Manufacturer Said This Part is $700, So I Replicated it for MUCH Less
Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль
Welcome back to the latest installment of the CNC Plasma Series! This week we are going to be showing you what it takes to perfectly replicate a metal part using a CNC Plasma Cutter!
Don't forget to check out our page for the DIY Hero Contest! :
diyhero.org/2022/tay-whiteside
Thank you to ShopSabre for sponsoring this video! They did not tell us what we could or could not say, so all the opinions shared in this video are our own. We genuinely believe they make a great product and we have many positive things to say about them, as you've heard us say many times before.
Consider ShopSabre for your CNC needs:
www.shopsabre.com/
Come back next week when we show you how to use this machine to pay for itself and even turn a profit!
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To inquire about a custom build we can help you bring to life, or to be a sponsor of the channel, shoot Tay an email at: Tay@liftarcstudios.com
Filmed and Hosted by: Tay Whiteside
Featuring: Wyatt Allen
Edited by: Walker Hooper
Music Licensed from Artlist.io
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Any technique or methodology shown in this video is purely for entertainment and informational purposes only. Lift Arc Studios and their associated craftsmen are not liable for any injury or damage to your shop or surrounding areas you man incur while trying to emulate these builds. Remember, be safe, have fun, work smart!
Пікірлер: 265
That little piece shuts off the flow of milk by pinching a rubber tube that you feed though the assembly. And the weight of the handle keeps it pinched off. And… at the end you figure it out 😂
@thepubliceye
Жыл бұрын
What he said
@kwinterburn
Жыл бұрын
spot on its a milkpak valve must must must not have any sharp edges
@RichSobocinski
Жыл бұрын
What I came here to say. I remember these from the mess decks in the Navy. The tight tolerances really aren't necessary. You literally could make this thing with a drill and hand file in less than a half hour.
@Hammerjockeyrepair
Жыл бұрын
@@RichSobocinski lol Im watching this and like 6 minutes in im yawning at the whole fusion 360 programming thinking We could have made this in 5 minutes with our hand tools
@JO-ly3hi
Жыл бұрын
@@Hammerjockeyrepair Simple drill presss and sander! ...OR, weld the broken part and finish.
First, thank you for helping support your local business! Second, thank you for taking the time to film a small victory over the “just trash and replace” culture. Third, thank you for being a maker.
Your gonna need to replace the bolt with a longer stainless steel one and a self-locking nut. It needs to be able to come apart to CLEAN it. You also need to polish it to a mirror finish or else the health inspector will ding her for that tooi!
@bgowrwbw4755
Жыл бұрын
That's exactly what I was going to say. We had these in college dorms back in the 70s. Everything needs to come apart for cleaning. And stainless should look spotless like any other piece of food handling equipment.
@crazzywolfie
Жыл бұрын
i could be wrong but i am guessing since he had to weld it the mechanism was not built to be taken apart like he did. i do agree that using a stainless steel bolt would have made things easier to fix in the future and easier to clean if needed but i don't think it would be a big deal especially if it just acts like a guillotine pinching off the hose. i would guess for health reason the hose it pinches has to be cleaned or replaced regularly but doubt the side where you don't touch would be a big issue.
@bgowrwbw4755
Жыл бұрын
@@crazzywolfie That makes perfect sense, but my recollection (it's been awhile) is that food-related equipment has to really be stripped down to every little piece for sanitation, much farther than one might expect. That's why that "sh*** bolt" he refers to at 17:12 was not permanently installed in the first place. Perhaps it had been threaded and the threads stripped, I don't know. In terms of the milk tube, unless things have changed, each container of milk has its own rubber tube. Back in the day, milk came in special boxes that had a 5 or 6-gallon bag inside, with its own tube. You lifted this heavy box of milk (milk weighs around 8-1/2 lbs/gallon) into the refrigerated dispenser and threaded the tube down into the valve mechanism, and then removed some kind of clip (my memory is hazy) so that the milk was then controlled by the dispenser valve. When it was empty, you pulled out the box and replaced it. I saw an example of a similar machine online; search for Silver King SKMAJ1/C3. Sorry to ramble.
