- Joined
- Nov 24, 2013
- Messages
- 1,791
Typically I would never watch a video as long as yours...... But I truly enjoy watching yours. You seem like a great guy with a awesome attitude. I greatly respect a man that desires to learn for pure enjoyment and not a pay check. I have found in school that the few guys who are there because they want a job have a totally different attitude and out look. Frankly they learn ALOT slower as well.
You mentioned sneaking up on the dimension... The best think about slowing down is you can catch your mistakes before the parts scrap. Every mistake I mae tends to come back to going to fast and just not observing whats really going on. Well that and order of operation which you learned. ahaha
One thing I notice that could just be camera angle, but worth a mention. It seems you like to reach over the chuck. That practice seems very unsafe to me. I try to stay in front of the head stock and reach towards it. Dont take much for a sleeve to get caught in that clutch if the sleeve is over the clutch. When reaching from the tail stock forward you eliminate that concern. I dont think your lathe is big enough to eat you but it's big enough to break bones.
You mentioned sneaking up on the dimension... The best think about slowing down is you can catch your mistakes before the parts scrap. Every mistake I mae tends to come back to going to fast and just not observing whats really going on. Well that and order of operation which you learned. ahaha
One thing I notice that could just be camera angle, but worth a mention. It seems you like to reach over the chuck. That practice seems very unsafe to me. I try to stay in front of the head stock and reach towards it. Dont take much for a sleeve to get caught in that clutch if the sleeve is over the clutch. When reaching from the tail stock forward you eliminate that concern. I dont think your lathe is big enough to eat you but it's big enough to break bones.