Here is a list of all the postings Martin King 2 has made in our forums. Click on a thread name to jump to the thread.
Thread: English members who have moved to France. |
17/07/2021 13:52:04 |
Hi Bill, Presumably she would like you to go with her............? I'll get me coat! Martin |
Thread: 75mm x 2000mm Belt Linisher Build Thread |
16/07/2021 13:01:20 |
Hi All, A small hiccup in the ongoing saga! The spring plungers just arrived from WDS along with the gas strut. Sadly I did not notice when ordering them that they are M10 x1 (Metric Fine) whereas the pre tapped holes from the water jetters are M10 Coarse. What might be the best way around this please? Will be getting on with this project next week, starting on the tracking and idler pullies. Cheers, Martin |
09/07/2021 09:42:18 |
Sorry, I was not clear in the above, the aluminium stock I am waiting for is for the tracking pulley 95mm diameter and 85mmm long. Goes on the axle just made. Cheers, Martin |
08/07/2021 15:57:54 |
Hi All, In the end I took Steviegtr's advice and sat down while the facemiil chewed out the stock, took a while but no dramas. Put the threaded holes in and made a start on the tracking pulley axle which is 25mm stainless. This was not a pain free exercise, a lot of messing about to find the best speed and feed. Finally I used a round nose HSS tool to do most of the stock removal and a new carbide insert to finish off. That said it can be seen that the finish is not great, partly because I had to put the finished surface in the 3 jaw to turn down the end thread to 11.8mm. SHOULD have done this at the same time as the main turning! Naturally this spun in the jaws causing surface damage. Practiced the M12 threading on some scrap to find that I had accidentally used a crappy carbon steel die which was hopeless. Switched to a new HSS die and even that was hard going so reduced the diameter to 11.65mm which was much easier going. Printed up a knob for the tracking adjuster and turned down and knurled the head of a M10 cap screw to fit with superglue, seems good. Next job is the slot for this assembly to slide in. Waiting for some stock to arrive as I misread the drawing and have nothing big enough! I am certainly making plenty of errors on this as I go along but nothing has had to be scrapped...YET! Here it is so far: Cheers, Martin |
Thread: Weird Small Hand Drill |
05/07/2021 19:08:55 |
Hi all, We have over the years had many many hand drills of all sorts for restoration and sale and I thought that i had seen them all! Yesterday however turned this up at Yeovil car boot, a really unusual small design that I have not seen before. No makers marks of any sort. Has the standard small 4 jaw chuck usually seen on Archimedes type drills; the body is of pressed or stamped steel and all parts are riveted together, no screws at all. Works really nicely! Anyone come across one by any chance? The only nice find in a rubbish day, got totally soaked, all our stuff got wet also and we took £12 with £7 entrance fee. Can't win 'em all! Cheers, Martin |
Thread: 75mm x 2000mm Belt Linisher Build Thread |
04/07/2021 17:27:25 |
Hi Vic & Nicholas, I find hack sawing by hand very hurtful to my wrist and hand so that's a no go I am afraid. Will continue with the roughing mill and perhaps give the shell mill a try also. Cheers, Martin |
04/07/2021 09:03:37 |
Hi, Any thoughts on the best way to hog this material out in the above photo? Keep on with the roughing mill or try the shell mill? Cheers, Martin |
Thread: Vintage Tools |
03/07/2021 19:38:51 |
The shop is a real Aladdins Cave! The people who work there often have to ‘ask DAD’ if you try to make an offer, else they must stick to the price ticket which may well cause your eyebrows to raise a bit! Martin |
03/07/2021 17:45:41 |
John Ben lists several THOUSAND items at a time on EBay, has several staff at the shop and still runs Crimson Guitars. he has a dedicated film unit just doing the videos which are quite lucrative I believe. The man is a workaholic, never stops! He is a seriously talented luthier and turns out some simply stunning work using mainly hand tools. The workshop is kitted out with every tool known to man and he runs luthier courses very successfully. I think that I may well have made a rod for my own back as I think I got him started with selling tools We used to compete at a local "invitation only" tool buying event but it all got a bit silly so I stopped going. As for the prices, what can I say, go figure! Certainly makes our stuff look cheap! Cheers, Martin |