@IkaraPentiki
Жыл бұрын
@@crazzywolfie it did not have to be welded, it is built to come apart.
@htomerif
Жыл бұрын
@@crazzywolfie The housing was zinc and I think the threads were chowdered. I'm confused as to why he didn't just drill it all the way through and use a new bolt and lock nut. I mean the hole went all the way through anyway for him to be able to weld it. That would be kind of embarrassing to leave a little weld blob on the side of the end of a bolt holding it in place. You could also probably just use a quick release pin.
It has been a long time since my food service days, but that should be able to be disassembled for cleaning.
I always preach that it is critical to fully understand/communicate the function of anything being designed or fabricated.
I also would've made the part over buying one. But lacking all the fancy machinery and software, I would've scribed lines in layout blue, and used drills, a saw and a grinding wheel. Old school. Nice work.
@liveen
Жыл бұрын
Software = free, fancy machinery = DIY-able with pretty decent quality and precision (great for hobbyists, not all that great for extremely precise commercial stuff) for less than 500 bucks if you buy everything new, using none of your own spare stuff, and keep the expensive components (like a spindle motor) to sites like Aliexpress, banggood etc. Mostly though, its a great thing to make for fun, and the reward is a finished product and the ability to make MORE things for fun! Highly recommend giving it a shot if you're a handyman type of guy, for some people a little project like that can lead to amazing things
@fredmercury1314
Жыл бұрын
I would've just bought a thin bit of sheet steel from a DIY store and used a hacksaw and drill. Mind you, I do charge $700 an hour so...
@MarkkuS
Жыл бұрын
Even cheaper
Why not use a 316 bolt and nylar lock nut so it can easily be repaired instead of welding it ?
@recrdholdr
5 ай бұрын
I was literally screaming that at the screen when he said he was going to weld it.
Nice 944 in the background!
I first found your channel and watched the 4 hour video of the clean up and making of the shop. I loved it. and when you placed the front door on the office you said you made it a no latch because it will be used the most. I said to myself "yea right he will be going through that bathroom door the most to get into the shop. And now on this video I see you going back and forth so much you have the bathroom door propped open. LOL . I still love your videos
I used to make tooling for the Cooke and candy industry. One of the tricks I used in AutoCAD 2000 was to take a picture of the design and import it into the system as a “jpg” file on a special layer then draw a rectangle or circle around the part. Then scale both to the measured size of the real part. Then I can trace and locate details. Small parts are easy, big parts you have move back and be sure the camera and part are parallel and on the same centerline. To avoid parallax. Try it you’ll like it.
20:21…. “That’s a cut point” had me cracking up! Love your videos… and the injokes like “oh you’re brilliant!” Then making that Walkers Happy Place! Watched that over and over! Great videos guys… thanks for sharing all you do!
"I'm going to take an hour out of my day to replicate a part out of stainless" also "Instead of buying a 25 cent fastener, watch me fuck weld the entire thing"
@IkaraPentiki
Жыл бұрын
I wish i could give this comment 3 thumbs up.
@robertnomok9750
Жыл бұрын
An hour is a stretch. ITs like 20-30 minutes to mesuare small part like that and than cut it. If he did it off cam it would be faster.
"Walker's happy place" is the most relatable thing ever.
This is not a put down but this is a perfect example of book learning crossed over to practical application. Great job. Too many of the products we have are made by people who are totally disconnected from these two aspects of engineering. I say again Great job. Plus this is the best way I know of to convey my thoughts.
@LiftArcStudios
Жыл бұрын
This comment meant the world to me, thank you! -Tay
@frankdeegan8974
Жыл бұрын
@@LiftArcStudios You are welcome!
Can we have a little context here, did they actually say that .50 cent piece was 700 dollars or did they say they couldn't sell just that part and the entire assembly was for 700 dollars?
