Indian Mark's 1911 build
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- SELF INTRODUCTION: Hey...I live in South Jersey (the Super Fund State) work as an Operating Engineer local825.Besides bikes I love to fish the surf.I have my current & seemingly endless project a BSA 750 Rocket3, a 72 Honda CB750,79 Kawasaki KZ1000, 48 Simplex, & a 62 Norton Atlas engine
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Re: Indian Mark's 1911 build
Man...that's lookin good.Here's hopin you're shooting Holes in Shit real soon.
Changing the shape of the Earth...1 bucket at a time...IUOE local 825 top of the food chain
- railroad bob
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- SELF INTRODUCTION: Hi Dan, thanks for your time and energy spent on this new board. I hope you will give me a waiver on the email account, I have used gmail so long I don't have a clue what my service provider account is.
I just returned home from a 2 week trip in New Mexico, have a few good pix, can't wait to share my off-highway traveling. Got to put 1400 miles on the scoot.
Best, Bob Davidson - Location: Alaska
Re: Indian Mark's 1911 build
Jeff L wrote:Man...that's lookin good.Here's hopin you're shooting Holes in Shit real soon.
What he said...
Alaska - Land of the Individual and Other Endangered Species
An Armed Society is a Polite Society,...
Politicians Prefer Unarmed Peasants
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An Armed Society is a Polite Society,...
Politicians Prefer Unarmed Peasants
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- General Smart-Ass
- Posts: 231
- Joined: Wed Nov 09, 2011 1:30 pm
- SELF INTRODUCTION: So,...I guess I'm a newb. Can I get my "General Smart-Ass" moniker back, or do I actually have to build something. Like a chopper for example. I am hoping to re-start a build that's been sitting in my shop for a couple years with most of the parts already acquired.
Just wanted to thank Dan and anyone else involved in getting this board up and running.
Dan is a personal friend of mine and one of the finest people I know. I have a world of respect for him, not just for his work here but also for reasons beyond this forum.
Not sure if that's 200 words, but that's my intro and I'm sticking to it.
BTW, I'm Mark. Not Indian, just a fanatic of the motorcycle brand.
Re: Indian Mark's 1911 build
Haha, Thanks guys!
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- General Smart-Ass
- Posts: 231
- Joined: Wed Nov 09, 2011 1:30 pm
- SELF INTRODUCTION: So,...I guess I'm a newb. Can I get my "General Smart-Ass" moniker back, or do I actually have to build something. Like a chopper for example. I am hoping to re-start a build that's been sitting in my shop for a couple years with most of the parts already acquired.
Just wanted to thank Dan and anyone else involved in getting this board up and running.
Dan is a personal friend of mine and one of the finest people I know. I have a world of respect for him, not just for his work here but also for reasons beyond this forum.
Not sure if that's 200 words, but that's my intro and I'm sticking to it.
BTW, I'm Mark. Not Indian, just a fanatic of the motorcycle brand.
Re: Indian Mark's 1911 build
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Last edited by Indian Mark on Mon Apr 07, 2014 2:20 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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- General Smart-Ass
- Posts: 231
- Joined: Wed Nov 09, 2011 1:30 pm
- SELF INTRODUCTION: So,...I guess I'm a newb. Can I get my "General Smart-Ass" moniker back, or do I actually have to build something. Like a chopper for example. I am hoping to re-start a build that's been sitting in my shop for a couple years with most of the parts already acquired.
Just wanted to thank Dan and anyone else involved in getting this board up and running.
Dan is a personal friend of mine and one of the finest people I know. I have a world of respect for him, not just for his work here but also for reasons beyond this forum.
Not sure if that's 200 words, but that's my intro and I'm sticking to it.
BTW, I'm Mark. Not Indian, just a fanatic of the motorcycle brand.
Re: Indian Mark's 1911 build
So I've finally had a chance to do some work on this again. I got the cutting from the top side done including a tricky undercut that required a severely altered cutter. All went well. At the moment it's standing up cutting a deep undercut from the looking down the barrel position. If I don't screw it up ( or even if I do) I'll post a couple pics tomorrow.
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- curt
- Long in the Tooth
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- Location: utica new york
Re: Indian Mark's 1911 build
nice
ever notice when you hit somethin or someone with a hammer you feel instantly better
- rudog
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- SELF INTRODUCTION: Jack of all. Master of none. Worked in a machine shop since I was 8. Desgined embedded computers for a few years. Done lots in between. If there's anything I've learned with certainty, "Anyone who looks like they know what they're doing is putting on an act."
- Location: Texoma
Re: Indian Mark's 1911 build
Interesting workholding. I've got some pcs coming up that I may need to do similar. I like this thread.
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- General Smart-Ass
- Posts: 231
- Joined: Wed Nov 09, 2011 1:30 pm
- SELF INTRODUCTION: So,...I guess I'm a newb. Can I get my "General Smart-Ass" moniker back, or do I actually have to build something. Like a chopper for example. I am hoping to re-start a build that's been sitting in my shop for a couple years with most of the parts already acquired.
