Metalworking: Doing It Better
By Tom Lipton
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About this ebook
This collection of priceless tips, tricks, skills, and experiences from a veteran of the trade is presented in a way that captures the readers’ attention and engages them in the process of furthering their skills. It includes shop-tested descriptions and illustrations of creative and unique techniques and observations from four decades in the metalworking trades. Perfect for hobbyists and veterans alike, and everyone in between, and for those who work out of either small shops or garages, backyard facilities and basements. It will help any metalworker do better work and do it faster!
Users will learn about: The shop environment. Basic generic skills such as drawing and sketching, accuracy, speed, shop math and trigonometry, and angles. Setting up your shop, including floors, light, heating and cooling, workbenches and tables, air supply, raw material storage and handling, safety equipment, filing, sawing, rigging and lifting. Manual and CNC lathes. Manual and CNC mills. Welding. Flame straightening. Sheet metal, patterns, cones, and tanks and baffles. Sanding, grinding, and abrading.
Features- Covers hundreds of shop-tested techniques. These creative and unique techniques have been shop-tested by the author the old-fashioned way, by repetition and hard work.
- Features hundreds of 4-color photographs. Metalworking —Doing It Betterincludes over 900 4-color images personally photographed by the author to illustrate the methods he describes in the book.
- Fully integrates text and photographs. The guide has been designed so that in virtually every case, the tips and the supporting photographs appear together on the same page.
- Provides wide range of topics. Many of the topics address specific trade skills, working with manual and CNC lathes and mills, as well as welding flame straightening, sheet metal, sanding, grinding, and abrading. Earlier chapters focus on general across-the-board skills, including essential shop math and trigonometry, accuracy, speed, drawing, and sketching.
- Includes extensive guidance for setting up your workshop. Chapter 4 helps you with shop basics — finding the right floor and lights, heating and cooling, workbenches and tables, air supply, storage and handling of raw materials, and much more.
- Written from a folksy, personal perspective. The tips and techniques are presented as an ongoing, informal conversation between the author and the reader.
Tom Lipton
Tom Lipton is a career metalworker. He learned to weld at the tender age of nine and has worked in many different job shops that required machine and sheet metal work, along with welding fabrication skills. His industrial experience encompasses consumer product development, laboratory equipment, medical devices, and custom machinery design. Along the way Tom refined his metalworking skills to a high level. He has been awarded six U.S. patents for unique designs. Tom’s hobbies are, no surprise, mostly metalworking projects. He’s also an avid backpacker and motorcycle rider. Between his wife’s requests for custom machinery and his own inventions, Tom is a busy guy in the shop. Nonetheless, now and then he accepts requests to give private lectures and in-plant demonstrations related to the metalworking field. He lives in the San Francisco Bay area with his wife, who is also a metalworker and a fine artist besides, together with their Australian cattle dog.
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Metalworking - Tom Lipton
Diving In
1.1 Welcome to Doing It Better
I always wanted to write a book. I started more than my fair share actually, but for numerous mostly lame reasons never was able to finish any. Then a few years ago, Metalworking: Sink or Swim came together. I’ve been pleased with the result and am very happy now to be moving forward with other book projects like this one. Whereas my first book was aimed primarily at machinists, welders, and fabricators who work in larger metalworking shops, this book as aimed toward small scale DIY (do it yourself) operations, including those you might find in maker shops and small business.
Career Metalworker is probably the best way to describe me. As I work on this manuscript, half a century has passed under my bridge since I was hatched and I still love metalwork. I may not have loved all the jobs I have done or all the places I have worked, but I have always loved the trade. My parents might have had a small clue I was destined for the trades after my mom gave me the serrated saw off an aluminum foil box, which I put to good use sawing up the arms of her nice dining room chairs.
Maybe a more accurate description of me would be that I love the skilled trades. I can appreciate and be humbled by the violinmaker, the plumber, and the tugboat captain. The act of building something is deeply satisfying and difficult to explain to people outside the trades. Wherever humans pick up tools and work with materials, machines, and a skilled hand, this is where I want to be.