@AlliPrice371
Жыл бұрын
Does it matter?
@MilesHolt
Жыл бұрын
@@AlliPrice371 not really 700 dollars for that assembly is still ridiculous. 700 dollars for the little piece he made should be criminal. But if the machine is 700 and they don't piece it out I understand. So I was just curious what actually came with the 700 dollar price.
55 years ago we had a milk dispenser in our kitchen a.k.a. the cow. Anybody that owned one of these dispensers knew the how it worked long before minute 19. I love my cow 35° milk chasing Oreo cookies. That was when Oreos Cooks had trans fats they tasted so much better. Great memories of a interesting childhood.
The first time I saw this milk system was at Great Lakes Training Center when I was a Recruit - 1965. It used a 5 gal. milk container and a plastic hose like the one you saw (as others have noted). They have been using this system for many years, and I suspect the company has found this to be a nice expensive replacement part.
It is great having a CNC plasma cutter. I have a small one at home and I have used to make parts and art. It is nice that you were able to help this lady. I was a laser operator in a small metal fabrication shop. After 22 years, I was replaced by a faster laser. I sure miss my job. I miss my home business. Thanks for the video.
Great job. A suggestion - instead of welding the retaining bolt how about replacing it with a longer one and putting a retaining clip on the end?
@johnz5359
Жыл бұрын
Yes! That was exactly what I was thinking. That would have been so simple. A pin with a cotter pin costs like 50 cents at the hardware store. Or even just a longer bolt with just the end threaded. There are a bunch of different ways to accomplish that, all of them better than welding it in place.
Absolutely fantastic and love how you explain everything you do and how it’s done top bloke and full respect 👍👍👍
@LiftArcStudios
2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the kind words friend! We go back and forth on whether or not people will find videos like these boring or interesting, glad you found it interesting! Cheers, Tay
Yea, milk machine valves usually pinch off a rubber "nipple" that is built into the 5 gallon milk "bags" that go into them. I've had to babysit milk machines like that many times during my time in the Navy. You have to cut the end off the tube of the new bag to open it.
Great tutorial on using a plasma cutter! Thanks!
Very nice video this week Tay and the gang. Can't wait to see more videos soon. Keep up the great craftsmanship and hard work my friends weld on. Fab on. Keep making. God bless.
@LiftArcStudios
2 жыл бұрын
As always Jared, you're the man! Thank you! - Tay
@SchysCraftCo.
2 жыл бұрын
@@LiftArcStudios your very welcome.
Bad move on weld disassembly is required for cleaning as you discovered slide just pinches tube from milk carton. Good job on part replication.
I'd imagine the $700 was for the whole assembly not the tiny plate you made.
@brucelarcombe4679
Жыл бұрын
1.8625… bananas 🙄
@H4rleyBoy
Жыл бұрын
@@brucelarcombe4679 I have no idea what that means ???
@brucelarcombe4679
Жыл бұрын
@@H4rleyBoy Here in Australia ‘banana’ is a metric-elitist term for ‘inches’. So I was having a giggle about decimal inches. Not sure why it wound up as a comment on your post, sorry about that 🙏
@H4rleyBoy
Жыл бұрын
@@brucelarcombe4679 Yes I knew about the inches thing from watching CEE channel, but didn't see a connection to my comment :) :)
@brucelarcombe4679
Жыл бұрын
@@H4rleyBoy yup, I watch CEE too. Just a lack of talent on my part 🤣
Agree, it does feel good to fix something rather than throwing it away. 👍
This is brilliant.
Good process.
How about a small radius in corners of the square pocket. May prevent cutting tube.
Great Video Man!
A trick to keep the construction lines from showing up in the DXF is to project the face of the part to a new sketch and create a DXF from the projection. It will only project the edges and nothing more.