Thread: 75mm x 2000mm Belt Linisher Build Thread |
03/07/2021 17:33:26 |
Hi All, Finished off the belt extension bar today: Cut a chunk of 40x40 BMS from the bar that will be the main extension bar carrying the table. This will make the bracket for the adjustable tracking pulley that fits onto the top of the part above.. Used my new ALDI bandsaw in anger for the first time and very pleased with it indeed; as long as you go gently and let the weight of the saw do the work it cuts BMS like butter and a very straight cut. Cleaned up with a shell mill; for some reason this new vice is way more accurate than the smaller one I have always used before. Being much bigger helps I guess? Managed to use the band saw to cut the part to length but could only just hold it safely. There is no way that I can come up with to hold it safely in either my Kennedy or Aldi saw to remove the bulk of the waste as below. Using the Roughing mill with small plunge cuts seems to worrk but will take some time, no way I am doing it by hand! Is there a better way to do this? Perhaps the shell mill? Not sure. Had enough for today so time for a cuppa and then do the days EBay listings, we are clearing out a lot of our older stuff at our local car boot at Yeovil tomorrow so no shop time! Cheers, Martin
|
02/07/2021 18:05:33 |
Hi All, Pressed on a bit today and made a start on the 40x20x240 bar that will be the belt tensioning lever and carry the belt tracking pulley. I thought I would do this first so that I can bolt it in position as shown top allow the slot that it runs in to be marked out to fit exactly. Just as well as the stock needed some squaring up and is a tad undersize to the drawing so it would have been a bit sloppy had I done the slot first. Very impressed with a new 12mm roughing mill from Arc, it went through the stock like butter even with quite a heavy cut. It seems to go up and down OK so that's a good sign! The 10mm hole to the left is for the locking spring plunger. Cheers, Martin |
01/07/2021 16:41:28 |
Hi All, Some progress made, just received a very nice counterbore kit from Arc so have done the main frame part which allowed a trial fit of the box section already made. This went together well but the small buttress like parts needed some slight fitting with a file as there was not enough "wiggle room" for a couple of the bolts. There appears to be a slight error in the plans which show an M10 bolt to go in an M12 hole that is already tapped so will cut down an M12 to fit, no big deal. I had a length of UHMW plastic rod which is perfect for the plastic washers needed. The very nice locking levers have arrived from WDS just waiting for the gas strut now. The nearest size fit I can find is a whopping 700N, (180N needed) but WDS assure me that the strut is adjustable via a valve. I presume that this will be a "suck it and see" type operation! Knocked up a ribbed lever handle from some scrap alloy and cut up an old M10 screw for the thread. Next job is to tackle the extension arm that carries the adjustable tracking pulley, quite a big chunk of 40x20 steel with heavy chamfers. I think it best to make that first and then do the slot it slides in to fit OR should I do it the other way round? One irritation was that I tried to make the tiny 38mm long x 12mm axle that carries the extension lever. The piece I picked was stainless and machined OK but when I came to die cut the two ends for M10 there was no way I could hold it tight enough either in the 3 jaw or collet chuck. VERY hard work, kept stalling the Myford in back gear and made a right mess. I tried finishing it by hand but ended up binning it and remade in a bit of EN1A. Much easier! I think in retrospect that I should have made a female thread in a larger bit of stock to hold the workpiece before attempting the second thread? Onward and upward, Cheers, Martin |
Thread: Cold blue for Aluminium? |
27/06/2021 18:06:25 |
Stuart & Baz many thanks for the info, will follow up on it soon. cheers, Martin |
27/06/2021 16:47:41 |