The only caveat is that it must be done well. This appreciation for attention to detail was drummed into my head by some of the old guys, more by osmosis and boot in the rear than any direct action on my part. I always felt that I let them down if I did a bad job or something didn’t quite come out the way they wanted it. Most of the time, however, they didn’t even have to say anything. You knew from the look on their faces or a callused hand sliding over the offending detail that you had somehow failed slightly. The answer for me was to try harder the next time and learn from the experience.
Call me strange, but I love the sight, sounds, and smells of a working shop (see Figure 1-1). Each has its own distinct flavor and heartbeat. The smell of hot metal and cutting oil brings certain memories out in clear relief. Almost any welder can smell a piece of paper burning halfway across the shop in the middle of cutting steel plate with a torch, sniffing the air like a bloodhound looking for the start of a fire. We can tell which shop the boss sent the grinding work out to by the smell of their cutting oil.
These shops we work in get into our blood in more ways than you know. The squeal of a tortured cutting tool, the clank of a pair of vise-grips opening, or the sound of a tack weld breaking is as recognizable as your own name called by your mother in a noisy room.
My first experiences in metal working started with welding. My father taught me how to stick weld when I was nine years old in the dark basement of our house in Berkeley. Like the sailors who get the open ocean into their blood, I can say this is the moment I was infected by a fascination with metalworking or, at least at that point, welding.
In school I took machine shop and welding and never looked back. Somebody I thought was smart told me back then that having two different sets of skills was a valuable asset. They could not have been more right and it has served me well for a long time. The real message was never stop learning about your trade.
Young people just entering the trade are encouraged to stick with it and get through the tough beginning years. Things will still need to be built from metals and the trade needs new talent to advance. Be versatile and don’t shy away from the tough jobs—you will be rewarded with a lifetime of support and hopefully enjoyment of a job well done. These first few years are the character building years where you Pay your Dues
and learn an appreciation for all the aspects of your trade.
Figure 1–1 A small, well set up hobby shop.
1.2 Personal Learning Attitude
Your attitude is one of the key ingredients to success in any field, not just metalworking. Without a positive and persistent attitude, you might as well just go sit in front of the TV and bathe yourself in some nice cable programming. The power of learning and dogged persistence cannot be overstated. My wife and I call it burning rod.
You have to burn rod and put your time in to learn how to weld or become skilled in any trade (see Figure 1-2). In my experience, most people don’t learn on the first rod they burn or the first thread they cut. Winners do what losers are unwilling to do.
We are in the middle of a unique time in history. The ability to share new ideas, information, and old skills will never be better. This critical time balances between the new guard and the old. On one side, we have access to technology for sharing huge amounts of detailed information across thousands of miles and time zones in the blink of an eye. On the other side, we still have access to the people and knowledge whose shoulders we are standing on and who form the foundations of our trades. This combination of factors has not been the case throughout history.
Figure 1–2 Burning rod.
Not that long ago people never traveled more than ten miles from the town where they were born. Ten miles represents the distance you could walk and return home in one day. Anything outside that radius might as well have been imaginary.
Right now in our time, I can move my finger and click two or three times and look at the surface of another planet in our solar system. That to me is truly amazing. Now you can learn or teach all the way around the planet. Borders and time zones have no real meaning now for the learning process. You will either be in this wave of learning, or be left behind and fossilized by it.
This book is about learning new, and advancing current metalworking skills. The trades have been very good to me. Part of the requirement the trade imposes is to pass on knowledge and skills to those willing to learn. We have all stood on the shoulders of the people we have learned from; we owe at least the payment of passing the skills on. Each generation should push the boundaries of their art to the next higher levels. I thank the people I have learned from because without them I would still be trying to figure out how to smelt iron.
Your attitude toward learning and your skills are your protection in modern times. No longer can you rely on having a good job for life working for a stable company. Entire industries are being created or becoming obsolete on a daily basis. Modern skilled tradesmen have to constantly adapt and add skills to their toolkit to keep up with the pace of industry and the modern global electronic economy. Your skills must not stay static. Learn everything you can about everything. Sink, swim, or get the heck out of the way.
