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garyo1954

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Everything posted by garyo1954

  1. You got that right Ben. The other thing is the blank plate used for backing the dremel too was rubbing against the wood. Big Doh. Worked great to pop rivet the clamps into the screw holes but not so much as far as clearance for cutting. LOL Yes to the round cutter. It should be the best. And yes to the springs. Might even need add a counterweight. thought about routing the cable along the side rail with tie wraps but not sure what the max bend is. You know how it is. Never buy something you can find in your tinker toy box. G
  2. I saw that Nathan. 2"X5/8" or 21/2" x 3/4". The price is scary too. The set costs about the same as a Crazy Crawler. We need diemai to make a stamping machine for this. Looked at some of the ones Ben was talking about also. Some nice work being done. YES! to the cotter pin. And the longer adjustment flap on the blade. The Crazy Crawler has been around since the mid to late 20s. Started out as the Donaly WOW and the Jersey WOW. Both used the same body. The Jersey WOW was reversed and used one treble rear hook due to the New Jersey three point hook law. Heddon acquired the rights in the 40s. G
  3. Ben, you are absolutely right. That is 3/16 rod and 1/4 bit. So that is part of the problem right there! Have to work on a good stylus. Screwdrivers and threaded rod seem to be the easiest solution. Glen, you hit the nail on the head. They may have dug that bit up in Egypt. LOL There has got to be a way to hang the dremel to keep the cable flexible but not in the way. Need to give these some thought. And get back to it. This morning I had VA bloodwork. They have taken at least 100 red, pink, green, orange, and purple vials of my type A+. Next year I want a gold vial! And those urine sample cups keep getting smaller. I put in a request to p*e in the centrifuge next time. That should save everybody a headache. Thanks for the comments! I'll settle down and work these out. G
  4. Nathan, Thanks! Been wondering where to find creeper wings. This one has been on my to do list. Problem is I have more to dos than time to to dos! G
  5. Time to rethink again. Rebuilt the dremel support. But the cable is too stiff IMHO. Might add springs to the arms to prevent the cutter from digging in, but that's a minor problem. It does cut. It does follow a pattern. Will rebuild the round bar using a trim router and add springs. Then we try again. G
  6. Mark Poulson's thread on airbrush cleaning: http://www.tackleunderground.com/community/topic/24702-easy-air-brush-cleaning/ It's the way I've been cleaning mine since he posted it and it works for me. No sink, keep a tub of water on the table. I use an old Country Crock butter tub about half full. It works. G
  7. That's a good setup salty. Guessing you use a router for your cutter. A lure body every 40 seconds comes to about 90 per hour LOL WOW! Just WOW! G
  8. But I'm anxious to see if it works. Removed the Z axis, drew up an idea based on some videos of duplicating carvers and this is what you get. LOL Or this is what I got anyway. Not sure what I like and don't at this point. Wanted to make the frame 12" but using 1 1/2" angle for the sides takes 3" of play from the center. Not good. Just modded it with wood for the time being. Dremel cable is stiff. Night have to rework that idea. Want to get rid of the 1/4" plexiglass too. The trick is to keep as much side to side movement as possible. At least that is what I hope to do. Hope to do a test run today or tomorrow. G
  9. Here's a video of an operator cutting 16 copies with ganged routers. He puts his hand on the trace unit at :21. What software are you running? Mach 3 had an emergency stop. If (or when) I set the little one up, I'll use it. G
  10. On my best day, I can shoot water without much trouble.
  11. Bob L., I agree with you. I'll take the responsibility for the misleading statement that CNCs won't cut rounds. I wasn't considering re-positioning the material or any additional axes. Totally my fault for trying to keep things simple. Red's machine is fun to watch. As Red says, it is a dangerous operation. Imagine the liability of operating a ganged cutter built along that idea would be astronomical. From the standpoint of purely electro-mechanical, I opt for Goody's Roughout with ganged routers where an operator traces a master which in turn cuts a number of copies. G
  12. I'm sort, kinda, maybeing on going back to dipping myself. Nothing seems to last forever, except plastic in a landfill, nuclear waste, and roaches. So unless you are building or buying only collectibles, lures are going to show use and wear. If it lasts longer than the 90 day warranty on my microwave, I'm happy. Sometimes the more I hate something, the better it works. I don't know why this is. Maybe my mind works in reverse and I should gear up to making things I hate. Showed a bunch of lures to a guy yesterday. First thing he did was pick solid black with fluorescent yellow head. I mean, I'm all, "Hey look at the spots and the nice colors on this one!" And he gets excited on one that looks like the reverse of a Mister Twister chartreuse tail worm?!? Guess it does come down to "paint catches fisherman, lures catch fish." G
  13. Lure blank sizes always puzzle me. Is there a chart somewhere showing what the letters and number represent? Just wondering. G
  14. Have to agree with you. Living in a small town does not make it easy to obtain some of the stuff these guys talk about. Lowes has epoxies. Loctite and Gorilla Epoxy are just as good for ballasts. G
  15. Dupli-wars II! You guys already had me debating this again: What have you done? My mind is filled with rebuilding Z axis, and free floating carriages and OH MY! G
  16. Bought the Badger 200 thinking it would make fines lines incredibly simple. It didn't. Don Johnson talks about shooting fine lines here: http://www.howtoairbrush.com/content/airbrushing-fine-lines-detail-254/ Certain tools give confidence, or instill a belief that you can, so you accomplish the level you set out to achieve. G
  17. garyo1954