Just wanted to thank Dan and anyone else involved in getting this board up and running.
Dan is a personal friend of mine and one of the finest people I know. I have a world of respect for him, not just for his work here but also for reasons beyond this forum.
Not sure if that's 200 words, but that's my intro and I'm sticking to it.
BTW, I'm Mark. Not Indian, just a fanatic of the motorcycle brand.
Re: Indian Mark's 1911 build
On the standing up pic I clamped it against an angle plate and used guage blocks to space the 1x2x3 blocks out to match the piece. If I was ever to do another one (and I'm not) I'd make up better fixtures for holding.rudog wrote:Interesting workholding. I've got some pcs coming up that I may need to do similar. I like this thread.
Thanks Curt!
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- General Smart-Ass
- Posts: 231
- Joined: Wed Nov 09, 2011 1:30 pm
- SELF INTRODUCTION: So,...I guess I'm a newb. Can I get my "General Smart-Ass" moniker back, or do I actually have to build something. Like a chopper for example. I am hoping to re-start a build that's been sitting in my shop for a couple years with most of the parts already acquired.
Just wanted to thank Dan and anyone else involved in getting this board up and running.
Dan is a personal friend of mine and one of the finest people I know. I have a world of respect for him, not just for his work here but also for reasons beyond this forum.
Not sure if that's 200 words, but that's my intro and I'm sticking to it.
BTW, I'm Mark. Not Indian, just a fanatic of the motorcycle brand.
Re: Indian Mark's 1911 build
Couple pics. There's a funky undercut deep in the magazine slot for the trigger bow. Doesn't really show up in the pics.
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- General Smart-Ass
- Posts: 231
- Joined: Wed Nov 09, 2011 1:30 pm
- SELF INTRODUCTION: So,...I guess I'm a newb. Can I get my "General Smart-Ass" moniker back, or do I actually have to build something. Like a chopper for example. I am hoping to re-start a build that's been sitting in my shop for a couple years with most of the parts already acquired.
Just wanted to thank Dan and anyone else involved in getting this board up and running.
Dan is a personal friend of mine and one of the finest people I know. I have a world of respect for him, not just for his work here but also for reasons beyond this forum.
Not sure if that's 200 words, but that's my intro and I'm sticking to it.
BTW, I'm Mark. Not Indian, just a fanatic of the motorcycle brand.
Re: Indian Mark's 1911 build
Planning to start on this end today. It'll take several set ups and edm work. I'll keep ya'll posted as I go.
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- rudog
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- SELF INTRODUCTION: Jack of all. Master of none. Worked in a machine shop since I was 8. Desgined embedded computers for a few years. Done lots in between. If there's anything I've learned with certainty, "Anyone who looks like they know what they're doing is putting on an act."
- Location: Texoma
Re: Indian Mark's 1911 build
It is a sweet treet to see this progress. My father said in job shoping he could always underbid since everyone else included the price of fixturing. He developed a style of workholding using modular clamping. Oddly enough, even when he started doing volume, he would still setup modular workholding. When I got my cnc's, I was in 7th heaven with fixtures for the volume cast parts, but I still built them so I could tear down and repurpose.
Keep it coming!!!
Keep it coming!!!
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- General Smart-Ass
- Posts: 231
- Joined: Wed Nov 09, 2011 1:30 pm
- SELF INTRODUCTION: So,...I guess I'm a newb. Can I get my "General Smart-Ass" moniker back, or do I actually have to build something. Like a chopper for example. I am hoping to re-start a build that's been sitting in my shop for a couple years with most of the parts already acquired.
Just wanted to thank Dan and anyone else involved in getting this board up and running.
Dan is a personal friend of mine and one of the finest people I know. I have a world of respect for him, not just for his work here but also for reasons beyond this forum.
Not sure if that's 200 words, but that's my intro and I'm sticking to it.
BTW, I'm Mark. Not Indian, just a fanatic of the motorcycle brand.
Re: Indian Mark's 1911 build
I'm always fascinated to see what other guys come up with. Sometimes I'm pretty clever, usually I just come up with something that'll work and keep everything held square. I have been using gauge pins thru holes in the part for indicating it into location. That method seems to be working pretty good for keeping everything in proper location. The tolerances on this are pretty tight. I'm not past the point of totally f'ing it up, but so far so good.rudog wrote:It is a sweet treet to see this progress. My father said in job shoping he could always underbid since everyone else included the price of fixturing. He developed a style of workholding using modular clamping. Oddly enough, even when he started doing volume, he would still setup modular workholding. When I got my cnc's, I was in 7th heaven with fixtures for the volume cast parts, but I still built them so I could tear down and repurpose.
Keep it coming!!!
