
@@halheavyduty Great channel. Number 6 just started on a CNC.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
👊
@janj0n
@janj0n 9 күн бұрын
What is TPI and TPF? Is profile similar to API Regular or Int. Flush? I've cut more than a few (hundred) tubing and casing threads, and many of the Spec 7 (API) tool joints, and there are casing buttresses that are quite a bit bigger, but I think you've got the world beat in tool joints. I'm curious what you're doing about gaging?
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Hey mate, great questions. Unfortunately I can’t share any specific data on the thread as it’s a custom under development. Similar to the larger API reg threads, with some significant differences though.
@grahambeech5576
@grahambeech5576 8 күн бұрын
WoW!!!!!!
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
Cheers Graham! Thanks for commenting mate
@jeffrawe6486
@jeffrawe6486 5 күн бұрын
How big is the thread gauge 😂😂
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 5 күн бұрын
🤣🤣🤣
@theoldstationhand
@theoldstationhand 9 күн бұрын
So, are you doing a complete drill string in this diameter and, can you share why you are drilling a 3m hole 250m deep? Surely not to cut up into shorter lengths and sell off for underground tanks or the like🤔🤣
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Hahaha. That’s gold. They’re for ventilation in underground mining. We’ve done a bunch at 1.8m with our current big rig… But this size is next level. Custom machinery all round to handle the torque that will be generated at that diameter.
@pulsenpal7882
@pulsenpal7882 9 күн бұрын
what loads are calculated for drill string using this coupler -compression and tension?
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Hey mate, great question. At this stage I can’t share any specifics as it’s a custom thread under development but might be able to in future videos. Thanks for understanding. Judging by the quality of the question you clearly know your stuff.
@ColinLennard
@ColinLennard 5 күн бұрын
Before you cut the thread you went back & forth (I think) 3 times, then started the thread. what is the reason for that? I don't know whether you know of Curt ice at CEE, he does a lot of KZfaq (If this is new to you) look him up he does a lot of heavy work for the big equipment & he is in Oz.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 4 күн бұрын
Excellent question. So on a the first of a new thread (or a new tool setup) I’ll add -1 of toolwear for the first pass… Just to check visibly I haven’t accidentally stuffed up a number somewhere. It was how I was taught, and it just made good sense. Once I know it’s all set up right, the 2nd one onwards I don’t do that. Only on the first one. Just to check.
@sh4dowchas3r
@sh4dowchas3r 8 күн бұрын
when you mention the expected torque for the drilling. How much do you expect it to be?
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
I’ll double check with the drill designer on Monday and post the exact number in the next video. Great question.
@beriklelmut1842
@beriklelmut1842 9 күн бұрын
My heaviest cut I have ever made was 10 mm in steel but only a feed rate of 0.07mm I got so many burns from that since we are running normal lathes and using a dnmg style insert
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
I can only imagine. That would be a nightmare. Out of curiosity, did it chip off or come out in strings at that speed / depth of cut. Some heavy duty stuff right there
@beriklelmut1842
@beriklelmut1842 9 күн бұрын
@@halheavyduty it’s a steel that has a good bit of sulfur in it it so the chips were tiny and flying everywhere they flew like 1 meter high
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
Gotcha. Yep. Burns galore for sure 🤣
@akfarmboy49
@akfarmboy49 9 күн бұрын
The biggest threaded joints I heard of were on Howard Hughes ship Glomar Explorer
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Off to Google that one. Legend. Thanks for letting me know 👊
@akfarmboy49
@akfarmboy49 8 күн бұрын
@@halheavyduty if you need any more info let me know
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
👊🙏
@jarnosaarinen4583
@jarnosaarinen4583 6 күн бұрын
A 3 metre hole 250mm deep, from the back of a Truck! What ( material) are you drilling into?
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 6 күн бұрын
We are drilling large diameter ventilation holes for underground mining. Max size to date has been 1.8m to 270m… To go further the team had to design a big rig from scratch to do it - including all the rods, drill bits. The lot. It’s all one big crazy custom project. It’ll be drilling into a variety of different types of earth over its lifetime I imagine. Depends on what’s down there. Fingers crossed no granite 🤣
@clivequinn8978
@clivequinn8978 6 күн бұрын
What do you mean you wanted a left hand thread? Oops.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 6 күн бұрын
Not sure what you meant? Did I accidentally mention something about left handed threads?
