thank you so much for sharing your knowledge, true craftmanship is a dying art and we need to pass this knowledge on for future generation.,society can't continue with only layyers, doctors, engineers, etc..we need a hands on proficient technical work force.
Is mrpete222 Tubal Cain or is he reposting videos by Mr. Cain? Just curious. By the way, I have several of Tubal Cain's books and think he is one of the most knowledgeable machinists alive. His method for aligning lathe tailstocks, for example, is elegant, simple, and cheap. That's genius!
@ArtemiaSalina I am the tubalcain from the USA. There was a tubalcain from England that authored many books. I believed he has passed away.--tubalcain
@mrpete222 The author who wrote in The Model Engineer, (UK), and wrote the very well know books, was T.D. Walshaw (Terry), who passed away a few years ago, having written in the magazine since the Second World War, and published under the name Tubal Cain. He was a Professional Engineer and teacher at College, and published many designs for both Steam locos and Stationary engines, plus many erudite articles on machinery. Sadly missed.
Like so many before , many , many thanks for you videos they are so helpful in my daily work shop doings . and are truly entertaining . Once again Thank you so much . :)
Like so many before , many , many thanks for you videos they are so helpful in my daily work shop doings . and are truly entertaining . Once again Thank you so much . :)
I love how you explain everything with the demo but I really love how you show different variations of your setup. You make up for all the lousy shop teachers that most of us had. Thanks and I look foward to every video you put out.
Thank you for taking the time to make the videos.We have a ten inch lathe and manual bridgeport at my work for maintenance and repair for production equipment.and your videos are a huge help trying to keep the company in America not Mexico.Thanks and keep them coming.
These videos may seem trivial to you, but there is always something that can be learned. I knew I'd pick up some finer points of threading and wasn't disappointed. Thanks for taking the time to make all of your videos!
Great information ***** A lot of your videos cover lost art information. Have you ever considered creating a video disk on different subjects, like foundry work, lathe work, basic machine shop, and offer them for sale? You already have the videos on your computer. Thanks for your time, John .
@mrpete222 You should seek out someone who could assist you because I totally agree! If @terrierbw1 can not assist you, I may be able to help you find someone. I was thinking Lindsays technical books may be someone to approach. He has all the old technical books, but you have the videos and the hands on instruction! I think you are sitting on a gold mine and need to kick out all the info you can for the benefit of generations to come!
@mrpete222 That is a great idea, and im sure if you search around you can find a company that will take your video files and burn them to disc. put it in a nice case and all for a fairly reasonable price.
I like how you said "I might be breaking some rules, but I don't care." Refreshing hearing people who don't get caught up by doing everything "by the book".
do you have a list and title of all your video someplace,,
what books to you recommend for beginners or retired elec engineers !
tumble1967 1 week ago
@tumble1967 SEARCH youtube for INDEX OF tubalcain MACHINE SHOP VIDEOS
mrpete222 1 week ago
thank you so much for sharing your knowledge, true craftmanship is a dying art and we need to pass this knowledge on for future generation.,society can't continue with only layyers, doctors, engineers, etc..we need a hands on proficient technical work force.
tumble1967 1 week ago
Thanks for all of your videos they are very informative....Yea! Tubalcaine!
paulk1011 1 month ago
another excellent video from Mr Pete
makedoandmend2 8 months ago
como quisiera que lo traduscan al español
trimetales 11 months ago
Yale senior just died using a lathe... scary machine.
Dllshockk 11 months ago
Really useful information here. Thanks !
Bob
bsquadronguy 1 year ago
Is mrpete222 Tubal Cain or is he reposting videos by Mr. Cain? Just curious. By the way, I have several of Tubal Cain's books and think he is one of the most knowledgeable machinists alive. His method for aligning lathe tailstocks, for example, is elegant, simple, and cheap. That's genius!
ArtemiaSalina 1 year ago
@ArtemiaSalina I am the tubalcain from the USA. There was a tubalcain from England that authored many books. I believed he has passed away.--tubalcain
mrpete222 1 year ago
@mrpete222 I see. Well these are very good videos and I appreciate your making them!
ArtemiaSalina 1 year ago
@mrpete222 The author who wrote in The Model Engineer, (UK), and wrote the very well know books, was T.D. Walshaw (Terry), who passed away a few years ago, having written in the magazine since the Second World War, and published under the name Tubal Cain. He was a Professional Engineer and teacher at College, and published many designs for both Steam locos and Stationary engines, plus many erudite articles on machinery. Sadly missed.
Stephen.
swallin19 3 weeks ago
Thanks for explaining how threading on a machine SHOULD work and also how it CAN wok. I've always wondered about that.
tzkelley 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
Like so many before , many , many thanks for you videos they are so helpful in my daily work shop doings . and are truly entertaining . Once again Thank you so much . :)
pocketproductions 1 year ago
Like so many before , many , many thanks for you videos they are so helpful in my daily work shop doings . and are truly entertaining . Once again Thank you so much . :)
pocketproductions 1 year ago
Thanks for tricks and hints : )
john1966elliott 1 year ago
I love how you explain everything with the demo but I really love how you show different variations of your setup. You make up for all the lousy shop teachers that most of us had. Thanks and I look foward to every video you put out.
zippy308 1 year ago
Thank you for taking the time to make the videos.We have a ten inch lathe and manual bridgeport at my work for maintenance and repair for production equipment.and your videos are a huge help trying to keep the company in America not Mexico.Thanks and keep them coming.
SlowEarl1 1 year ago
These videos may seem trivial to you, but there is always something that can be learned. I knew I'd pick up some finer points of threading and wasn't disappointed. Thanks for taking the time to make all of your videos!
schneidp20 1 year ago
Great Tubolcane ... Thanks a million.
Metalloys 1 year ago
5:08 lol
russtuff 1 year ago
Comment removed
russtuff 1 year ago
loved it! thanks. now i know how it's done. :-)
catman72 1 year ago
Great information ***** A lot of your videos cover lost art information. Have you ever considered creating a video disk on different subjects, like foundry work, lathe work, basic machine shop, and offer them for sale? You already have the videos on your computer. Thanks for your time, John .
terrierbw1 1 year ago
@terrierbw1 Several people have suggested that. May consider doing that---no sure how to make discs--remember, I'm a buggy whip maker.
mrpete222 1 year ago
@mrpete222 You should seek out someone who could assist you because I totally agree! If @terrierbw1 can not assist you, I may be able to help you find someone. I was thinking Lindsays technical books may be someone to approach. He has all the old technical books, but you have the videos and the hands on instruction! I think you are sitting on a gold mine and need to kick out all the info you can for the benefit of generations to come!
GrizzlyGroundswell 1 year ago
@mrpete222 That is a great idea, and im sure if you search around you can find a company that will take your video files and burn them to disc. put it in a nice case and all for a fairly reasonable price.
sdably 1 year ago
I saved these last 3 videos up for Sunday night viewing and the wait was well worth it! This is super stuff. Thank you for doing this.
Best Wishes, Brendan.
baconsoda 1 year ago
I like how you said "I might be breaking some rules, but I don't care." Refreshing hearing people who don't get caught up by doing everything "by the book".
jeriellsworth 1 year ago 11