    DSCN5636

    Apologies. Got to reading. Good point Ben. Never even thought of that. Will have to add a tow point n the lip. This is another of the bodies made last year that was thru wired. Thanks, G
  18. garyo1954

    DSCN5636

    Just came off the dryer.
  19. garyo1954

    DSCN5619

    All the green ones had a lot of seepage under the label. Not sure what that is about. I used the same roll on adhesive on all the labels, Thinking it might be a problem with the color.
  20. garyo1954

    DSCN5612

    The emblem is a bit out of focus here.
  21. garyo1954

    DSCN5611

    Welcome Home gift for the Marine? Thought I'd do some novelty stuff for the heck of it. Still working on the stencil to airbrush the emblem. So I sized and printed labels.
  22. Mark, Had that happen to me a couple of months ago. Same thing. Set a bib. Couple of days later decided to reset it. Everything was gummy inside. I assumed it was my fault. Glad to know I'm not the only one. G
  23. Mike don't know what else to tell you. Now, I'll be more than happy to help your buddy if he wants to make an account here at TU. But the cockamammy crap about "nobody shares unless they can make a buck" is for the birds. I've yet to come to TU when people weren't sharing some experience, idea, or plan. I own a lathe and a CNC. I had to make decisions when I bought these machines. I realize you can't just google "fishing lure cutter" and get ads for manufacturers of fishing lure machines. I learned that back around 2009 before buying my lathe. I don't know of a single machine designed for cutting fishing lures as a first priority unless it is homemade. So that leaves us with lathes, or lathes with duplicators, CNCs, and what it called duplicators/copiers/replicators which are then specifically set up to cut lures. That is what I was saying in my first post which apparently you didn't understand. Like I said, I gave that post a lot of thought, and gave you the best information I could based on the information you provided. I can think of at least a few hundred dollars I wasted listening to Teddy who said Jimmy saw online that this was the part that so-and-so used on their machine. I would have been delighted had you come back with relevant questions about these machines, that I could have answered, or at least pointed you in the proper direction. And I don't know why you didn't. But, Mike, I'm not comfortable sticking my neck out on vague presentations when salespeople are going to ask the same things I asked (if they bother to ask anything). Best thing I can figure is if you didn't like the answer I gave, you aren't going to like any of the recommendations I'd offer. Google "Lathe Duplicators." Best of luck. G
  24. How many gummy bears did you mix in it? G
  25. Doesn't sound right to me putting any chemical in an oven I going to consume baked food out of. Too, you've got chemicals in a hot enclosed space in a larger enclosed space where vapors are collecting. I remember doing some work in the Monsanto plant one summer. The same place they made Agent Orange. One unit out there makes laundry detergent. Or the same stuff as laundry detergent. The story goes everyone who works in that unit is told not to take this stuff home because even if it is laundry detergent, there or other chemicals that need to be added before it is safe. They started that warning after one dummy did take some home and showed up with a bag of rags, zippers and few buttons the next day. Heat and chemicals are never good. Especially in an enclosed area. Even if they don't explode, or catch fire, they can affect your brain, and your breathing. No clue about how much is too much, but I've seen videos of accidents people have had lighting f*rts. That's all I need to know.
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