I was with you until you started welding on a chromed visible part of the mechanism to retain a removable fastener
@Hammerjockeyrepair
Жыл бұрын
I wasnt even with him since the beginning... The effort and time spent just measuring and programming into the computer was so much more complicated than just making the part on the bench with the same files, a grinder and drill! And then once he tried welding that crap instead of fixing the threads I just paused and went to the comments ahaha
@IkaraPentiki
Жыл бұрын
@@Hammerjockeyrepair for a one off, i agree with you. However, that would have made a boring video, and now he can produce aftermarket replacement parts, more or less ad libitum, could be a tidy sum all on it's own if he can just reach customers.
@robertnomok9750
Жыл бұрын
@@Hammerjockeyrepair effort? That like 20-30 minutes to measure it and cut on plasma table. With such simple detail it takes no time at all., Welding part of the other hand made me suffer,
I understand the instructional value ….but. I could have made that part by hand in half the time in 1.5 beers and an episode of Columbo. Did enjoy the episode
Sweet repair, I dream of having a shop sabre!
@komoru
Жыл бұрын
Don't dream of it. Get a business license as an LLC or corporation (not a sole proprietor), be in business for at least one year and cashflow, and then you can finance one. Done.
Great video nice job!
@LiftArcStudios
2 жыл бұрын
Thank you! Cheers!
Gemini Laser 3015 co2. Ran it 15 years. Production. Good job kid.
You are brilliant cameraman
Hey could you make a video of more detail software controller info? Nice video :)
milk bag has a rubber hose that fits into the spigot that the part squeezes close,, not needing a water tight seal.. just the ability to pinch off hose.
Right, we have determined this is some horrid cast metal....let's TIG it 🤣 Longer bolt and a nyloc nut on the other side
@quademasters249
Жыл бұрын
As much as I like tigging, sometimes a nut is all you need.
@truckinNloving
Жыл бұрын
My method has always been to bolt it... Frames busted? Bolt some C channel or angle iron to it! Presto! Like new again!
I'm glad I have a Westcott plasma table. The program on my machine does everything for you lol. Just tell it what thickness and material.
@LiftArcStudios
2 жыл бұрын
Life of luxury! haha
The valve pinches a hose that comes out of a milk bag. I love the chocolate milk!
Finally a work case that totally justifies me buying a $25K CNC plasma for my garage shop... Jokes... Great Video and great solution. Stainless for the win.
@LiftArcStudios
2 жыл бұрын
HAHAHA right!? It is the little things, however, like this that make me thankful to have this machine in the shop, fast track prototyping! Cheers, Tay
@quademasters249
Жыл бұрын
I've been trying to justify it too. I know it would just sit there most of the time. I'd need to find another building for the tractor too.
aaaaaaand by the time you got to the 8 minute mark putting all that info into fusion I already had the piece made on my bench with a drill grinder and hand file lol
Why not 316 as as we know it is a much better grade stainless and price difference is negligible for the amount required .
Right to repair is important! Support local mechanics and engineers
What is your shielding gas? I run N2 to shield and water to clean all of my stainless cuts and I don’t usually end up with that much dross.
I believe the "valve" is simply a rubberized tube that is pinched by the handle, hence the handle being relatively heavy.
I want one of those hats!
a nice clevis pin was needed , but hey ho , its up and running . Interesting to watch the full process.
I am thinking that it isn't pure zinc but something called Silumine aka Aluminum-zinc alloy or even Magnesium alloy because it momentarily burned with a super bright light
Darn that works just like nature LOL!
It isn't a contact with liquid type valve. This is built for hygiene as there is a rubber teat that is attached to the bottom of the milk bag which protrudes through the broken piece and the weight of the pendulum applies enough pressure to the teat to pinch the flow off....
One really dumb but super useful thing I learned recently is to literally just hold the piece to your monitor. You have the two major dimensions, but getting things like the filets and exact spacings correct can be a pain. Holding the piece to your monitor and zooming out in F360 until the major dimensions match makes it super obvious where you're even just slightly off.
