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/diy/ - Do It Yourself

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>> No.1912660 [View]
File: 25 KB, 492x428, 1580257200681.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
1912660

>>1911768
sage

>> No.1622341 [View]

>>1622299

You're only supposed to tack things into place while they're on, dingus.


I've been making some drawers for what's turning into a light remodeling of my garage shop. I picked up a pin nailer at a garage sale a long time ago and used that and glue to put them together. After having to pull out some misfires, I'm astounded how much holding power a tiny little 23-gauge wire actually has, even in shitty pine plywood. Don't know how well they'd hold up as the wood age (hence the glue), but still.

As an aside, the one I was using was a really old Omer pin nailer. After I managed to break the driver while trying to figure out why the replacement gaskets I made (the driver kept failing to turn after firing), I got pic related. Works good, so far. Even comes with a replacement driver off the bat. For reference, a replacement Omer driver was triple what I payed for the entire new tool. I mean, it's literally a Harbor Freight tool vs. a known industrial brand, but still, goddamn.

>> No.1621183 [View]

>>1620026

The mill, mini lathe, welding equipment, and CNC router parts (it was a DIY thing, I can't put a proper value on it) alone would push me above 10k. Probably only another 2-3k outside of that stuff.

>> No.1620179 [View]

>>1620150
>The lowest tech solution is to just push it bit by bit with prying bars

Note that this will fuck the floor. Probably not terribly, but there's plenty of scratches in mine from scooting a 2700lb mill into place.

Look into machine skates. They're not too hard to make. I also experimented with air casters, which work VERY well on a smooth floor, but I've got a bunch of dings and cracks in mine that make them obnoxious to use.

>> No.1619070 [View]

>>1619066
you don't make a thread for a single question. you should have asked that question in the stupid questions thread and that's where I've posted the answer

>> No.1618879 [View]

>>1617260

The Orange Goop hand cleaner is actually pretty good, though I'll admit half the reason I'm saying that is because I've never had a proper container of the stuff. Just been using dish soap, which works only meh on black, greasy hands and takes longer to rinse off.

Picked up a couple of the roller stands a few days ago. Should have got some earlier, they're stupid cheap with a coupon and make life way easier when dealing with long/wide stock.

The 2-ton chain hoist, load leveler, and various lifting/ratchet straps haven't killed me yet, so I guess those get a pass.

>>1617264

I got the version with the disc sander attached. Don't know if that one's different, but it was hot garbage and I took it back without ever having used it. Nothing's flat or square, and one of the guards broke as I was putting it on.

>> No.1618156 [View]

>>1618007
>bake the bearing in the oven as hot as it'll go

Do not. Depending on the oven and where exactly the bearing is, it could get hot enough to fuck up the heat treat.~200F/100C is about what you're looking for..

>> No.1617445 [View]

>>1617437
>power density of petroleum

I'm assuming you mean "energy density". Gas doesn't have a power density per-se.

If you actually do mean power density, then lol u dumb.

>> No.1616240 [View]

>>1616185

Unless you're trying to bring down the surface speed because you're using HSS or high-carbon (lol) tooling, no. Chipload is chipload.

>> No.1616119 [View]
File: 655 KB, 460x426, animated joker eating popcorn.gif [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
1616119

>>1615190

>> No.1616116 [View]
File: 40 KB, 512x384, dragonball z hercule.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
1616116

>>1616059

>glass
>anywhere near my precious, precise ways

I mean, you CAN, but that sure as shit isn't something I'd want to regularly do on a machine that wasn't very well protected from the highly-abrasive grit it produces.

>> No.1615683 [View]

>>1615482

CO2 is stored at pressures easily exceeding 800PSI. This alone is far above what a normal compressed air regulator is rated for. Did you not even look at how high that inlet pressure gauge goes?

>> No.1614395 [View]

>>1614359
>Thats gay. How is a cop going to know you have a bike over 1000 watts?

Unless something changed (again) this is no longer a problem. There's no limit on motor power anymore, just speed.

Now, if someone can explain to me why the fuck we needed three separate ebike classifications (two of which are regulated the same) along with that update, that's another story. My bike is within the legal speed limit, but has a throttle instead of pedal assist, so it's technically illegal. What even the hell? Stick with the "don't be the dumbass that ruins it for everyone by being a dumbass" mentality and just do whatever, IMO.

But, if you insist on being by-the-books, there's not much to it. If it has a throttle, it can only go up to 20MPH before the motor stops assisting. If it's only got pedal assist, it can go 28MPH.

>> No.1614317 [View]

>>1614238
>Speed control is identical in many cases

It's not.

Speed control in cheap tools is done simply by modulating power open-loop style. Either through PWM or phase-angle control, the speed controller simply cuts back by a fixed amount on the effective voltage and/or current the motor gets, thereby reducing speed.

Speed control in good tools is done with feedback (closed-loop). There is a simple optical or magnetic encoder connected to the motor, and the controller uses this to determine speed. It can then make the necessary adjustments to the amount of power that the motor gets, giving the tool an almost perfectly constant speed, regardless of load.


Though, in practice, you're not entirely wrong. Not many tools have the latter, at least in my price range. Being a cheap fuck, I think the only tool I have that does this is a corded router. Which is weird, because it's an old, cheap, blue Ryobi, and about the last tool in my shop I would expect to have proper speed control.

>> No.1614302 [View]

>>1614254
>does layout fluid offer scratch protection?

No more than a sharpie does.

>> No.1613055 [View]

>>1612941

Because CO2 doesn't liquefy (with the associated change in density) until at least 800PSI or so at room temperature, and higher when it's hot. Naturally, the can would have to be much bigger, heavier, and more expensive in order to contain that kind of pressure safely.

Hence, various hydrocarbon derivatives that have much more reasonable vapor pressures.

>> No.1612723 [View]

>>1612394

As others have said, there usually needs to be a thickness to the walls.

However, you can probably get it to do what you want (which, I assume, is a single-wall print) just by setting the number of top layers to 0.

>> No.1612721 [View]
File: 4 KB, 126x126, troll line everyone underneath it is trolled.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
1612721

This is bait and you should feel bad.

>> No.1233096 [View]
File: 16 KB, 400x400, cocotte-minute.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
1233096

>>1232733
Get >picrelated.jpg

Make fine water steam that you can refrigerate to get distilled water.

Make also nice hoosh

And definitely make delicious food if used according the manual

>> No.1233092 [View]
File: 1.32 MB, 200x200, 1500247621172.gif [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
1233092

>>1232250
>>1232366
>>1232721
>>1232745
>110V to 220V
...
>picrelated.jpg
mfw OP is such a gaylord everybody here auto-assumed he was murrican.

>> No.1233091 [View]

>>1232299
Nice dubs

>> No.1220634 [View]

I suggest researching keyloggers then. You won't get very far at university by expecting other people to do your work for you...

>> No.1202137 [View]

i think we can all agree all your friends are retard including the marines, pocahontas and fafafeeny

>> No.1137357 [View]

>>1137330
>you know the drill
DeWalt or Makita ?

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