Bracket Talk
Crankshafts Pakistani style

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September 30, 2021, 03:31 PM
adv ET 266
Crankshafts Pakistani style
Only 12 easy steps lol. Pakistan is obviously a poor country and so different than American production. I think it’s interesting to watch this 4 Star factory machine these V6 or 3 cylinder crankshafts with manual labor.

https://youtu.be/-inYCr-fV3Q

This message has been edited. Last edited by: adv ET 266,



2005 2000lb 4 link dragster
home brew 582 BBC Dart 355
1.058
2.98
4.629@149
6.094
7.310@185

September 30, 2021, 04:17 PM
BG7X77
Love the state of the art coolant application system. Wow.


BG
October 01, 2021, 12:26 AM
Footloose
What was the deal with the hammer off and on? Eek
October 01, 2021, 07:26 AM
TD3550
No arms or other limbs were lost during the making of this video. Quality goes in before the name goes on.. The **** Hammer gets it.
October 01, 2021, 07:56 AM
pauley
that is how our administration wants us to live and work.

ep
October 01, 2021, 08:03 AM
Bucky
quote:
Originally posted by Footloose:
What was the deal with the hammer off and on? Eek


Straightening. They were pretty good at it too. I built heavy driveshafts for a while in college. Some guys were really good at that method of straightening.

Years ago it was thought that India would pass China as the world's manufacturing power. China remains with the stranglehold.


Foxtrot Juliet Bravo
October 01, 2021, 08:29 AM
head gamez
The crate says "made in Pakistan".


Mikey
October 01, 2021, 08:44 AM
CURTIS REED
quote:
Originally posted by Footloose:
What was the deal with the hammer off and on? Eek


SOP to indicate a part in a 4 jaw.

This was a pretty cool video to me since I have been in the production machining world for over 30 years. We used to do many operations that weren't much different than what you were seeing. Lots of fixturing and drill bushings. Since I took over the shop we have moved everything on to CNC machines now. The bad thing is that I'm the only manual machinist left in the shop.

Some of you may not want to hear this but I bet if you went to the Eagle or Scat factory in China the roughing process wouldn't be a whole lot different than what you saw on this video. LOL



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October 01, 2021, 09:12 AM
Bucky
With the chip shortages going on, it makes you wonder if we could not repair cnc machines, would we have enough skilled machinists to actually machine without those automated controls?


Foxtrot Juliet Bravo
October 01, 2021, 09:53 AM
Mike Rietow
quote:
Originally posted by pauley:
that is how our administration wants us to live and work.

ep


There's more of us than them. Wait a minute, no there's not.

You've already admitted you'd bend over for a track official without peep.

You'd make administration officials a sandwich when they're done with ya.

You ain't fooling me none. Smile
October 01, 2021, 09:55 AM
Bob Deniker
The Eagle Factory is nicer than I thought it was.


www.thinkingofnikki.com

October 01, 2021, 10:27 AM
CURTIS REED
quote:
Originally posted by Bucky:
With the chip shortages going on, it makes you wonder if we could not repair cnc machines, would we have enough skilled machinists to actually machine without those automated controls?


Easy answer. NO! One of my best friends owns a machine shop and they do lots of repair/re-build type work of stuff that parts can no longer be bought. Large gearboxes, rollers for metal and or paper manufacturing, etc.... He can't find anywhere near enough machinists to do the work he could have. A great deal of that pretty much has to be done manually.

It's funny you mention chips. I have machines that if the main board goes out I have to get a new control for them because they say they can't get parts for those boards. $10,000 retrofit.



____________________________
2017 and 2018 Osage Casinos Tulsa Raceway Park No-Box Champion

2018 Div4 Goodguys Hammer award winner
October 01, 2021, 01:39 PM
adv ET 266
As the discussion moves to the Erosion of skilled labor, in particular machinist, as opposed to CNC operators, this reminds me of what I saw in Power Plant operations over 30 years as a Controls Engineer.
As that industry moves forward, with advanced automation and controls, the humans skills fade into the sunset. 40 years ago, a skilled operator could recover from a system upset and using manually control. Now Controls are so automated, the operators job in an upset is watch the Control System and try and respond to a flood of alarms. From a process control side this is good as most problems are human error. But of course the operators process skills shrink to minimal hands on ability, just like a modern machinist I’d guess.
Wait till AI is entrenched and the system ***** slaps an operator trying to do something. lol



2005 2000lb 4 link dragster
home brew 582 BBC Dart 355
1.058
2.98
4.629@149
6.094
7.310@185

October 01, 2021, 02:08 PM
CURTIS REED
Mike Rowe has been working to correct the loss of skilled workers for a long time.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c4s-4fK5r0w



____________________________
2017 and 2018 Osage Casinos Tulsa Raceway Park No-Box Champion

2018 Div4 Goodguys Hammer award winner
October 03, 2021, 08:28 AM
Footloose
Them guys are gonna pick there nose and blow black chunks from there lungs for yrs. Frown They work vary hard no denying it.
October 05, 2021, 04:46 PM
Toad1
No matter the building condition, abandoned 100 year old building it looks like. These guys can handle a lathe, a lost art in America is my guess. We have a manual Bridgeport and I enjoy an afternoon making a Powerglide valve a Double dump Pro-Brake. Next up is I want to make a low gear and high gear brake valve body. ?? Need some sketches from my man at TSR first though ;-)

Jok


www.trailertoad.com designed by racers for racers.

October 12, 2021, 08:58 PM
M802138
you should see how a motorcross/atv/motorcycle crank is done.

Crude is a word that comes to mind but theres really no other way to do it.

Precision? LOL.

I did a bunch of them in the hayday. The bigger ones (600cc+ single cyl) required every bit of the 50 ton press to get the big end pin out. Then 50 ton to get the new one in-as square as possible by eyeballing. To true the halves, big copper hammer and whack it. Set it back on the blocks and check it with dial indicators. The funny thing, you could get it to zero, install it (properly), run the engine 5 minutes, pull the crank back out and put it on the stand again to find it .005" off. So after a few hundred cranks pressed, I quit getting them to zero. Spec was .002 on the smaller ones which I tried to stick to but honestly, on my own stuff if they were .020" it was fine. Never once had one come back either.

The ones I hated were multi-cylinder usually 2 strokes. most of them had to be welded or they'd come apart. I learned this from a guy who lived in Florida who was retiring and sold me some of his tooling. The welding might or might not affect how true it runs. If we got lucky they'd only be .005" off. Thankfully I didn't do too many of them as normally when the customer brought a bike in with that kind of engine, and the crank needed work, by the time we saw them the engine was totally expired, generally speaking the owners weren't willing to put the money into them. I threw away (scrapped) at least 4 RZ350's that I can remember, I kept one and sold it for parts for $150. I wish I'd have kept them. Cool bikes.