DIYbanter

DIYbanter (https://www.diybanter.com/)
-   Metalworking (https://www.diybanter.com/metalworking/)
-   -   Interesting machine (https://www.diybanter.com/metalworking/354068-interesting-machine.html)

Ignoramus13603 March 15th 13 01:10 AM

Interesting machine
 
http://igor.chudov.com/tmp/Snyder-Machine/

"6 station milling machine" with total of 280 HP, not counting two
hydraulic power units.

i

Larry Jaques[_4_] March 15th 13 01:29 AM

Interesting machine
 
On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 20:10:32 -0500, Ignoramus13603
wrote:

http://igor.chudov.com/tmp/Snyder-Machine/

"6 station milling machine" with total of 280 HP, not counting two
hydraulic power units.


And you bought it to make Russian Field Jacket buttons, da?
;)

--
Self-development is a higher duty than self-sacrifice.
-- Elizabeth Cady Stanton

Ed Huntress March 15th 13 01:34 AM

Interesting machine
 
On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 20:10:32 -0500, Ignoramus13603
wrote:

http://igor.chudov.com/tmp/Snyder-Machine/

"6 station milling machine" with total of 280 HP, not counting two
hydraulic power units.


Oh, jeez. I hope you're not planning to buy it. That's the kind of
machine you used to see in the automobile industry -- 40 years ago.
g

--
Ed Huntress

Ignoramus13603 March 15th 13 02:10 AM

Interesting machine
 
On 2013-03-15, Ed Huntress wrote:
On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 20:10:32 -0500, Ignoramus13603
wrote:

http://igor.chudov.com/tmp/Snyder-Machine/

"6 station milling machine" with total of 280 HP, not counting two
hydraulic power units.


Oh, jeez. I hope you're not planning to buy it. That's the kind of
machine you used to see in the automobile industry -- 40 years ago.
g


I already bought it. I hope that it weighs 50 tons.

i

Pete C. March 15th 13 02:56 AM

Interesting machine
 

Ignoramus13603 wrote:

On 2013-03-15, Ed Huntress wrote:
On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 20:10:32 -0500, Ignoramus13603
wrote:

http://igor.chudov.com/tmp/Snyder-Machine/

"6 station milling machine" with total of 280 HP, not counting two
hydraulic power units.


Oh, jeez. I hope you're not planning to buy it. That's the kind of
machine you used to see in the automobile industry -- 40 years ago.
g


I already bought it. I hope that it weighs 50 tons.

i


Yikes, that will take a week or two to dismantle and truck. I know you
have a big building, but can you even fit all that in with the other
stuff you have?

Ignoramus13603 March 15th 13 03:25 AM

Interesting machine
 
On 2013-03-15, Pete C. wrote:

Ignoramus13603 wrote:

On 2013-03-15, Ed Huntress wrote:
On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 20:10:32 -0500, Ignoramus13603
wrote:

http://igor.chudov.com/tmp/Snyder-Machine/

"6 station milling machine" with total of 280 HP, not counting two
hydraulic power units.


Oh, jeez. I hope you're not planning to buy it. That's the kind of
machine you used to see in the automobile industry -- 40 years ago.
g


I already bought it. I hope that it weighs 50 tons.

i


Yikes, that will take a week or two to dismantle and truck. I know you
have a big building, but can you even fit all that in with the other
stuff you have?


That one goes straight to a scrap yard. I may save a few bits and
pieces, though.

i

Ed Huntress March 15th 13 03:33 AM

Interesting machine
 
On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 21:10:49 -0500, Ignoramus13603
wrote:

On 2013-03-15, Ed Huntress wrote:
On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 20:10:32 -0500, Ignoramus13603
wrote:

http://igor.chudov.com/tmp/Snyder-Machine/

"6 station milling machine" with total of 280 HP, not counting two
hydraulic power units.


Oh, jeez. I hope you're not planning to buy it. That's the kind of
machine you used to see in the automobile industry -- 40 years ago.
g


I already bought it. I hope that it weighs 50 tons.


For scrap, I assume?

--
Ed Huntress

Ignoramus13603 March 15th 13 03:43 AM

Interesting machine
 
On 2013-03-15, Ed Huntress wrote:
On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 21:10:49 -0500, Ignoramus13603
wrote:

On 2013-03-15, Ed Huntress wrote:
On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 20:10:32 -0500, Ignoramus13603
wrote:

http://igor.chudov.com/tmp/Snyder-Machine/

"6 station milling machine" with total of 280 HP, not counting two
hydraulic power units.


Oh, jeez. I hope you're not planning to buy it. That's the kind of
machine you used to see in the automobile industry -- 40 years ago.
g


I already bought it. I hope that it weighs 50 tons.


For scrap, I assume?


Yes, definitely. A few useful things can be saved from it, but it is a
patently useless machine that no one can figure out, anyway. I hope
that it weighs 50 tons. I did see it.

i

Pete C. March 15th 13 01:28 PM

Interesting machine
 

Ignoramus13603 wrote:

On 2013-03-15, Pete C. wrote:

Ignoramus13603 wrote:

On 2013-03-15, Ed Huntress wrote:
On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 20:10:32 -0500, Ignoramus13603
wrote:

http://igor.chudov.com/tmp/Snyder-Machine/

"6 station milling machine" with total of 280 HP, not counting two
hydraulic power units.


Oh, jeez. I hope you're not planning to buy it. That's the kind of
machine you used to see in the automobile industry -- 40 years ago.
g


I already bought it. I hope that it weighs 50 tons.

i


Yikes, that will take a week or two to dismantle and truck. I know you
have a big building, but can you even fit all that in with the other
stuff you have?


That one goes straight to a scrap yard. I may save a few bits and
pieces, though.

i


I would think the motors and hydraulic power units would be more
valuable as-is than as-scrap.

Ignoramus20730 March 15th 13 01:33 PM

Interesting machine
 
On 2013-03-15, Pete C. wrote:

Ignoramus13603 wrote:

On 2013-03-15, Pete C. wrote:

Ignoramus13603 wrote:

On 2013-03-15, Ed Huntress wrote:
On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 20:10:32 -0500, Ignoramus13603
wrote:

http://igor.chudov.com/tmp/Snyder-Machine/

"6 station milling machine" with total of 280 HP, not counting two
hydraulic power units.