@clivequinn8978
@clivequinn8978 6 күн бұрын
@@halheavyduty Sorry friend, just reminiscing fifty years ago in the tool room when we were asked to remake a phosphor bronze adjusting nut off an orthopaedic bed as a favour for the local hospital. After three attempts at cutting the acme thread and not fitting the screw some bright spark realised it was left handed.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 6 күн бұрын
Oh man I hear you. I’ve done this myself 🤣
@edwardvan5808
@edwardvan5808 8 күн бұрын
How do you check fit the thread? I'm guessing you check it in the set-up and use a custom gauge and I'm guessing your shop made the gauge.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
We have a bunch of checks along the way. As it’s a prototype, the most important thing is to check its machined to exact size & thread depth. It then becomes the tester for the pin (male). One we are happy with the prototypes we develop the quality testing to suit the final design. Excellent question. Thanks for commenting mate
@edwardvan5808
@edwardvan5808 8 күн бұрын
@@halheavyduty I get it. Good content. Thank you.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
👊👍
@Cromwell648
@Cromwell648 8 күн бұрын
the lathe behind you,not the one you used for the screw thread . is it a Harrison ?
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
They’re both Alpha Harrison’s. The little one is a 560 The bigger one is a 760 Well spotted my friend
@tord9707
@tord9707 7 күн бұрын
Nice vid. If im not wrong you make 55 or 60 deg threads. Have you considered trapezoid or round threads for those high torque connections?
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 7 күн бұрын
Well spotted. We did consider it, but stuck to the 60 degree style. The predecessor to this tool joint was almost as large and didn’t have any issues in field testing, so we stuck with it.
@tord9707
@tord9707 7 күн бұрын
@@halheavyduty I see. Best luck with your project. -T
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 7 күн бұрын
Thanks mate. Going to be very satisfying to see the first hole drilled.
@brucemcpherson8832
@brucemcpherson8832 9 күн бұрын
If you designed it you get to give it a name. How about HALxxx where xxx is the diameter of the connection
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
What a great idea. I’ll talk to the team (it was very much a team effort) and see what they reckon. Wonderful suggestion. Grandad (Hal that we named the channel after) would have loved to see something like that thread. Thank you
@moosempw71
@moosempw71 6 күн бұрын
Amazing
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 5 күн бұрын
Thanks mate. Appreciate the comment 👊
@danielgrebner8412
@danielgrebner8412 9 күн бұрын
How do you know what size the pitch diameter is? Do you just cut the male thread to fit? I thought I heard you say 30 pcs? Are they interchangeable?
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
We have to build 30 male and 30 female tool joints for a total of 270m of rod ends. The big lathe is about to get a heavy duty workout 🤣 The pitch is approx 3tpi /M8
@paullang1961
@paullang1961 9 күн бұрын
CNC you will never be a CEE LoL
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
This is true. I’m just happy being me and doing what we do. I personally find CNC work more enjoyable than manual machining. It’s the nerd in me I guess 🤣 Kurtis is a great guy and has a fantastic channel. Love watching his stuff. Safe to say it’s gold standard. 👍
@justmeva
@justmeva 9 күн бұрын
Just a quick question, what happens to all of that coolant? Does it get recycled somehow?
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Sure does. Although a small percentage gets removed with the cuttings (swarf) it all keeps getting recycled. Great question mate
@justmeva
@justmeva 9 күн бұрын
@@halheavyduty Thank you!!!
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
👊👍
@treyroman7170
@treyroman7170 6 күн бұрын
Are you able to share what material if is? Pretty please :)
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 6 күн бұрын
For sure. They’re made from 4140 steel.
@Alan_Hans__
@Alan_Hans__ 9 күн бұрын
I had to go double check the hole size that the drill will be drilling. 3m diameter by 250mm deep ( 0:55 ). Is that actually a footing for something? At 250mm deep it's barely what I'd call a hole. I checked the description and the description says 250m which IS a hole.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Great spot 🤣 totally screwed that up in the intro. Yep. 3m diameter… 250m deep. Wild
@markfryer9880
@markfryer9880 9 күн бұрын
​@@halheavyduty What on Earth is a hole that big needed for? Next question is how is any drill rig going to power that thing into Queensland? Mark from Melbourne Australia 🇦🇺
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
They’ve custom built a one of a kind rig for it. They’re using the tech to drill large ventilation holes for underground mining
@Timus_han
@Timus_han 9 күн бұрын
I am not machinist, true to say, a medical. Nice chips but is it OK with the chip color. I thought inserts are burning.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
Cheers for the comment brother. The chips should come off anywhere from a gold to blue colour. I always thought at the start that it meant you were cutting too hard, but you actually want the chips coming off blue ideally. It means the heat is being transferred away from the part.
@BoldUniverse
@BoldUniverse 9 күн бұрын
👍
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
👊
@richardjurgens4511
@richardjurgens4511 9 күн бұрын
Would have liked to see you gauge it......
