I was blessed with.....
It was a joke Trev.
I was blessed with.....
Thanks Obi wanThose welders are a selfish bunch. They don't want to teach anybody anything until we already know. Then they just want to argue. They use all kinds of jargon to confuse us too.
I think brail means to close your eyes and poke the weld rod/wire at some metal till it sticks, then turn the machine off, wait till everything stops glowing, cut the rod/wire, rinse repeat. It's a very slow process. But stuff eventually sticks together if you never look at it. Here is some of my finest braille:
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I have made several custom sockets, some even for my own use...Unless it doesn't fit, this project is done.
The boys came over for several stints. Once for design, scoping it out, and order of ops. Then for work on the schedule 40 pipe. Then for the drive. And finally for final ops and assembly.
In the first session, I learned that 3 boys each 2 years apart, is a recipe for mischief, confusion, and jealousy. Two at a time from then on. We decided to go with a 1" hex drive (nut) on the drive. Sadly, no shaper work.
In the second session, we cut the main tube on the bandsaw, cleaned up the edges, and milled the drive slots. Schedule 40 pipe cuts like butter. They wanted to add ventilation slots all over the place too..... Thank God their Mom arrived to rescue me.
In the third session, we cut the drive plug from a piece of 3" bar on the lathe to the same OD/ID as the pipe. Lots of hands taking turns cranking handles. Lots of measurements. Tons of swarf. Waaaay too much cutting oil. Boys all got racing stripes from cutting oil. Mom won't be happy. The part fits like a glove.
On the 4th session, we cut the drive hex on the mill. We had decided on a 1" hex cuz I have a spare 1/2" drive 1" socket that their dad can have with the tool. God I love the DRO on my mill. Good lesson for them too. Aligned the hex using the hex surface of a collet holder. Too bad it wouldn't fit the part directly. Looked much better than it really was. But fit the 1" socket perfectly.
Final job was to attach the drive part to the sleeve. Started to be a bit of a debate. They wanted to weld, I wanted to drill and tap. Their gift, their call - welding it was. So we turned the pipe and the drive to add a weld groove and then the oldest tacked it together using my rosin core wire welder. Looks GREAT. So he finished the weld all the way around. I'd die to have welds that looked half as good as that 16 year old kid. When he was done, we chucked it back in the lathe and cleaned up the weld.
One happy old man and 3 very happy boys!
I was WAAAAY too busy being the Safety Rep. No pictures.
Grandkids are wonderful!
It's those moments spent with a grandfather that shapes the future of the kids. I know that the time spent with mine greatly forged my future and taught me that if another man could do it, there's no real reason that I can't.Ya, I figure that I could have made that in about 4 hours, but 4 days with the boys was amazing - even with the challenges. The goodbye hugs when they left with the finished tool were noticeably tighter and loving. I'm very happy.