Oh, jeez. I hope you're not planning to buy it. That's the kind of
machine you used to see in the automobile industry -- 40 years ago.
g


I already bought it. I hope that it weighs 50 tons.

i

Yikes, that will take a week or two to dismantle and truck. I know you
have a big building, but can you even fit all that in with the other
stuff you have?


That one goes straight to a scrap yard. I may save a few bits and
pieces, though.

i


I would think the motors and hydraulic power units would be more
valuable as-is than as-scrap.


I agree with you, especially about the motors. The power units, I am
not so sure, although I would hate to scrap them. The motors are
great, there is a lot of multiples on them. Good for phase converters
or whatever.

i

Jon Elson[_3_] March 15th 13 06:46 PM

Interesting machine
 
Ignoramus13603 wrote:

On 2013-03-15, Ed Huntress wrote:
On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 20:10:32 -0500, Ignoramus13603
wrote:

http://igor.chudov.com/tmp/Snyder-Machine/

"6 station milling machine" with total of 280 HP, not counting two
hydraulic power units.


Oh, jeez. I hope you're not planning to buy it. That's the kind of
machine you used to see in the automobile industry -- 40 years ago.
g


I already bought it. I hope that it weighs 50 tons.

Well, it should have LOTS of useful parts in it. Lots of
hydraulic valves, maybe even some Moog proportional servo valves.

Jon

PrecisionmachinisT March 16th 13 04:41 PM

Interesting machine
 

"Jon Elson" wrote in message
...
Ignoramus13603 wrote:

On 2013-03-15, Ed Huntress wrote:
On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 20:10:32 -0500, Ignoramus13603
wrote:

http://igor.chudov.com/tmp/Snyder-Machine/

"6 station milling machine" with total of 280 HP, not counting two
hydraulic power units.


Oh, jeez. I hope you're not planning to buy it. That's the kind of
machine you used to see in the automobile industry -- 40 years ago.
g


I already bought it. I hope that it weighs 50 tons.

Well, it should have LOTS of useful parts in it. Lots of
hydraulic valves, maybe even some Moog proportional servo valves.



He's probably going to kill somebody one of these days soon; he's got zero
formal training and most of his "rigging" is junk that someone else has
discarded for safety issues.

IIRC, he's already come close at least once, while disassembling an overhead
crane.



Pete C. March 16th 13 05:28 PM

Interesting machine
 

PrecisionmachinisT wrote:

"Jon Elson" wrote in message
...
Ignoramus13603 wrote:

On 2013-03-15, Ed Huntress wrote:
On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 20:10:32 -0500, Ignoramus13603
wrote:

http://igor.chudov.com/tmp/Snyder-Machine/

"6 station milling machine" with total of 280 HP, not counting two
hydraulic power units.


Oh, jeez. I hope you're not planning to buy it. That's the kind of
machine you used to see in the automobile industry -- 40 years ago.
g


I already bought it. I hope that it weighs 50 tons.

Well, it should have LOTS of useful parts in it. Lots of
hydraulic valves, maybe even some Moog proportional servo valves.



He's probably going to kill somebody one of these days soon; he's got zero
formal training and most of his "rigging" is junk that someone else has
discarded for safety issues.

IIRC, he's already come close at least once, while disassembling an overhead
crane.


You recall incorrectly. He witnessed some hacks nearly get killed
disassembling an overhead crane, he had nothing to do with it.

Ignoramus28030 March 16th 13 06:31 PM

Interesting machine
 
On 2013-03-16, Pete C. wrote:

PrecisionmachinisT wrote:

"Jon Elson" wrote in message
...
Ignoramus13603 wrote:

On 2013-03-15, Ed Huntress wrote:
On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 20:10:32 -0500, Ignoramus13603
wrote:

http://igor.chudov.com/tmp/Snyder-Machine/

"6 station milling machine" with total of 280 HP, not counting two
hydraulic power units.


Oh, jeez. I hope you're not planning to buy it. That's the kind of
machine you used to see in the automobile industry -- 40 years ago.
g


I already bought it. I hope that it weighs 50 tons.

Well, it should have LOTS of useful parts in it. Lots of
hydraulic valves, maybe even some Moog proportional servo valves.



He's probably going to kill somebody one of these days soon; he's got zero
formal training and most of his "rigging" is junk that someone else has
discarded for safety issues.

IIRC, he's already come close at least once, while disassembling an overhead
crane.


You recall incorrectly. He witnessed some hacks nearly get killed
disassembling an overhead crane, he had nothing to do with it.


You are correct. Someone else was doing the dismantling. Those people
are scrap metal gypsies (Romani).

I never buy overhead cranes, as a matter of fact, due to safety
concerns. Too heavy and too high for me to deal with. You need two
big telehandlers to remove them safely.

So much venom from this "precisionmachinist", all because I killfiled
him for off-topic posts. Doubtfully this is a successful , well adjusted
individual.

i

PrecisionmachinisT March 16th 13 07:35 PM

Interesting machine
 

"Ignoramus28030" wrote in message
...
On 2013-03-16, Pete C. wrote:

PrecisionmachinisT wrote:

"Jon Elson" wrote in message
...
Ignoramus13603 wrote:

On 2013-03-15, Ed Huntress wrote:
On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 20:10:32 -0500, Ignoramus13603
wrote:

http://igor.chudov.com/tmp/Snyder-Machine/

"6 station milling machine" with total of 280 HP, not counting two
hydraulic power units.


Oh, jeez. I hope you're not planning to buy it. That's the kind of
machine you used to see in the automobile industry -- 40 years ago.
g


I already bought it. I hope that it weighs 50 tons.

Well, it should have LOTS of useful parts in it. Lots of
hydraulic valves, maybe even some Moog proportional servo valves.



He's probably going to kill somebody one of these days soon; he's got
zero
formal training and most of his "rigging" is junk that someone else has
discarded for safety issues.

IIRC, he's already come close at least once, while disassembling an
overhead
crane.


You recall incorrectly. He witnessed some hacks nearly get killed
disassembling an overhead crane, he had nothing to do with it.


You are correct. Someone else was doing the dismantling. Those people
are scrap metal gypsies (Romani).

I never buy overhead cranes, as a matter of fact, due to safety
concerns. Too heavy and too high for me to deal with. You need two
big telehandlers to remove them safely.


