• Fuck spez
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    76 months ago

    4 inch thick stainless steel? What in tarnation is that for?

      • @BigDanishGuy
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        36 months ago

        Port holes in armored vehicles, so the soldiers can stick their rifles out of and shoot at people.

    • tim-clark
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      26 months ago

      Adding a lift point. Did 12 of them and the driver was on the toasty side when done

      • Fuck spez
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        16 months ago

        A lift point on what, though?

        • tim-clark
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          16 months ago

          Large pieces of billet material, lift point added for moving between machines on the first 2 operations. Afterwards the item is light enough to pickup. Roughly 323lbs of material removed in the first 2 operations. Then the items went on to 6 months of machining to complete them. Very expensive one off pieces manufactured during R&D. Final products are low number runs of 2-3 items that take 5 months to manufacture. This was a single piece in a larger piece of equipment that I manufactured. Largest tolerance on the item was 0.0005" with true position at 0.0001". Challenging item to handle and machine

          • Fuck spez
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            16 months ago

            What were they parts of?

            • tim-clark
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              16 months ago

              Wafer manufacturing. High heat application for the unit, part described is the main internal platter

    • @BigDanishGuy
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      16 months ago

      What I’m more intrigued by is that OP didn’t say that they use any kind of guide or frame to hold the power drill. Try drilling 10cm by hand straight enough that it makes sense to tap the hole.

      • tim-clark
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        16 months ago

        Free hand, lots of practice. The threaded hole was to add a lift point, didn’t need to be perfectly perpendicular