@sugarbooty
Жыл бұрын
You can also import a reference picture for things you can't hold up
@submarine.7seas
Жыл бұрын
Bed scanner
@daylen577
Жыл бұрын
@@sugarbooty Reference pictures are very difficult to get straight, though. When you're working with millimeter parts, even a tiny but of skewing in your picture can really mess up any measurements you take from it after calibration. Unless you have a softbox with an overhead stand for a camera with a lens that does not distort, you're not getting the precision you'd want
@daylen577
Жыл бұрын
@@submarine.7seas Bed scanners work great for flat objects, absolutely. It's a bit different when it's an object like a fancy ergonomic mouse or a TV remote or really any part with a curved underside, because a bed scanner will turn that curve into a gradient that is impossible to decipher. But within the context of this video, a bed scanner would have been a perfect fix and would have saved probably a solid 30-60 seconds
@sugarbooty
Жыл бұрын
@@daylen577 It might not be perfect but it has helped me out a lot. I usually take pictures with my zoom lens from far away to remove as much perspective as I can. Im pretty sure you could also use dewarping software to give you a better result but I've never bothered. As a hobbyist its perfectly fine for me, I usually use it for following curves and stuff I can't easily measure
Get yourself a wireless pendant - you can leave that keyboard in the cabinet and stick the pendant on the side of the cabinet.
American ingenuity at its finest
What does one of those cost?
Why not polish to chrome like finish .
Why on Earth did yo not put a longer bolt through and a washer/ nut on the end?
Try wire eroder next time. Finishing in one hit. No filing necessary. Job done.
Need clarification. You could have done the 2d cam in fusion360 but didn't. Why?
Ok serious question I was shopping for a waterjet to avoid draft on thick parts (3/4 inch) and hole ovalisation along with edge hardening Im building motorcycles and a cnc would save me a ton of time on brackets and frame parts that are critically dimensioned The question is, how much control do you have over the kerf angle ? Could you ream the holes and still have them precisely positionned ? And do you need to normalize the edge after its been cut when you tig weld it ?
@yeetskeetledeet8184
2 жыл бұрын
Depends on the criticality of the weldment and/or part. If the weld needs to be aerospace spec and x-ray, then welding on a plasma cut edge may not be a great idea. For motorcycles you are most likely going to be fine, bring the edge back to shiny metal and it welds great. As far as edge bevel, you are always going to have that with plasma. 3 degrees is normal, but you can get a straighter edge with good settings. Dimensional tolerance on the top side of the cut is easily + - .005”, even less with a proper setup. So yes, you could ream the holes to their appropriate dimension post-cut. If you are making a lot of these parts and your tolerance is tighter than the above ☝️ details, water jet and/or laser cutting is the name of the game
@mytuberforyou
Жыл бұрын
The way I handle this is offseting the toolpath by half the kerf plus the taper- since almost all processes benefit from an edge sanding, I then do a quick second operation on a spindle sander just to take out the taper, working small side up the edge works as a visual guide and it takes very little time. Although I know people here with both laser and waterjet, I can actually get my parts laser cut in Madrid for roughly the cost of the steel here, with a two week lead time. So in most cases I do that and then deburr and second operations like profiling, milling, reaming, chamfers, or flycutting here in my shop. If you normally use 1/8" and 1/4" plate they call it 3mm and 6mm respectively over there, the 6mm 304 I get from there is actually toleranced closer to .250 than the domestic 1/4" I get here. My opinion is that getting a waterjet for metal is daft in today's market, they are so messy and PITA to maintain. For the cost of a waterjet you can get a hybrid laser, not have to deal with a water table or sludge, have a machine that can be left idle with no downside, etc. Plasma is cheapest, but also worst. Just as an example, he could have got that part in two days from Reno for $14 (OK, he would have had to order $29 total to cover shipping) in 304 SS, and that is from SendCutSend, they are TWICE the cost of my supplier. So if you are building motorcyles and not mass producing motorcycle parts, your floor space may be more valuable than a waterjet or plasma, don't forget with either you also need to inventory and store material and scrap. Precut parts arriving 30 at a time in a box may be a better solution. I know it is for me.