No, you use the crane itself--something you'd know if you had any real
rigging experience.


So much venom from this "precisionmachinist", all because I killfiled
him for off-topic posts. Doubtfully this is a successful , well adjusted
individual.

i




Existential Angst[_2_] March 17th 13 03:24 PM

Interesting machine
 
"Ignoramus13603" wrote in message
...
http://igor.chudov.com/tmp/Snyder-Machine/

"6 station milling machine" with total of 280 HP, not counting two
hydraulic power units.

i


What did you pay for alladat?

You can proly estimate the weight pretty well.
Steel weighs 480#/cu ft, ditto copper, brass (approx), or 60# per 6" cube.
You could proly visually estimate an avg "spatial density" of select
measurable volumes pretty well, and come up with a grand total, good to +/-
15%.

I imagine it is going to take quite some time disassembling alladat, on top
of the rigging itself.
--
EA




Ignoramus19014 March 17th 13 05:36 PM

Interesting machine
 
On 2013-03-17, Existential Angst wrote:
"Ignoramus13603" wrote in message
...
http://igor.chudov.com/tmp/Snyder-Machine/

"6 station milling machine" with total of 280 HP, not counting two
hydraulic power units.

i


What did you pay for alladat?


A lot!

You can proly estimate the weight pretty well. Steel weighs 480#/cu
ft, ditto copper, brass (approx), or 60# per 6" cube. You could
proly visually estimate an avg "spatial density" of select
measurable volumes pretty well, and come up with a grand total, good
to +/- 15%.

I imagine it is going to take quite some time disassembling alladat, on top
of the rigging itself.


I am still learning this scrap business.

My best guess is that there is 50 short tons of steel in it. (I hate
short tons, but scrap yards here operate in short tons)

My another guess is that disassembly and rigging, will take 4 days.

i

Tom Gardner[_6_] March 17th 13 05:52 PM

Interesting machine
 
On 3/16/2013 2:31 PM, Ignoramus28030 wrote:
On 2013-03-16, Pete C. wrote:

PrecisionmachinisT wrote:

"Jon Elson" wrote in message
...
Ignoramus13603 wrote:

On 2013-03-15, Ed Huntress wrote:
On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 20:10:32 -0500, Ignoramus13603
wrote:

http://igor.chudov.com/tmp/Snyder-Machine/

"6 station milling machine" with total of 280 HP, not counting two
hydraulic power units.


Oh, jeez. I hope you're not planning to buy it. That's the kind of
machine you used to see in the automobile industry -- 40 years ago.
g


I already bought it. I hope that it weighs 50 tons.

Well, it should have LOTS of useful parts in it. Lots of
hydraulic valves, maybe even some Moog proportional servo valves.



He's probably going to kill somebody one of these days soon; he's got zero
formal training and most of his "rigging" is junk that someone else has
discarded for safety issues.

IIRC, he's already come close at least once, while disassembling an overhead
crane.


You recall incorrectly. He witnessed some hacks nearly get killed
disassembling an overhead crane, he had nothing to do with it.


You are correct. Someone else was doing the dismantling. Those people
are scrap metal gypsies (Romani).

I never buy overhead cranes, as a matter of fact, due to safety
concerns. Too heavy and too high for me to deal with. You need two
big telehandlers to remove them safely.

So much venom from this "precisionmachinist", all because I killfiled
him for off-topic posts. Doubtfully this is a successful , well adjusted
individual.

i


He makes everybody feel better about themselves!

Pete C. March 17th 13 06:00 PM

Interesting machine
 

Ignoramus19014 wrote:

My another guess is that disassembly and rigging, will take 4 days.


Since this equipment will never be put into operation as-is again,
assuming it's ok with the place you're removing it from, don't be afraid
to separate sections with a big abrasive cutoff saw or for tighter areas
an angle grinder with a cutoff wheel. Keep a fire extinguisher nearby,
but that will be the fastest way to get through mixed materials and get
on with the loading. Sawzalls are good too, but an abrasive wheel will
beat them for time on most materials.

Ignoramus19014 March 17th 13 08:06 PM

Interesting machine
 
On 2013-03-17, Existential Angst wrote:
"Ignoramus19014" wrote in message
...
On 2013-03-17, Existential Angst wrote:
"Ignoramus13603" wrote in message
...
http://igor.chudov.com/tmp/Snyder-Machine/

"6 station milling machine" with total of 280 HP, not counting two
hydraulic power units.

i

What did you pay for alladat?


A lot!


Still being coy??
Sheeit, we ARE your 24/7 bidniss/tech consultants, so you SHOULD divulge
details.....

100,000# at 10c/# (retail) would be that place's expectation of scrap
payment ($10K), less what they'd have to pay to bring it to a yard. So if
you paid $10K, you paid waaaaay too much. $5K would proly be too much.
Well..... am I getting close?? LOL

But the parts value could be considerable. Old motors, tho, were not
renowned for efficiency. New Baldors (and others) are topping 98% (claimed)
effic -- ackshooly, for quite some time now..


I paid 6k.

Scrap yards pay me 290 per short ton, and with this much I hope that I
can get 300/ton.

There is steel, copper wire, electrical controls, valves, hydraulic
power units, and motors, among the sellable parts.


You can proly estimate the weight pretty well. Steel weighs 480#/cu
ft, ditto copper, brass (approx), or 60# per 6" cube. You could
proly visually estimate an avg "spatial density" of select
measurable volumes pretty well, and come up with a grand total, good
to +/- 15%.

I imagine it is going to take quite some time disassembling alladat, on
top
of the rigging itself.


I am still learning this scrap business.

My best guess is that there is 50 short tons of steel in it. (I hate
short tons, but scrap yards here operate in short tons)


Everybody uses short tons... easy conversion, I spose. 2,000#, right?

100,000# is about 200 cu ft of steel, or about 7 cu yds, or one cube about 6
ft on an edge.
If you "melted" alladat down, it should then fill those volumes. If that
seems visually reasonable, then dats proly what you got. If not, you need
to re-estimate.


This is not how I estimate, I go by known machines (like "cincinnati
vertical mill 14k lbs) and think, how many of those would be about
equivalent to this machine.

I am not great at estimating yet. But I have to learn. I keep
spreadsheets of how much I make from scrap machines.


