Yes, people cut steel and also many exotic metals with Sherline machines. Of course, very little at a time is the trick

I can see you are well equipped!
POLAND_SPUD wrote:even if there was no link I'd know it's a bot because of female name
well the last time I used it... it actually fucke## up somethingI can assure you that you will still love epoxy. It attaches things without threads, seals stuff, and fixes your mistakes.
Very nice! Is that a compressed air motor, what's the scale?jor2daje wrote:Great minds must think alike jsr, a couple weeks ago I traded my south bend for a sherline lathe/mill and a couple accessories
That's what ultimately convinced me too, he needs to ask for commissionThanks LeMaudit forgot to mention that seeing your mini boy and reading some of the stuff on what I guess is your website definitely swayed me towards sherline.
Yep, no more "I wish I had a lathe to make this" whiningThat's awesome, no more complaining now.
Definitely, and machining things in sections then epoxying them together will allow more complex shapes to be achieved. I also want to look into the possibility of making rough epoxy casts then machining them down, though as the material is thermosoftening it might not work so well... maybe a small cooling fan can be made.I can assure you that you will still love epoxy. It attaches things without threads, seals stuff, and fixes your mistakes.
Not really similar, much larger bore and lower rate of fire. If you want an impressive large bore rapid fire cannon, check out the Russian AK-130:hmmm nice AA gun... iranians are working on something similar too
The Koran specifically forbids high resolutionI guess they could use an HD camera
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
A cooling fan won't work well. You'll want a cooling fluid or lubricant. Even water in a spray bottle lightly misted onto the epoxy will help stop it melting when you try machine it. Some light oil that wont affect the epoxy would be even better.jackssmirkingrevenge wrote: Definitely, and machining things in sections then epoxying them together will allow more complex shapes to be achieved. I also want to look into the possibility of making rough epoxy casts then machining them down, though as the material is thermosoftening it might not work so well... maybe a small cooling fan can be made.
PimpAssasinG wrote:no im strong but you are a fat gay mother sucker that gets raped by black man for fun
I've dragged a new table into the workshop, now to bolt it down.Labtecpower wrote:but... What are you going to do first?
Interesting, something to try eventually.A cooling fan won't work well. You'll want a cooling fluid or lubricant. Even water in a spray bottle lightly misted onto the epoxy will help stop it melting when you try machine it. Some light oil that wont affect the epoxy would be even better.
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life