- rudog
- Conventioneer
- Posts: 257
- Joined: Tue Oct 25, 2011 2:03 pm
- SELF INTRODUCTION: Jack of all. Master of none. Worked in a machine shop since I was 8. Desgined embedded computers for a few years. Done lots in between. If there's anything I've learned with certainty, "Anyone who looks like they know what they're doing is putting on an act."
- Location: Texoma
Re: Indian Mark's 1911 build
I admire the work you're putting into this. Holding it is one thing...squareing it, verifying, resetting your datum and checking again so you don't scrap all work to date is a chore that requires patience and "skill".
My father had been building an alum compression arm since the 60's. He used 2 plates to sandwich the part for clamp screws. All manual mills/drills. The fixture was so screwed up that I would have to shake the whole thing to remove the part. It was pure luck to get the part out. Overall machineing was 5 parts/day.
That was the 2nd part I fixtured for my mill. With a 4th axis rotab and a homemade tombstone, I could machine 3 sides then rotate 90*. I made 4 small pallets with a quage pin to locate one end, set screw fence on the other, and 3 small clamps to hold it. Part to part was 6 min.
The job I got now is real tricky since there are no flat edges to clamp onto. I may need to redisign for manufacturing just to hold and indicate it in. I'm designing some storage floorboards that will need to be patented to avoid suite from the other guys with a patent. I'm kinda hyped. The timing of your progress is perfect to amp me up for this.
My father had been building an alum compression arm since the 60's. He used 2 plates to sandwich the part for clamp screws. All manual mills/drills. The fixture was so screwed up that I would have to shake the whole thing to remove the part. It was pure luck to get the part out. Overall machineing was 5 parts/day.
That was the 2nd part I fixtured for my mill. With a 4th axis rotab and a homemade tombstone, I could machine 3 sides then rotate 90*. I made 4 small pallets with a quage pin to locate one end, set screw fence on the other, and 3 small clamps to hold it. Part to part was 6 min.
The job I got now is real tricky since there are no flat edges to clamp onto. I may need to redisign for manufacturing just to hold and indicate it in. I'm designing some storage floorboards that will need to be patented to avoid suite from the other guys with a patent. I'm kinda hyped. The timing of your progress is perfect to amp me up for this.
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- General Smart-Ass
- Posts: 231
- Joined: Wed Nov 09, 2011 1:30 pm
- SELF INTRODUCTION: So,...I guess I'm a newb. Can I get my "General Smart-Ass" moniker back, or do I actually have to build something. Like a chopper for example. I am hoping to re-start a build that's been sitting in my shop for a couple years with most of the parts already acquired.
Just wanted to thank Dan and anyone else involved in getting this board up and running.
Dan is a personal friend of mine and one of the finest people I know. I have a world of respect for him, not just for his work here but also for reasons beyond this forum.
Not sure if that's 200 words, but that's my intro and I'm sticking to it.
BTW, I'm Mark. Not Indian, just a fanatic of the motorcycle brand.
Re: Indian Mark's 1911 build
That's awesome.rudog wrote:I admire the work you're putting into this. Holding it is one thing...squareing it, verifying, resetting your datum and checking again so you don't scrap all work to date is a chore that requires patience and "skill".
My father had been building an alum compression arm since the 60's. He used 2 plates to sandwich the part for clamp screws. All manual mills/drills. The fixture was so screwed up that I would have to shake the whole thing to remove the part. It was pure luck to get the part out. Overall machineing was 5 parts/day.
That was the 2nd part I fixtured for my mill. With a 4th axis rotab and a homemade tombstone, I could machine 3 sides then rotate 90*. I made 4 small pallets with a quage pin to locate one end, set screw fence on the other, and 3 small clamps to hold it. Part to part was 6 min.
The job I got now is real tricky since there are no flat edges to clamp onto. I may need to redisign for manufacturing just to hold and indicate it in. I'm designing some storage floorboards that will need to be patented to avoid suite from the other guys with a patent. I'm kinda hyped. The timing of your progress is perfect to amp me up for this.
- railroad bob
- Contributor
- Posts: 939
- Joined: Fri Nov 04, 2011 10:07 pm
- SELF INTRODUCTION: Hi Dan, thanks for your time and energy spent on this new board. I hope you will give me a waiver on the email account, I have used gmail so long I don't have a clue what my service provider account is.
I just returned home from a 2 week trip in New Mexico, have a few good pix, can't wait to share my off-highway traveling. Got to put 1400 miles on the scoot.
Best, Bob Davidson - Location: Alaska
Re: Indian Mark's 1911 build
Great thread, I'm enjoying seeing how you clamp and fixture. Comments about using pins for indexing are good to hear,
gives me some insight about how the process goes.
Thanks...
gives me some insight about how the process goes.
Thanks...
Alaska - Land of the Individual and Other Endangered Species
An Armed Society is a Polite Society,...
Politicians Prefer Unarmed Peasants
TANSTAAFL
An Armed Society is a Polite Society,...
Politicians Prefer Unarmed Peasants
TANSTAAFL