My another guess is that disassembly and rigging, will take 4 days.


I'da thought more, but still in the ballpark. I don't scrap, just bring my
own **** to the yard in m'pickup, and DATS time-consuming. Dead LEAVES are
time-consuming.... lol


I used to do the same thing.

i

Existential Angst[_2_] March 17th 13 08:07 PM

Interesting machine
 
"Ignoramus28030" wrote in message
...
On 2013-03-16, Pete C. wrote:

PrecisionmachinisT wrote:

"Jon Elson" wrote in message
...
Ignoramus13603 wrote:

On 2013-03-15, Ed Huntress wrote:
On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 20:10:32 -0500, Ignoramus13603
wrote:

http://igor.chudov.com/tmp/Snyder-Machine/

"6 station milling machine" with total of 280 HP, not counting two
hydraulic power units.


Oh, jeez. I hope you're not planning to buy it. That's the kind of
machine you used to see in the automobile industry -- 40 years ago.
g


I already bought it. I hope that it weighs 50 tons.

Well, it should have LOTS of useful parts in it. Lots of
hydraulic valves, maybe even some Moog proportional servo valves.



He's probably going to kill somebody one of these days soon; he's got
zero
formal training and most of his "rigging" is junk that someone else has
discarded for safety issues.

IIRC, he's already come close at least once, while disassembling an
overhead
crane.


You recall incorrectly. He witnessed some hacks nearly get killed
disassembling an overhead crane, he had nothing to do with it.


You are correct. Someone else was doing the dismantling. Those people
are scrap metal gypsies (Romani).

I never buy overhead cranes, as a matter of fact, due to safety
concerns. Too heavy and too high for me to deal with. You need two
big telehandlers to remove them safely.

So much venom from this "precisionmachinist", all because I killfiled
him for off-topic posts. Doubtfully this is a successful , well adjusted
individual.


Sam, offtopic posts? Are u kidding?
What is it with you assholes and killfiling, anyway?? Did you all run away
with yer toys when you were kids, as well??

Dude, PM is one of THE smartest people around here. Admittedly in need of
improved bedside manners, but sheeit, compared to the avg kill-filing
asshole here, dats really minor.

Bottom line is, you have simply vexed a small group who have the insight to
realize that you essentially milk rcm for personal gain. That some
inneresting offshoots occasionally occur from sed milking are purely
coincidental, but is apparently is enough to warrant a regular Group
Fellatio.
And some assholes think you warrant a book..... DAT gave me vertigo, let
me tell you..... I'm STILL wobbly from dat one....
--
EA






i




Existential Angst[_2_] March 17th 13 08:14 PM

Interesting machine
 
"Ignoramus19014" wrote in message
...
On 2013-03-17, Existential Angst wrote:
"Ignoramus19014" wrote in message
...
On 2013-03-17, Existential Angst wrote:
"Ignoramus13603" wrote in message
...
http://igor.chudov.com/tmp/Snyder-Machine/

"6 station milling machine" with total of 280 HP, not counting two
hydraulic power units.

i

What did you pay for alladat?

A lot!


Still being coy??
Sheeit, we ARE your 24/7 bidniss/tech consultants, so you SHOULD divulge
details.....

100,000# at 10c/# (retail) would be that place's expectation of scrap
payment ($10K), less what they'd have to pay to bring it to a yard. So
if
you paid $10K, you paid waaaaay too much. $5K would proly be too much.
Well..... am I getting close?? LOL

But the parts value could be considerable. Old motors, tho, were not
renowned for efficiency. New Baldors (and others) are topping 98%
(claimed)
effic -- ackshooly, for quite some time now..


I paid 6k.

Scrap yards pay me 290 per short ton, and with this much I hope that I
can get 300/ton.

There is steel, copper wire, electrical controls, valves, hydraulic
power units, and motors, among the sellable parts.


You should do alright.... proly not a windfall, but still worthwhile.
Depending on how you handle "parts", tho, you might have some of those for a
while.
Thank gawd for ebay....

If I had the money, space, I'd put alladis in a "manufacturing museum".
Lord knows, Merka already needs one.....
--
EA




You can proly estimate the weight pretty well. Steel weighs 480#/cu
ft, ditto copper, brass (approx), or 60# per 6" cube. You could
proly visually estimate an avg "spatial density" of select
measurable volumes pretty well, and come up with a grand total, good
to +/- 15%.

I imagine it is going to take quite some time disassembling alladat, on
top
of the rigging itself.

I am still learning this scrap business.

My best guess is that there is 50 short tons of steel in it. (I hate
short tons, but scrap yards here operate in short tons)


Everybody uses short tons... easy conversion, I spose. 2,000#, right?

100,000# is about 200 cu ft of steel, or about 7 cu yds, or one cube
about 6
ft on an edge.
If you "melted" alladat down, it should then fill those volumes. If that
seems visually reasonable, then dats proly what you got. If not, you
need
to re-estimate.


This is not how I estimate, I go by known machines (like "cincinnati
vertical mill 14k lbs) and think, how many of those would be about
equivalent to this machine.

I am not great at estimating yet. But I have to learn. I keep
spreadsheets of how much I make from scrap machines.


My another guess is that disassembly and rigging, will take 4 days.


I'da thought more, but still in the ballpark. I don't scrap, just bring
my
own **** to the yard in m'pickup, and DATS time-consuming. Dead LEAVES
are
time-consuming.... lol


I used to do the same thing.

i




PrecisionmachinisT March 17th 13 08:46 PM

Interesting machine
 

"Existential Angst" wrote in message
...
"Ignoramus28030" wrote in message
...
On 2013-03-16, Pete C. wrote:

PrecisionmachinisT wrote:

"Jon Elson" wrote in message
...
Ignoramus13603 wrote:

On 2013-03-15, Ed Huntress wrote:
On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 20:10:32 -0500, Ignoramus13603
wrote:

http://igor.chudov.com/tmp/Snyder-Machine/

"6 station milling machine" with total of 280 HP, not counting two
hydraulic power units.


Oh, jeez. I hope you're not planning to buy it. That's the kind of
machine you used to see in the automobile industry -- 40 years ago.
g


I already bought it. I hope that it weighs 50 tons.

Well, it should have LOTS of useful parts in it. Lots of
hydraulic valves, maybe even some Moog proportional servo valves.