The advancement of any craft depends on new experiences and new people with sometimes wild and exaggerated ideas who push the boundaries of current knowledge or accepted practice. This is one of the character traits that built America. As new techniques, ideas, and materials become available, postpone or suspend judgment about them. Look at how they might be applied instead of dismissing them. An open environment where every person and new idea has worth—without concern for criticism or dismissal—is key to success. Truth and accuracy in knowledge and information, and the destruction of myth and misinformation, are required to further the art. Speak the truth; walk a reasonably toleranced line.
It never ceases to amaze me how some people memorize sports trivia, yet more often than not they are the same people who ask how to run a particular machine in the shop they have been walking past for ten years. Instead of investing time and effort to improve themselves, they choose to invest in a big screen TV or an F-350 4X4 turbo diesel to haul groceries. These are some of the same folks who will ask to borrow your tape measure because they don’t have one.
Typically, these same people never have enough of anything. More money, more beer, more toys, more horsepower. They don’t correlate that their skills = value = profit = wages. Notice wages comes after profit. The companies we work for or start and run must be profitable or they cease to exist. As skilled tradesman, we have the responsibility to use our skills to make sure our companies survive and prosper.
Every company is built on people. Machines and materials are commodities that can be bought, sold, and traded any day of the week. Great people are grown, cultivated, protected, and nurtured. In exchange for this, they give back loyalty, dedication, innovation, and hard work.
It’s called a trade for a reason. Don’t misunderstand what I am saying here. I enjoy leisure time as much as the next guy, but I also love my work and would be doing the same thing even if somebody didn’t conveniently pay me to do it.
You cannot learn skilled trades by reading a book, even this book, period. You can get an understanding of the technical issues and the tools involved, but true skill comes from hands-on practice. Anybody can learn some metalworking trivia and talk a good technical line. Just like a good salesman, they can sell themselves like a shiny new car. But, there is nowhere to hide out in the shop when the rubber hits the road. You either go up in smoke or gain traction. An imposter stands out like a cow-pie at a croquet match to someone skilled in the trade.
An interesting example of this comes from a story a friend told me about passing through international customs one time. The customs inspector asked him what kind of work he did, to which he replied that he was a machinist and worked with metal. The next question from the customs inspector was, Let me see your hands
This is pretty telling, that you can judge a person’s validity by looking at their hands (see Figure 1-3). All I can say is ‘good luck’ if you’re an imposter!
Figure 1–3 Meathook hands.
Figure 1–4 Charlie Blessing and Doug Duane, Master Toolmaker and Sheetmetal Man.
Skills are like calluses; the faster you try to go, the easier it is to get a blister. The slow, steady approach builds skills and calluses for a lifetime of learning and rewards. If you think you can read a book or take a pill and miraculously emerge a seasoned veteran, you are mistaken. It takes years to hardwire the necessary muscle memory to perform some of these operations, but once you have it is obvious to others in the trade. It’s the little things that give away the masters—like the way a sheetmetal man flips his wrist to fan a cushion of air between sheets of metal or the little quick head nod of an experienced welder putting their hood down. You can’t learn these things overnight.
I know for myself, and I’m pretty sure it’s the same for most, the way I learned is in little gems and nuggets, during the process of making lots of mistakes. Slowly you gather these small parts together of the really big puzzle. That why old geezers are so darned smart; they have been picking up pieces of the puzzle for a long time. They’ve have had a lot time to gather and polish their nuggets. The trick is to write or pass them down before your memory starts to fail. That’s what I’m trying to do with these nuggets.
Somehow I have been lucky to develop good relationships with several great teachers (see Figures 1-4 and 1-5). I sometimes feel pathetic and puny next to their skills.
The only way I could ever hope to surpass them is if they die and give me a chance to catch up a little. That’s exactly what’s happening.
My old teachers and workmates are dying off. When they die, they become static points. All their amassed skills stop growing and start to dissipate until they disappear forever or, worse, have to be learned again. By writing down and documenting as many as I can remember, I can preserve them for future tradesmen. So do your part for the trade. Take some old geezers under your wing and learn something from them. The baby boomers will be retiring in droves in the next several years, taking all their wonderful hard-earned knowledge with them right out the door. I have tools that were given to me from some of the most influential people I learned from. Every time I pick up one of these tools and use it, a flood of memories comes back along with a deep appreciation and feeling of humility. I can still hear them telling me to be careful and not screw up that nice tool I gave you.