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Should be able to in a future video
@mehmettemel8725
@mehmettemel8725 9 күн бұрын
@@halheavyduty Since it's non standard being custom connection do you intend to get a gauge made or just make the male part to suit?
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
It’ll depend on how many we end up making to be honest. To start with we will create a tester set and measure. It’s not a for sale item, so only use is intended for our in house rig.
@DB-thats-me
@DB-thats-me 9 күн бұрын
Hi, new viewer here, but after 5min…. I subscribed. 👍 Personal question. Where’s your accent from? Seems too soft for a native Q’lander. Anyway, looking forward to your uploads. 👍
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
I think it’s because my grandparents on my mothers side were Canadian (Hal) and Texan (Jean) Left all us kids with slightly different accents. A mix of 🇦🇺 🇨🇦 🇺🇸 I lived for quite a while in Argentina in my late teens too, and found that I had to speak with a semi British accent so people could understand me 🤣 Aussie slang doesn’t translate into Spanish it seems
@peteb3365
@peteb3365 9 күн бұрын
like to see real life vid of where these go, dont really get ascale of how big these are, could you show next to say a hand/foot/ bear can 😜
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Def will do in the next vid. Thanks for bringing it to my attention 👊💯
@lancer2204
@lancer2204 9 күн бұрын
OK, who else had the Pink Panther theme music start playing in their mind at 5:18 ? damnit *>_
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
It’s stuck in my head too 🤣
@axemastersinc3269
@axemastersinc3269 9 күн бұрын
We have been running 36" drill bits since the 1970's...
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
That’s some serious gear. Nice one. What kind of work were you doing?
@axemastersinc3269
@axemastersinc3269 9 күн бұрын
@@halheavyduty Drilling holes west Texas and New Mexico. Those bits are bigger than the rotary table so we have to put the on under the floor.
@axemastersinc3269
@axemastersinc3269 9 күн бұрын
I wonder how much pressure your stuff can handle? On the rigs we like to drill with 3000 to 3500 PSI.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 8 күн бұрын
About the same here. Typical pressure is in that range. We run a lot of UDR650 & UDR1200 rigs. The bigger ones are custom though
@danieloblinger1199
@danieloblinger1199 9 күн бұрын
It would’ve been nice if you would’ve told us how big it was.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Oh crap. Clearly got so carried away I can’t believe I didn’t mention it 🤦‍♂️ I’ll add it in the description now. For reference, and without sharing specifics the OD is: 320mm Thread length is 200mm.
@IsZomg
@IsZomg 9 күн бұрын
4mm pitch?
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
About double that. Give or take a little.
@IsZomg
@IsZomg 9 күн бұрын
@@halheavyduty 3TPI
@bryanwalkerCT7729
@bryanwalkerCT7729 9 күн бұрын
Brilliant problem solving safely ❤❤❤on the job. Should be part of education worldwide #MHLivingHistoryLeapyear2024
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Cheers Bryan
@jimsvideos7201
@jimsvideos7201 9 күн бұрын
I assume that gets welded to something?
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
Yep. Welding will be part of the process 💯 These are just the initial testers before the production run.
@carltauber2939
@carltauber2939 9 күн бұрын
I like your videos but PLEASE: stop with the quick cuts, and stop waving the camera like you're trying to swat flies with it. Those camera moves are OK when the content is boring so the camera operator tries to create drama by moving the camera. Your content is fascinating, please let us enjoy it without all the camera movement.
@halheavyduty
@halheavyduty 9 күн бұрын
That’s great feedback - thank you. In the next video I’ll do my best to keep it more steady. Haven’t got a proper setup to hold it yet, but I probably need to do that. Again, thanks for letting me know. Really helps me improve future videos.
@Yamototamto
@Yamototamto 9 күн бұрын
I'm not subbed but watched few of those videos and totally agree. Make camera stable it is much more enjoyable that way. Also you can buy few more cameras and mount them around lathe to show different angles. If you can stream via wifi videos from those camera to your PC where you edit you can make easy directory from each camera which would greatly increase your work with making video in an editor. Content is good. As a fellow machinist love your drills. I have maybe 3 u drills with square carbide inserts. They do sing but it is the song of my ppl xd love them.
@EdwardKilner
@EdwardKilner 9 күн бұрын
Yes, I agree. Use a tripod. Nauseating movement in this video.
@dirtfarmer7472
@dirtfarmer7472 8 күн бұрын
Don’t sweat the small stuff, it’s mostly small stuff
@dirtfarmer7472
@dirtfarmer7472 8 күн бұрын
Maybe visit with Karen of CEE, she does good work.
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