He's probably going to kill somebody one of these days soon; he's got
zero
formal training and most of his "rigging" is junk that someone else has
discarded for safety issues.

IIRC, he's already come close at least once, while disassembling an
overhead
crane.

You recall incorrectly. He witnessed some hacks nearly get killed
disassembling an overhead crane, he had nothing to do with it.


You are correct. Someone else was doing the dismantling. Those people
are scrap metal gypsies (Romani).

I never buy overhead cranes, as a matter of fact, due to safety
concerns. Too heavy and too high for me to deal with. You need two
big telehandlers to remove them safely.

So much venom from this "precisionmachinist", all because I killfiled
him for off-topic posts. Doubtfully this is a successful , well adjusted
individual.


Sam, offtopic posts? Are u kidding?


Iggy is full of ****.

--he killfiled me because his butt buddy Steve (who also tends to constantly
ask silly off-topic questions here) asked yet another silly off-topic
question at which point I asked if he was really THAT that ****ing
stupid....

What is it with you assholes and killfiling, anyway?? Did you all run
away with yer toys when you were kids, as well??

Dude, PM is one of THE smartest people around here. Admittedly in need of


Thanks but the reality is, I simply know how to find information without
having to call upon the generousity of others.

improved bedside manners, but sheeit, compared to the avg kill-filing
asshole here, dats really minor.


I killfile trolls, typically they've ended up here because some nincompoop
has included RCM into a crossposted political thread.


Bottom line is, you have simply vexed a small group who have the insight
to realize that you essentially milk rcm for personal gain. That some


I quickly grow tired of anyone who refuses to put in the effort it takes to
actuallly learn something, who always looks to someone else instead, for a
quick answer...

inneresting offshoots occasionally occur from sed milking are purely
coincidental, but is apparently is enough to warrant a regular Group
Fellatio.
And some assholes think you warrant a book..... DAT gave me vertigo, let
me tell you..... I'm STILL wobbly from dat one....







Ignoramus19014 March 17th 13 08:55 PM

Interesting machine
 
On 2013-03-17, Existential Angst wrote:
"Ignoramus19014" wrote in message
...
On 2013-03-17, Existential Angst wrote:
"Ignoramus19014" wrote in message
...
On 2013-03-17, Existential Angst wrote:
"Ignoramus13603" wrote in message
...
http://igor.chudov.com/tmp/Snyder-Machine/

"6 station milling machine" with total of 280 HP, not counting two
hydraulic power units.

i

What did you pay for alladat?

A lot!

Still being coy??
Sheeit, we ARE your 24/7 bidniss/tech consultants, so you SHOULD divulge
details.....

100,000# at 10c/# (retail) would be that place's expectation of scrap
payment ($10K), less what they'd have to pay to bring it to a yard. So
if
you paid $10K, you paid waaaaay too much. $5K would proly be too much.
Well..... am I getting close?? LOL

But the parts value could be considerable. Old motors, tho, were not
renowned for efficiency. New Baldors (and others) are topping 98%
(claimed)
effic -- ackshooly, for quite some time now..


I paid 6k.

Scrap yards pay me 290 per short ton, and with this much I hope that I
can get 300/ton.

There is steel, copper wire, electrical controls, valves, hydraulic
power units, and motors, among the sellable parts.


You should do alright.... proly not a windfall, but still worthwhile.
Depending on how you handle "parts", tho, you might have some of those for a
while.
Thank gawd for ebay....

If I had the money, space, I'd put alladis in a "manufacturing museum".
Lord knows, Merka already needs one.....


It is not really that good for a museum, it is not like steam punk or
some such. There is nothing remarkable about this, except the size.

i

jon_banquer[_2_] March 17th 13 09:00 PM

Interesting machine
 
On Mar 17, 1:46*pm, "PrecisionmachinisT"
wrote:
"Existential Angst" wrote in message

...









"Ignoramus28030" wrote in message
m...
On 2013-03-16, Pete C. wrote:


PrecisionmachinisT wrote:


"Jon Elson" wrote in message
news:VPmdncwMyuA5997MnZ2dnUVZ_rqdnZ2d@giganews .com...
Ignoramus13603 wrote:


On 2013-03-15, Ed Huntress wrote:
On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 20:10:32 -0500, Ignoramus13603
wrote:


http://igor.chudov.com/tmp/Snyder-Machine/


"6 station milling machine" with total of 280 HP, not counting two
hydraulic power units.


Oh, jeez. I hope you're not planning to buy it. That's the kind of
machine you used to see in the automobile industry -- 40 years ago.
g


I already bought it. I hope that it weighs 50 tons.


Well, it should have LOTS of useful parts in it. *Lots of
hydraulic valves, maybe even some Moog proportional servo valves.


He's probably going to kill somebody one of these days soon; he's got
zero
formal training and most of his "rigging" is junk that someone else has
discarded for safety issues.


IIRC, he's already come close at least once, while disassembling an
overhead
crane.


You recall incorrectly. He witnessed some hacks nearly get killed
disassembling an overhead crane, he had nothing to do with it.


You are correct. Someone else was doing the dismantling. Those people
are scrap metal gypsies (Romani).


I never buy overhead cranes, as a matter of fact, due to safety
concerns. Too heavy and too high for me to deal with. You need two
big telehandlers to remove them safely.


So much venom from this "precisionmachinist", all because I killfiled
him for off-topic posts. Doubtfully this is a successful , well adjusted
individual.


Sam, offtopic posts? *Are u kidding?


Iggy is full of ****.

--he killfiled me because his butt buddy Steve (who also tends to constantly
ask silly off-topic questions here) asked yet another silly off-topic
question at which point I asked if he was really THAT that ****ing
stupid....

What is it with you assholes and killfiling, anyway?? *Did you all run
away with yer toys when you were kids, as well??


Dude, PM is one of THE smartest people around here. *Admittedly in need of


Thanks but the reality is, I simply know how to find information without
having to call upon the generousity of others.

improved bedside manners, but sheeit, compared to the avg kill-filing
asshole here, dats really minor.


I killfile trolls, typically they've ended up here because some nincompoop
has included RCM into a crossposted political thread.