@robertnomok9750
Жыл бұрын
You dont. Even plasma manufaturer will tell you that metall 12+mm thick will have angled cut. Its in the nature of using plasma. Unlike pressure watter cutting or laser you electrical arc is dancing around a bit. You REALLY dont want to cut hole with diametres less that 4 time thickness of your metall unless you plan to finish them on the other tool. You will get angled cut on round holes. You might have 50 mm on one side and 49 mm hole on the other side, for example. They try to sell you "fine cut" torches and "true hole" addons but even so they would not promise you good results. You want perfect edges and holes? Use milling machine and drill holes afterwards. Plasma cutting is just a first step in making new part unless you do not require precision.
there is a rubber tube that the valve pinches off
bro, thank you
Lets hope that this video becomes widely viewed and that a market for replacement parts is created. You could help pay for the plasma table. Set your part price at at least 4 times your costs. You will force the supplier to lower the price of this stamped part and find out if there is a patent infringement. If so make it square with round edges.
@frontiervirtcharter
Жыл бұрын
Pretty sure no patent infringement on that one.. Milk-pack dispensers like that one have been around since the '80s at least, and the design looks like it's from the '50s or maybe even the '40s
Best little edit (IMBRILLIANT) 😆Love the videos.
I wonder if long term this piece is going to wear out the slot in which it rides because it's a much harder material.
@courier11sec
Жыл бұрын
Ugh. Just got to the bit where you started welding on the casting.. You could have turned up a pin with a clip or cotter without altering the device at all.
You should have used a retaining pin
How much does a CNC plasma cutter cost?
no 3d scanner?
When you find out how it works after making and it appears the tolerances weren't that important at all..... hell you could fix this point welding 2 O-rings together 🤣
im sure its a dumb question but could you put small parts like that in a scanner(like from a printer scanner) and import the object
@LiftArcStudios
2 жыл бұрын
Pure genius...I'm definitely trying that next time. Cheers! -Tay
@V8Hunter7
2 жыл бұрын
@@LiftArcStudios You don't even need a scanner. Take a picture of it > Import pic into Fusion 360 > Scale the picture to the dimension and then sketch over top of the picture
@TheStealthbob
Жыл бұрын
@@V8Hunter7 This^^^ I have been able to perfectly replicate intricate small parts with various small holes this way. It creates a 1:1 image you use as a stencil you then simply model over.
@Taliesin6
Жыл бұрын
@@V8Hunter7 you could have parallax issues with a camera photo, way less parallax with a flatbed scanner.
@robertnomok9750
Жыл бұрын
You kinda do it like that for small parts, yes. But you still need to measure it manually to check yourself.
I’ve worked on that machine or a very similar one and the 700 dollars covered the entire assembly (plus some other parts) in my case. Which is its own form of obnoxious but from a business perspective makes a bit of sense I guess… having a SKU for every tiny part adds too much overhead in stocking, shipping, etc…
the part: $700 the education and tools to self-manufacture the part: $80000 the satisfaction of not paying for the part: $priceless
@runed0s86
Жыл бұрын
My library got rid of their 3d printers. The local hackerspace sold their cnc machine.
Great video. I noticed that matching up a printed 1:1 drawing from Fusion wasn't identical in size to the parts I order from the laser shop. Perhaps that is due to the kerf compensation and I can address that once I have a plasma table set up for myself
@mytuberforyou
Жыл бұрын
Have you opened up your file in another DXF editor and checked it? Probably a scaling issue. Unlees your parts are oversize and you were applying compensation- because your laser shop should be applying compensation ALSO.
at 17:30 instead of tack welding an ruining the whole unit. use a longer stud an pull pin.
You could’ve tried taking a picture of it, diameter one reference side and try that right off the bat.
@LCM4x4
2 жыл бұрын
Best way to copy stuff
Not sure welding that bolt was the right move, but nice job replicating the part!
Certainly looked like a 944 in the background.. Nice
I think the new part squeezes a nipple that's on the bottom of the milk bag inside the cooler. I've flipped a lot of those valves in chow halls all over the world. The camera guy is right!