In ten thousand years, modern humans will have forgotten how to read the ancient language this book is written in. But I am willing to bet they will still use metals and need to fabricate them into useful articles. I’m sure the methods will be different. However, I am confident they will have their roots in the things we know now and have learned from the people that went before us.
Figure 1–5 Fred Van Bebber, Master Machinist
1.3 Shop Environment
All work and no play make for a pretty dull shop. Working in a shop with a bunch of other people is somewhat like a marriage. There are good, bad, and really funny days. Just like a family, there are members you get along with and others that you don’t. You spend more waking time at work with your workmates than you do with your mate or immediate family in a given work week. If you can’t have a little fun and get along, it makes for a pretty miserable time. I have purposely included an attempt at humor in some of the descriptions and pictures.
Over the years I have worked in many shops, some large and some small. Overall I prefer the small shop dynamic. The flavor of a shop is created by the people working there. Shops can foster and nurture the learning and skill building attitude or they can undermine and destroy it. It is a choice.
One of the greatest gifts I have been given is the thirst for skill growth. This sounds simple enough, but is much harder to do in practice. If you were to ask anybody if they support skill growth or learning, what do you think they would say? In all likelihood they will agree and say yes.
The only way to truly judge this is by actions. How do you support this by action? Humans learn best by doing things. In particular, things they are interested in. When you are interested in something, the learning is almost effortless.
Have you ever been surprised by how different and incomplete the descriptions of tasks and operations you read about in a book were when you actually tried them out for real? If you were lucky enough to learn some of your craft in an apprenticeship program, then you know what I mean. This balances the need for some theoretical work with a healthy dose of doing things in the shop.
Here are two scenarios to think about.
You’re sitting in a classroom listening to the teacher talk about how long it takes a train leaving Chicago to get to New York if it’s traveling east at 60 mph and another train leaves New York, yada, yada,........ This is what I call linear or structured learning, otherwise known as lacking moisture and inductive of sleep. Almost all schools and academic institutions use this method. They start at the beginning and move in a deliberate step-by-step fashion until they get to the end. Some people thrive in this type of cranial learning environment. Some of these folks end up as engineers or scientists along with business managers. Normally, they are politely called white-collar workers by shop folks. These are the same people who write textbooks and decide how to train and improve the other type of workers. You know, the ones with blue collars and dirty jeans.
Most trades people have learned their skills in a much different way. In fact, some may have gone into the trades because they didn’t like the structured linear method. The main method of learning skilled trades is the direct hands-on method. In my experience, the learning bounces around more and is definitely less linear than in a school environment. Typically whatever you were working on was the subject of the lesson that day. Most of us blue-necks have come to be where we are by this bouncing around method.
1.4 What’s a Journeyman Anyway?
There are many names for the seasoned tradesman. Typically, these professions were dominated by men. The names reflect that fact. It is not intended to be derogatory or sexist—only historically accurate.
Journeyman, Apprentice, Tradesman, Master, Rookie, and Craftsman are all names associated with different skill levels related to the skilled trades. Most trades have no published standards or colorful martial arts belts given out to indicate specifically what it means to be an apprentice or the tenth-degree grand master.
In my mind, it is not the number of years served in a trade but a question of ability. All too often people are given a title just because they have a certain number of years at the bench. I have seen 40-year veterans who stopped learning after their second year and became miserable static points.
I have also seen 4-year apprentices who were literally sponges starved for information, easily exceeding their static counterparts. There lies the problem. How do you measure ability? The definition of ability is different for each trade and cannot be measured merely by the passage of time. The only answer is for other top people in the specific trade to establish and make the ability assessments.