Bottom line is, you have simply vexed a small group who have the insight
to realize that you essentially milk rcm for personal gain. *That some


I quickly grow tired of anyone who refuses to put in the effort it takes to
actuallly learn something, who always looks to someone else instead, for a
quick answer...







inneresting offshoots occasionally occur from sed milking are purely
coincidental, but is apparently is enough to warrant a regular Group
Fellatio.
And some assholes think you warrant a book..... * DAT gave me vertigo, let
me tell you..... I'm STILL wobbly from dat one....


"Iggy is full of ****."

iggy seems to be much better at scrapping stuff than actually making
anything. If iggy had to depend on making something for a living he'd
starve to death.

Steve B is a ****ing moron with no clues. I'm still scratching my head
on Steve B's recent post asking for welding advice because like iggy
he refuses to pay his dues.

"I quickly grow tired of anyone who refuses to put in the effort it
takes to actuallly learn something, who always looks to someone else
instead, for a quick answer..."

Describes both Steve B and iggy to a "T". Mark Wieber fills the gap of
those who quickly tire spoon feeding idiots. Weiber caters to this
kind of moron and in turn they are more than happy to suck up and
ignore Wieber's many lies.




jon_banquer[_2_] March 17th 13 09:07 PM

Interesting machine
 
On Mar 17, 1:55*pm, Ignoramus19014 ignoramus19...@NOSPAM.
19014.invalid wrote:
On 2013-03-17, Existential Angst wrote:









"Ignoramus19014" wrote in message
m...
On 2013-03-17, Existential Angst wrote:
"Ignoramus19014" wrote in message
...
On 2013-03-17, Existential Angst wrote:
"Ignoramus13603" wrote in message
news:aKydnZFYnLeV6N_MnZ2dnUVZ_oidnZ2d@giganew s.com...
http://igor.chudov.com/tmp/Snyder-Machine/


"6 station milling machine" with total of 280 HP, not counting two
hydraulic power units.


i


What did you pay for alladat?


A lot!


Still being coy??
Sheeit, we ARE your 24/7 bidniss/tech consultants, so you SHOULD divulge
details.....


100,000# at 10c/# (retail) would be that place's expectation of scrap
payment ($10K), less what they'd have to pay to bring it to a yard. *So
if
you paid $10K, you paid waaaaay too much. *$5K would proly be too much.
Well..... * am I getting close?? * LOL


But the parts value could be considerable. *Old motors, tho, were not
renowned for efficiency. *New Baldors (and others) are topping 98%
(claimed)
effic -- ackshooly, for quite some time now..


I paid 6k.


Scrap yards pay me 290 per short ton, and with this much I hope that I
can get 300/ton.


There is steel, copper wire, electrical controls, valves, hydraulic
power units, and motors, among the sellable parts.


You should do alright.... *proly not a windfall, but still worthwhile..
Depending on how you handle "parts", tho, you might have some of those for a
while.
Thank gawd for ebay....


If I had the money, space, I'd put alladis in a "manufacturing museum".
Lord knows, Merka already needs one.....


It is not really that good for a museum, it is not like steam punk or
some such. There is nothing remarkable about this, except the size.

i


What's remarkable is that when asked a simple question, like what you
paid for a piece of equipment, you feel the need to play games. I've
always noticed that those who have worked their ass off to gain skills
and who have real talent are more than happy to answer direct
questions and share anything they know because they realize how hard
they had to work to gain those skills. This is in direct contrast to
people like you who have very little in the way of mechanical skills
and haven't or refuse to pay their dues. People like you tend to play
games and hold back pertinent information as long as possible.


jon_banquer[_2_] March 17th 13 09:23 PM

Interesting machine
 
On Mar 17, 1:07*pm, "Existential Angst" wrote:
"Ignoramus28030" wrote in message

...









On 2013-03-16, Pete C. wrote:


PrecisionmachinisT wrote:


"Jon Elson" wrote in message
news:VPmdncwMyuA5997MnZ2dnUVZ_rqdnZ2d@giganews. com...
Ignoramus13603 wrote:


On 2013-03-15, Ed Huntress wrote:
On Thu, 14 Mar 2013 20:10:32 -0500, Ignoramus13603
wrote:


http://igor.chudov.com/tmp/Snyder-Machine/


"6 station milling machine" with total of 280 HP, not counting two
hydraulic power units.


Oh, jeez. I hope you're not planning to buy it. That's the kind of
machine you used to see in the automobile industry -- 40 years ago.
g


I already bought it. I hope that it weighs 50 tons.


Well, it should have LOTS of useful parts in it. *Lots of
hydraulic valves, maybe even some Moog proportional servo valves.


He's probably going to kill somebody one of these days soon; he's got
zero
formal training and most of his "rigging" is junk that someone else has
discarded for safety issues.


IIRC, he's already come close at least once, while disassembling an
overhead
crane.


You recall incorrectly. He witnessed some hacks nearly get killed
disassembling an overhead crane, he had nothing to do with it.


You are correct. Someone else was doing the dismantling. Those people
are scrap metal gypsies (Romani).


I never buy overhead cranes, as a matter of fact, due to safety
concerns. Too heavy and too high for me to deal with. You need two
big telehandlers to remove them safely.


So much venom from this "precisionmachinist", all because I killfiled
him for off-topic posts. Doubtfully this is a successful , well adjusted
individual.


Sam, offtopic posts? *Are u kidding?
What is it with you assholes and killfiling, anyway?? *Did you all run away
with yer toys when you were kids, as well??

Dude, PM is one of THE smartest people around here. *Admittedly in need of
improved bedside manners, but sheeit, compared to the avg kill-filing
asshole here, dats really minor.

Bottom line is, you have simply vexed a small group who have the insight to
realize that you essentially milk rcm for personal gain. *That some
inneresting offshoots occasionally occur from sed milking are purely
coincidental, but is apparently is enough to warrant a regular Group
Fellatio.
And some assholes think you warrant a book..... * DAT gave me vertigo, let
me tell you..... I'm STILL wobbly from dat one....
--
EA









i


"Sam, offtopic posts? Are u kidding?
What is it with you assholes and killfiling, anyway?? Did you all run
away
with yer toys when you were kids, as well??

Dude, PM is one of THE smartest people around here. "

It's all about ego for morons like iggy and many others who post here.
Learning is secondary. Many of these idiots are too stupid to notice
that SVL has the kind of machining and mechanical talent they will
never have. Even when I use to fight with SVL I always acknowledged
how bright he was mechanically and I always read his posts.





