Oh, nope, nothing. Just inviting machinists to talk shop.what do you need machined?
I always wonder about that metal 3D printing. How do they soften/liquify metal and not ruin what must be a whole host of plastic components? It is an amazing feat of engineering.just had a little machine shop experience way back when, drill press, brake, shear, set up parts for rock crushers and aggregate reducers.
I watch and enjoy the ads for 3D printing of metal parts.
I know, right? You have to learn each part you do, too, and whether it's going to kiss the punch or not. I did enjoy it, miss it somedays. Sometimes it's more exciting than waiting for the program to do all the work.I've run a break press before... you gotta be very careful where you put your hands.
I've run a C&C before too, but somebody else set it up. If you don't get the setup exactly right you can ruin a part, the expensive machine bit, make a lot of noise and send metal bits flying all over the place. Fortunately I wasn't the one who set it up so it wasn't my fault. Maybe I SHOULD have set it up...