Noel, I was looking for a brush on solution not anodising, but thanks for the input. Thor, had a look at the products but they are expensive and multi step; more for industrial use I guess. It was just a thought wondering if there was something simple but I think not. Will just stick with an as finished wax application which will be fine I am sure. Cheers, Martin |
27/06/2021 13:56:41 |
Hi All, is there such a material similar to the cold blue liquid for steel but suitable for aluminium alloys? Cheers, Martin
|
Thread: 75mm x 2000mm Belt Linisher Build Thread |
25/06/2021 10:04:48 |
Hi All, Have made a start on this project and thought that I would do some of the more simple parts first to get my head round working accurately. First thing was that my Warco 4" DH1 vice was going to be way too small for some of the operations. I have a new 6" vice from some previous auction buys so mounted that up and trammed it as best as I could. Then realised that these parts will often need the same datum and to save having to keep edge finding all the time i made up a vice stop from some scrap material which has worked out well. I spent some time practising using the DRO in incremental mode with a pencil in the chuck to (TRY) and avoid costly mistakes later on! Kept checking that the absolute reference had not moved between operations. The moving jaw surface is handy for jotting down memos etc! The water jetted material has a 0.5mm allowance for tidying up on some parts at my request; this was found to be spot on and only a quick light cut with a face mill was needed so far. The holes that were water cut proved perfect and ready for the relevant reamer with no extra drilling out needed. Some of the M6 threaded holes are quite deep (30mm) and I took great care when power tapping, clearing the swarf very often. I found that the tap would slip sometimes in the drill chuck being of hardened steel. Here are the finished parts so far and to my utter amazement all fitted together very well! Next job is to ream and counterbore all the holes in the largest main frame part and check the above sub assembly for fit. More later! Cheers, Martin |
Thread: Making an adjustable vice stop |
16/06/2021 08:08:42 |
Stevie, May I please ask where you got the Bristol Clamping Levers? Cheers, Martin |
Thread: 75mm x 2000mm Belt Linisher Build Thread |
12/06/2021 21:47:02 |
Just realized that the link above is to the THIRD video of 3 NOT the first. Duh! Martin |
Thread: I Need this exact motor! |
12/06/2021 21:14:18 |
Hi Vic, Platen is 15mm mild steel which will have two asymmetrical T slots in it. Larger steel item in the pic Martin |
Thread: 75mm x 2000mm Belt Linisher Build Thread |
12/06/2021 17:22:08 |
Hi All, Well here goes! I have a need for a fairly powerful belt linisher and they are very expensive. There are loads of different build threads available on the 'Net and YouTube. I looked through and came across this one by Phil Vandelay in Germany. It seemed a well engineered project that allowed horizontal and vertical use, probably a bit over engineered truth be told. Link to first video here: https://youtu.be/dvvOFyb6vXA After looking at the series of three videos several times and realizing that there was no way that I could cut the very thick 15mm materials with what I have available i decided to get the larger parts water jet cut. The large drive pulley would also be too large for my Myford so I decided to get that machined also. I coughed up the dosh for the plans and was delighted to see how comprehensive they were. I pick up the water jetted parts on Monday morning so will start the project when a few more bits including the motor have been sourced. Here are the parts awaiting pick up: I will try and remember to take photos as I (slowly) progress, quite looking forward to this as it will stretch my skills to the limit! Cheers, Martin |
Want the latest issue of Model Engineer or Model Engineers' Workshop? Use our magazine locator links to find your nearest stockist!
Sign up to our newsletter and get a free digital issue.
You can unsubscribe at anytime. View our privacy policy at www.mortons.co.uk/privacy
You can contact us by phone, mail or email about the magazines including becoming a contributor, submitting reader's letters or making queries about articles. You can also get in touch about this website, advertising or other general issues.
Click THIS LINK for full contact details.
For subscription issues please see THIS LINK.