I got some shop time with Tim (Spuddevans) last night, and I really enjoyed it. I had my first go at milling, and it is great chopping a bit of steel off a length with a hacksaw, squaring it and getting it ready to make into a part. I reckon I learned more in those few hours than from weeks of watching and reading, shows how much better doing a thing actually is.
A couple of things struck me though:
1. Tims workshop was not originally designed with 2 people in mind! Good job we are friends!
2. Its is amazing how much material has to be removed to make a part that is useful. I guess this is less if the original steel is closer to the dimensions of the part, but when you are working with scrap bits which have been scavenged, a lot of metal has to be removed to make things.
3. Flycutting is harder than I thought, getting the tool steel ground correctly is NOT easy, normal end mills may take longer, but they are easier to work with. It does take a bit of practise judging how fast to feed the work through, but Tim was a very patient teacher.
4. Working to tolerances tighter than I've ever had to do is quite challenging. In plumbing and joinery stuff I've done to date, getting it to a mm is good, but yesterday I was measuring and cutting it to 0.01mm, where lapping on W&D with oil actually makes a difference.
I am hooked, it is a shame that there is no hope of me getting any machinery any time soon, but I hope to get more shop time with Tim and making more hot swarf to burn my hands with. Thanks for the help Tim