Steve, Hopper, Neil,
He is the Fitting and Turning instructor at our local tech college…
I wasn't aware of his background. He seems to take a very methodical approach to his work…those apprentices will be well served. How does he find the time to do 'two' jobs?
… got some video training as part of his teaching qualification…
That would get him off to a good start. Like most things, filming and editing basics are fairly easy to get a grip of, but to do it well is an order of magnitude higher. Editing is a very underated task but it can take a lot longer than the actual filming. IIRC, there was no Hollywood Oscar for 'editing' for many years untill the Committee saw the light.
…hand graver rest…
That looked very neat, and flexible. Eccentric Engineering do something similar but a bit more elaborate.
… the lapping plate fixture.
Yes, that caught my eye also. I imagine he has shelves of specialist tools he has developed over the years which can quickly solve outlier tasks.
Regards,
Ches
Edit: I also noticed he uses a small vacuum for clearing swarf. I use a Dyson fitted with the short nozzle for periodically sucking up the bulk of the swarf. In pecking order – small photographer's blower bulb, 1" paint brush, Dyson, Pan and Brush. In a workshop (where time is money, and the machinery is usually bigger) a compressed air line is much quicker and possibly safer…..it does spread the swarf, but the end-of-job clean-up gathers all that.
Edited By Ches Green UK on 31/12/2022 10:35:24
Edited By Ches Green UK on 31/12/2022 10:36:56