[email protected] March 18th 13 01:32 AM

Interesting machine
 
On Mar 17, 4:07*pm, "Existential Angst" wrote:


Bottom line is, you have simply vexed a small group who have the insight to
realize that you essentially milk rcm for personal gain.


EA


But in one way or another , we all milk RCM for personal gain. If we
did not get something from RCM , why would we log on.


Dan


PrecisionmachinisT March 18th 13 01:48 AM

Interesting machine
 

wrote in message
...

we all milk RCM for personal gain. If we did not get something from RCM ,
why would we log on.


Entertainment, silly goose...



Gunner[_7_] March 18th 13 01:55 AM

Interesting machine
 
On Sun, 17 Mar 2013 14:20:23 -0500, Ignoramus19014
wrote:

On 2013-03-17, Gunner wrote:
On Sun, 17 Mar 2013 12:00:53 -0600, "Pete C."
wrote:


Ignoramus19014 wrote:

My another guess is that disassembly and rigging, will take 4 days.

Since this equipment will never be put into operation as-is again,
assuming it's ok with the place you're removing it from, don't be afraid
to separate sections with a big abrasive cutoff saw or for tighter areas
an angle grinder with a cutoff wheel. Keep a fire extinguisher nearby,
but that will be the fastest way to get through mixed materials and get
on with the loading. Sawzalls are good too, but an abrasive wheel will
beat them for time on most materials.



Good suggestions. Followed of course by a Blue Point Wrench.


This is definitely torch and chopsaw territory!

i


Got yourself a nice plasma cutter yet? Might be a good job for one.

Gunner

The methodology of the left has always been:

1. Lie
2. Repeat the lie as many times as possible
3. Have as many people repeat the lie as often as possible
4. Eventually, the uninformed believe the lie
5. The lie will then be made into some form oflaw
6. Then everyone must conform to the lie

Ignoramus19014 March 18th 13 02:13 AM

Interesting machine
 
On 2013-03-18, Gunner wrote:
On Sun, 17 Mar 2013 14:20:23 -0500, Ignoramus19014
wrote:

On 2013-03-17, Gunner wrote:
On Sun, 17 Mar 2013 12:00:53 -0600, "Pete C."
wrote:


Ignoramus19014 wrote:

My another guess is that disassembly and rigging, will take 4 days.

Since this equipment will never be put into operation as-is again,
assuming it's ok with the place you're removing it from, don't be afraid
to separate sections with a big abrasive cutoff saw or for tighter areas
an angle grinder with a cutoff wheel. Keep a fire extinguisher nearby,
but that will be the fastest way to get through mixed materials and get
on with the loading. Sawzalls are good too, but an abrasive wheel will
beat them for time on most materials.


Good suggestions. Followed of course by a Blue Point Wrench.


This is definitely torch and chopsaw territory!

i


Got yourself a nice plasma cutter yet? Might be a good job for one.


This is heavier stuff, cutting bolts etc. Plus it will be at the job
site, not at my place.

jon_banquer[_2_] March 18th 13 02:17 AM

Interesting machine
 
On Mar 17, 7:13*pm, Ignoramus19014 ignoramus19...@NOSPAM.
19014.invalid wrote:
On 2013-03-18, Gunner wrote:









On Sun, 17 Mar 2013 14:20:23 -0500, Ignoramus19014
wrote:


On 2013-03-17, Gunner wrote:
On Sun, 17 Mar 2013 12:00:53 -0600, "Pete C."
wrote:


Ignoramus19014 wrote:


My another guess is that disassembly and rigging, will take 4 days.


Since this equipment will never be put into operation as-is again,
assuming it's ok with the place you're removing it from, don't be afraid
to separate sections with a big abrasive cutoff saw or for tighter areas
an angle grinder with a cutoff wheel. Keep a fire extinguisher nearby,
but that will be the fastest way to get through mixed materials and get
on with the loading. Sawzalls are good too, but an abrasive wheel will
beat them for time on most materials.


Good suggestions. *Followed of course by a Blue Point Wrench.


This is definitely torch and chopsaw territory!


i


Got yourself a nice plasma cutter yet? *Might be a good job for one.


This is heavier stuff, cutting bolts etc. Plus it will be at the job
site, not at my place.


You think a plasma cutter can't cut "heavier stuff" ? Sounds similar
to your bull**** claim that only ARC welding is for real men.






[email protected] March 18th 13 02:26 AM

Interesting machine
 
On Mar 17, 10:17*pm, jon_banquer wrote:


Got yourself a nice plasma cutter yet? *Might be a good job for one..


This is heavier stuff, cutting bolts etc. Plus it will be at the job
site, not at my place.


You think a plasma cutter can't cut "heavier stuff" ? Sounds similar
to your bull**** claim that only ARC welding is for real men.


Plasma cutters can not cut very thick metal. Most plasma cutters are
limited to an inch or less , but do work on stainless.


Dan


Ignoramus19014 March 18th 13 02:29 AM

Interesting machine
 
On 2013-03-18, wrote:
On Mar 17, 10:17?pm, jon_banquer wrote:


Got yourself a nice plasma cutter yet? ?Might be a good job for one.


This is heavier stuff, cutting bolts etc. Plus it will be at the job
site, not at my place.


You think a plasma cutter can't cut "heavier stuff" ? Sounds similar
to your bull**** claim that only ARC welding is for real men.


Plasma cutters can not cut very thick metal. Most plasma cutters are
limited to an inch or less , but do work on stainless.


It would not be practical to use a plasma cutter for scrapping
machines. Many reasons, such as them not being as portable, needing
compressed air, electricity etc, cut thickness and so on.

i

jon_banquer[_2_] March 18th 13 02:31 AM

Interesting machine
 
On Mar 17, 7:29*pm, Ignoramus19014 ignoramus19...@NOSPAM.
19014.invalid wrote:
On 2013-03-18, wrote:

On Mar 17, 10:17?pm, jon_banquer wrote:


Got yourself a nice plasma cutter yet? ?Might be a good job for one.


This is heavier stuff, cutting bolts etc. Plus it will be at the job
site, not at my place.


You think a plasma cutter can't cut "heavier stuff" ? Sounds similar
to your bull**** claim that only ARC welding is for real men.


