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Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
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On 2010-08-15, Pete C. wrote:
Ignoramus30661 wrote: On 2010-08-14, Jim Wilkins wrote: On Aug 13, 8:46?pm, "Pete C." wrote: RogerN wrote: I've been considering making some home shop machines that seem cost effective to make (you can make them cheaper than you can buy them). These include: slip roll bead roll knife makers grinder line boring bar break English wheel planishing hammer ... Machines that can be made with a few parts or a few weldments that cost very little but do the job. ?For the knife makers grinder couldn't you grind a polyurethane caster wheel on a lathe for the contact wheel. ?Maybe we could do some team effort and perhaps Iggy could make some parts on his CNC mill that would take him 5 minutes but take a half hour or more on a manual machine. ?My lathe could make rolls for a bead roller, but they could be made on a manual lathe pretty easily also. ?Anyway, it seems HSM'ers should be able to make thousands of dollars worth of metal working equipment for $0.10 on the dollar without much effort, especially if they utilize others that have specialized equipment to make the difficult parts. RogerN Sorry, Harbor Freight beat you to it on a number of those such as the rolls, break, english wheel, planishing hammer, etc. You definitely can't build them for less unless you have a source of free raw materials. They may not be quite perfect, but they are decent and can be improved. I'll build machines for fun http://picasaweb.google.com/KB1DAL/H...53242652915618 but generally have to agree with the others here. Even if the steel is already on my scrap pile the amount of trial-and-error labor involved in a custom prototype is so high that it's effectively at less than minimum wage. For that sawmill I had to buy new components for most of the transmission and spent more on them than the whole rest of the machine. I will try to make a pig roaster, but I am under no illusion that it will be dirt cheap. If I can find a bunch of sheet metal cheap, it wil be better. Right now I do not have much of it in larer pieces (I have some 12x12 pieces). i When you build something like that, it isn't to save money (unless you own a scrapyard), it is to both learn, and to build one that is better in some way than the commercially available item. In my case, it will be to fit my environment better, to be more portable. i |
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