My definition of the top meat eaters of the skilled trade food chain goes like this. It’s the people who have enough skill and experience to draw on in order to take on any problem that comes up in their trade. They may not know exactly how to tackle every job, but they have the experience and acuity to chip away using their skills and experiences to get almost any job done well. Journeyman cavemen can catch, cook, and clean their dinner as well as make a more efficient spear from one of the leg bones—and then go out and do it again and again day in and day out.
The French apprenticeship association (Les Compagnons du Devoir du Tour de France) has a system of skill measurement that seems perfect. It has withstood the test of time, 400 years and counting. After a certain number of years in a particular trade, you must submit a project for your masterwork. No term paper, no book report or thesis, but some real down-and-dirty work. I guess they figure if you hang around for four or five years, you will have at least learned which end of the hammer goes down, but they still want you to prove it.
This project proposal is reviewed by a panel of masters in that trade. If the project is judged difficult enough to demonstrate a high level of skill and competency, then you’re off and running. No special time off or preferred treatment is allowed. The project must be completed along with all the other responsibilities the student has. Gee, it’s kind of like the real world—pressure included.
The completed masterwork is presented and judged by a panel of masters in the particular trade. If it passes scrutiny, the applicant is awarded their master card (pun intended). In the case of the Les Compagnons, it is a cane or staff with the colors of their chosen trade on it. If the project is not deemed difficult enough or will not demonstrate the proper combination of skills, it is rejected. The applicant must then submit a new project or modify the original project. If you don’t complete the project, you get to stay mucking about in the lower levels forever. If students do a lousy job, then I imagine they have to wait to try again.
1.5 Thursday Nights
Fairly early in my career, I was very lucky to work at a shop that supported hands on skill growth and learning in a unique way. I don’t think they realized what they were doing and it certainly was not intended for the purpose of training. I only realized it many years later when I was in the position to implement a similar setup.
The shop allowed us to work on small personal projects using the company facilities and resources (see Figure 1-6).
It sounds pretty dumb and simple, but there is quite a bit here. One of the old guys I worked with at this company was employee number 001. He was the first employee and for many years he was the shop foreman until a serious industrial accident sidelined him. He started the tradition of what I call Thursday nights. This was the special time set aside for guys to work on their own projects. It was only one day a week but it was sanctioned, albeit weakly, by the company. We were allowed to use company equipment and minor materials and build almost whatever we wanted. This special time was set aside so the inevitable G-Jobs,
or personal projects, would not be done on company time. He used to say,
Every man has a little bracket in their life.
Thursday nights had a much more important effect.
What happened was the guys would build things. More important, they built things that they were interested in. They were gaining hands-on experience in the best possible way, by doing. You could build almost anything including things you had never built before. Things the shop foreman would never assign to you because you didn’t have the skill or experience. Obviously there were some limits on what you could put together.
The most extreme example I know of took place over a fourteen-year period when a friend built a 48- foot sailboat. He built the boat in his backyard but almost all the fittings and bits crossed his workbench at one time or another. Another guy built a stainless steel hot tub. The list goes on and on.
Well, I say, if you have the experience, who cares how you came by it? So by doing things and trying things you had never done on Thursday night on your own time, you built up your skills. I look back and the most successful people at that company were the ones that were there every Thursday night chunking away on their own projects and brackets.
Most success, either career or financial, can be traced to proactive learning behavior.
Figure 1–6 Here’s a helve hammer I built on Thursday nights.
Basic Thursday night rules
Figures 1-7, 1-8, and 1-9 show things I’ve built over the years with my Thursday night program just for the love of building things.
This kind of program provides the fastest, most effective way I know to gain important skills. I support this program in the shop I manage, with excellent results.
The program also delivers a super-positive message from the company to the employees, supporting them by trust and positive action. The company invests the materials and machinery along with space and the students invest the time.
The rewards are the students gaining skill and position while the company gains skills, versatility, loyalty, and dedication. What more could you ask for in a fair trade?
Of course, you can have a classroom and books along with written tests. But the true measure is: can they do the work? They passed the written test but they can’t find the start switch
is the all too common result of book learning. How many drivers’ licenses are handed out by just passing the written test and a minimal hands-on demonstration of driving skills? I see the results of that method every day on the highway during the sleepy morning migration and the angry afternoon free for all.