Plasma cutters can not cut very thick metal. *Most plasma cutters are
limited to an inch or less , but do work on stainless.


It would not be practical to use a plasma cutter for scrapping
machines. Many reasons, such as them not being as portable, needing
compressed air, electricity etc, cut thickness and so on.

i


Wrong idiot. Some plasma cutters are very portable. See my comments on
inverter power supplies. Man are you ****ing stupid.



jon_banquer[_2_] March 18th 13 02:33 AM

Interesting machine
 
On Mar 17, 7:26*pm, " wrote:
On Mar 17, 10:17*pm, jon_banquer wrote:

Got yourself a nice plasma cutter yet? *Might be a good job for one.


This is heavier stuff, cutting bolts etc. Plus it will be at the job
site, not at my place.


You think a plasma cutter can't cut "heavier stuff" ? Sounds similar
to your bull**** claim that only ARC welding is for real men.


Plasma cutters can not cut very thick metal. *Most plasma cutters are
limited to an inch or less , but do work on stainless.

Dan


A lot of what needs to be cut on this machine is probably under an
inch.

jon_banquer[_2_] March 18th 13 02:56 AM

Interesting machine
 
On Mar 17, 7:26*pm, " wrote:
On Mar 17, 10:17*pm, jon_banquer wrote:

Got yourself a nice plasma cutter yet? *Might be a good job for one.


This is heavier stuff, cutting bolts etc. Plus it will be at the job
site, not at my place.


You think a plasma cutter can't cut "heavier stuff" ? Sounds similar
to your bull**** claim that only ARC welding is for real men.


Plasma cutters can not cut very thick metal. *Most plasma cutters are
limited to an inch or less , but do work on stainless.

Dan


Wrong. Very wrong:

http://www.metalworkingcanada.com/vi...t-fabtech-2012

Ed Huntress March 18th 13 02:59 AM

Interesting machine
 
On Sun, 17 Mar 2013 15:55:41 -0500, Ignoramus19014
wrote:

On 2013-03-17, Existential Angst wrote:
"Ignoramus19014" wrote in message
...
On 2013-03-17, Existential Angst wrote:
"Ignoramus19014" wrote in message
...
On 2013-03-17, Existential Angst wrote:
"Ignoramus13603" wrote in message
...
http://igor.chudov.com/tmp/Snyder-Machine/

"6 station milling machine" with total of 280 HP, not counting two
hydraulic power units.

i

What did you pay for alladat?

A lot!

Still being coy??
Sheeit, we ARE your 24/7 bidniss/tech consultants, so you SHOULD divulge
details.....

100,000# at 10c/# (retail) would be that place's expectation of scrap
payment ($10K), less what they'd have to pay to bring it to a yard. So
if
you paid $10K, you paid waaaaay too much. $5K would proly be too much.
Well..... am I getting close?? LOL

But the parts value could be considerable. Old motors, tho, were not
renowned for efficiency. New Baldors (and others) are topping 98%
(claimed)
effic -- ackshooly, for quite some time now..

I paid 6k.

Scrap yards pay me 290 per short ton, and with this much I hope that I
can get 300/ton.

There is steel, copper wire, electrical controls, valves, hydraulic
power units, and motors, among the sellable parts.


You should do alright.... proly not a windfall, but still worthwhile.
Depending on how you handle "parts", tho, you might have some of those for a
while.
Thank gawd for ebay....

If I had the money, space, I'd put alladis in a "manufacturing museum".
Lord knows, Merka already needs one.....


It is not really that good for a museum, it is not like steam punk or
some such. There is nothing remarkable about this, except the size.


The American Precision Museum, which is full of old machine tools,
wouldn't touch something like that.

They wouldn't even take my little 1917 Taylor & Fenn knee mill. I
tried. d8-)

--
Ed Huntress

Spehro Pefhany March 18th 13 03:13 AM

Interesting machine
 
On Sun, 17 Mar 2013 19:26:51 -0700 (PDT), the renowned
" wrote:

On Mar 17, 10:17*pm, jon_banquer wrote:


Got yourself a nice plasma cutter yet? *Might be a good job for one.


This is heavier stuff, cutting bolts etc. Plus it will be at the job
site, not at my place.


You think a plasma cutter can't cut "heavier stuff" ? Sounds similar
to your bull**** claim that only ARC welding is for real men.


Plasma cutters can not cut very thick metal. Most plasma cutters are
limited to an inch or less , but do work on stainless.


Dan


How about one of those oxygen lance things?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1yJmYl9d-XI



Best regards,
Spehro Pefhany
--
"it's the network..." "The Journey is the reward"
Info for manufacturers: http://www.trexon.com
Embedded software/hardware/analog Info for designers: http://www.speff.com

Martin Eastburn March 18th 13 03:30 AM

Interesting machine
 
Looked like lots of bolts that take preform parts off.
Bet they are easy to take out - as they are used from time to time.

Main frame stuff is tough.

Martin

On 3/17/2013 9:17 PM, jon_banquer wrote:
On Mar 17, 7:13 pm, Ignoramus19014 ignoramus19...@NOSPAM.
19014.invalid wrote:
On 2013-03-18, Gunner wrote:









On Sun, 17 Mar 2013 14:20:23 -0500, Ignoramus19014
wrote:


On 2013-03-17, Gunner wrote:
On Sun, 17 Mar 2013 12:00:53 -0600, "Pete C."
wrote:


Ignoramus19014 wrote:


My another guess is that disassembly and rigging, will take 4 days.


Since this equipment will never be put into operation as-is again,
assuming it's ok with the place you're removing it from, don't be afraid
to separate sections with a big abrasive cutoff saw or for tighter areas
an angle grinder with a cutoff wheel. Keep a fire extinguisher nearby,
but that will be the fastest way to get through mixed materials and get
on with the loading. Sawzalls are good too, but an abrasive wheel will
beat them for time on most materials.


Good suggestions. Followed of course by a Blue Point Wrench.


This is definitely torch and chopsaw territory!


i


Got yourself a nice plasma cutter yet? Might be a good job for one.


This is heavier stuff, cutting bolts etc. Plus it will be at the job
site, not at my place.


You think a plasma cutter can't cut "heavier stuff" ? Sounds similar
to your bull**** claim that only ARC welding is for real men.







All times are GMT +1. The time now is 08:16 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter