Added: 5 years ago
From: metalspinningworksho
Views: 117,246
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  • Wow! Good skills buddy. I can watch this sort of thing all day long.

  • Yeah thats clever alright !

  • Wow- what a skilled artisan. Really enjoyed watching him work the metal with amazing fluidity. Well done.

  • hey man.tanks for the video.how many rpm?and hp?

  • how do you measure the surface area required for parabolic vesal. the material volume of the plain plate should equal to the material volume of the parabolic veseel. that is thickness mulitiply by surface area. how do you ensure the required thickme]\ness is reached.

    I like the video.

  • wonderful thanks for sharing

  • Wow, this is amazing! I've never known how these shapes are made. Thanks for sharing!!

  • WILD!! I've never seen spinning before

  • That is very cool. About how many RPM's do you spin the metal at?

  • that was pretty cool.

  • what's kind of material about the tooling? how do you make it?

  • One of the coolest videos I've ever seen. Thanks for posting it.

  • What type of tool is he using to form the spinner? And what assures that the metal gauge is uniform across the surface?

  • the skill of the tradesman ensures even gauge throughout the part

  • @Aczernek hi.i think you can see how he makes the thickness uniform by scraping/cutting the ridges down,thats when you see shavings flying off.and having done woodturning for a hobby i know he's a very skijjed person.woul love to have a go though,that aeroplane spinner is just magic.

  • Dude, can you make me a resonator cone?

  • WOW;; fantastic. Thank you VERY MUCH for this vidio.

  • you should see titanium being spun at 1200 deg. F. I work for a company that does tight tolerance aerospace metal spinning.

  • That was amazing to watch! I want to have a go at this

  • That just took my breath away!

  • That was a very interesting video, not many people know of metal spinning. What is a maximum gauge that can be spun? I assume that all metals can be spun?

    I don't have sound so those question might have been answered in the audio.

  • A wide variety of metal alloys and thickness can be spun, depending on the size, power, and tooling used. Lathes like the one in the video typically use aluminum up to 1/8" thick, where as a heavy duty lathe using steel tooling & rollers can spin very thick aluminum, copper, stainless steel, etc.

  • im a metal spinner! the shop i work at can spin up to 3/8 or 1/2 .. i forgot im only a hand spinner. oh and all metal can be spun

  • That guy sure knows what he's doing, I can't believe he put his finger on freshly trimmed edge.

  • Oh my god, that was awesome. And the music was a nice touch.

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