You really have to push the pedals and get dirty to learn this work. You can’t learn skydiving or how to pull nine G’s in a fighter plane without getting off the ground. Another example of this idea shows up clearly in a hiring situation. Suppose you have your choice between two candidates—one who had practical experience and time in the shop doing a particular operation, and another who had taken a class and passed a test but had not been in the shop. Which candidate would you favor?
With all that said let’s get to the good part. Good luck and never stop learning.
The price of failure is only knowledge.
Figure 1–7 Thursday night personal projects.
Figure 1–8 Thursday night pyramid rolls.
Figure 1–9 Thursday night English wheel.
1.6 Format
Finding the best format has been one of the hardest parts of writing this book and has contributed to the failure of previous efforts. How could I present this kind of information to readers in a way that keeps them interested, yet is not so bloated and long winded that the true gems of information become lost.
In the end, I decided to use a format that reinforces the way this kind of information gets into our heads in the first place. Call it a recipe book with each item standing on its own like a good meal and becoming a part of the whole experience. Lots of pictures contribute to a magazine-like format that can be snacked on in little bites any time you feel like opening the book.
Not all the ideas in this book will be of use right away. Your mind and situation have to open and ready to receive. Others bits will be immediately useful whereas some may never be. Heck, I’m pretty sure I will even be accused of copying
ideas. Remember folks, the knowledge belongs to the trade, not to any individual, me included. I will be the first one to admit that I learned many of these things from other people and by keeping my ears open and my mouth shut.
I hope this book will be something to refer back to and even add recipes of your own to become a kind of larger metalworking cookbook. Many things written here are directly related to my own personal experiences (see Figure 1-10). That does not automatically make them right for everybody. Use common sense and decide for yourself what makes the most sense to you.
If you are offended by anything I write here for whatever reason, please try to get a grip on reality; otherwise you will never survive in a real shop. In fact, let me say that anybody who is offended by this material is a prime candidate for a life of torture and harassment in pretty much any metalworking shop. Don’t let the informal style of my writing fool you. Trust me; there are some great nuggets in here. Potentially even one of the suggestions you find here could repay the investment in this book a thousand times over. I admit this material doesn’t read like a Tom Clancy techno-thriller, but if you enjoy your trade, you should find some useful information in here and I almost guarantee at least a chuckle or two.
There are many excellent, well-written books on the basics of these subjects. Some very good ones are listed in the bibliography and recommended reading list. This book is designed intentionally for metalworkers who already have a solid background in the basics, like righty tighty lefty loosey. I make the assumption that the readers already know whether their rear ends have been drilled, punched, bored, or reamed….
Figure 1–10 The author at work on a project.
Brain Food
Not all the skills we need in the metalworking shop involve the hands. Our brains are the most powerful tools we have at our disposal if we will just pry them open a little. Many times we can think our way out of a problem if we give ourselves half a chance. Improvement in thinking starts with admitting you don’t know something.
Have you ever had a serious discussion with someone you admired and thought was extremely intelligent? If you pay attention, when you talk to people like that you will notice that you end up explaining many things in great detail about your areas of expertise to them. Why is that? I think it’s because for years they have been able to admit they don’t understand something, which opened their door to learning. They are able to ask even the most mundane questions because they readily admit they don’t know something.
As soon as you say I don’t understand,
you open the door. You can’t put money inside a locked safe; the door has to be opened and the combination starts with I don’t understand.
2.1 Communication
Whether you work in a large or small metalworking shop, communication is an important tool of the trade. Even if you are an occasional hobbyist, with a backyard shop, communication helps you keep on top of projects. Effective communication is quick, clean, accurate, and—most important—to the point. A good engineering drawing has all these elements. Have you ever noticed that the best drawings have no questions? Effective written and visual communication can be considered a form of language. If you don’t speak the language, you are condemned to get your information from people who do. A stranger in a strange land is not in a friendly place.
A short note or sketch is worth its weight in gold compared to even the most detailed verbal information (Figures 2-1 and 2-2). If you just counted the parts in a box, take a second and leave a note for the next person so they don’t have to re-count (Figure 2-3). Often