You drew this up and used a plasma table to cut it out? How long did that take? Do you own a manual mill?
@robertnomok9750
Жыл бұрын
20-30 minutes at worst. You take a part, measure it, draw in 2d in your cad programm (3d is just to self check unless you create an assebly from several parts), throw it into cnc programm (settings he set in that programm and merging of lines is supposed to be automatic in nornam apps), download it to your cnc controller thats it. Change your plasma ampertage and cutting materials if needed, press on button and chill. Depending on part and its configuration it might take much longer. 80% of time is spend on measuring and double checking yourself.
@SomeGuyInSandy
Жыл бұрын
@@robertnomok9750 I could have made that part in ten minutes with a manual Bridgeport. CNC isn't really suited to simple one off parts. Now, if I had to make a thousand of them, yeah.
@robertnomok9750
Жыл бұрын
@@SomeGuyInSandy well yes, whole point to make a lot of them after wasting time on preparing cnc programm. When someone asks me to cut them one rectangle I poin them to the nearest saw,
whudabout that Porsche tho?... 😁
@LiftArcStudios
2 жыл бұрын
I'm welding a roll cage into in for a customer, being that it's only my second complete cage, i didnt have the confidence to film the whole thing and act like i know what im talking about haha. I will definitely post pictures to social media though! 1.75x.095 DOM tubing, completely TIG welded. Cheers! - Tay
There is a quicker way to transfer this in an model. Just make a picture of it and then open the picture in light burn. Then you trace the image and correct the dimensions correctly. And then you can cut already.
I Miss the hell out of This old Tony..
My milk valve brings all the boys to the VoD
That piece is used to pinch a rubber tube open and close which milk flows through. .
heres a quicker idea. place the item on graph paper . take a photo of it . scan it into the slicer program . double check every then do a 3d print of it to make shure every work then cut.???
it's a milkpak valve the item just squashes a pipe from the milk bag it doesn't touch the milk
that powered my max sticker in the back though
You are picking the tubing not cutting it.
The 1950's called, they want their caliper back. lol
@LiftArcStudios
5 ай бұрын
but those are the good ones!
You can just take a picture of the pieces, import it on Fusion, calibrate it and you are rdy to go, you can sketch on top of the pic, you don't even need to use the caliper so often, why you weld the bolt and not put a larger bolt with a nut on it?
Thumbs up for “you’re brilliant” sketch.
You can't say presice mesurement and calipers in the same sentence unless its written mitutoyo on the calipers.
Great job on the new part, but as im sure others have said. Welding the bolt was on the stupid side, a longer bolt and locking nut would of been a much better choice.
@chucksmalfus9623
Жыл бұрын
He real problem with welding in that bolt is the cleaning of the parts. They must be removable for FDA inspection so the pieces can be sanitized .
Couldn’t you scan the old part? This would made it easier?
@M21assult
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It was broken. So yes, but way harder. Than taking a few measurements. If he wasn’t explaining this to us, making the CAD file takes 2 minutes.
@Zyczu55
Жыл бұрын
@@M21assult in the time you would measure it and do it in cad, i would have it already done with grinder, drill press and 2 files
I wonder if the $700 was for the entire assembly. Which is still robbery, but less robbery. I deburr using a die grinder with a not so aggressive tool, sometimes rasps or files will leave a burr themselves I find.
Why measure? parts like this i just put on the flatbed scanner, next to a ruler for scale, scan to jpg, then insert jpg into sketch. Trace it out in the sketch, and do a couple spot measurements to verify, but dont have to bother transcribing all the dims, or write out a diagram.
@robertnomok9750
Жыл бұрын
Yes, but I would still measure it with caliber manually to double check. Part like that are have high tolerance but if we talk about something more precise you woould rather check twice.
Tac welded it into place. How will they clean that part? They cant. Shouldn't have been tac welded. and just took a longer bolt and a nut.
A plastic tube pinches