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Thanks for posting all the time Gregor. I'm about to start my own thread, finally.
Well, things have certainly changed a bit in the last few weeks haven't they?
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I think Nick thought I was a little nuts when I started ordering groceries on Amazon. I wasn't going prepper style crazy but I wanted to make sure I had at least 2 solid months of pizza supplies. Look, I'm happy to be cooped up at home but it will take more than a pandemic to get me to eat frozen pizza!
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But, you are home, practicing social distancing and looking for something light to pass the time. Hopefully you have a shop that you can go and work in. We collectively have a lot of time on our hands to get working on projects right now.
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So I picked up some aluminum stock from Metal Supermarket as the world was stocking up on toilet paper. Also, being on the cautious side, I refilled my Argon bottle so that I have two full ones.
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So I hope you are all well and settled in - I think we will be in this new reality for quite a while. I will try to post things a bit more regularly so as to provide a bit of a diversion. Both for you and I!
Gregor
Thanks for thinking of us Gregor - It always cheers me up to see anything you are working on.
I'm patiently waiting for the Guzzi but I have a horrible feeling that will get sold as-is![]()
You don't have to if you don't want, but I'd love to see more pictures/read more details of how the One Show and flat track race there went. Was really getting into the cliffhanger story of the last minute bike build! No IG account, so missed the story of the show as it was happening.
More details on the power feed now on the table lift please!
Also from following on IG you showed your DRO, what brand model is it? I've always done that math by hand as my DRO is just a simple x and y readout.
Always enjoy your IG stories, they are typically a great way to wind down after a stressful day!
Thanks,
Wes
For all the inspiration I've gotten from you, I'd be willing to support your bike builds in the form of T-shirts or Patreon or something like that.
Just have a T-shirt printed that says "MISSION CREEP" above a picture of a motorcycle in a million pieces, then shut up and take my money.
In all seriousness (not that I'm not serious about a market for Sakurama merch), I absolutely can't wait for the YouTube channel. I've spent hundreds of hours taking breaks at work and watching people half as talented as you do amazing things. Hopefully you are able to keep the projects rolling through to maintain content. And my advice: Don't make the channel singularly focused. Just like with GJ, people have diverse interests, and you never know what rabbit hole viewers might follow you down. As you finish your house, arrange your garage, make pizza, whatever. It's all YouTube gold, Jerry! Gold!
Just a few more thoughts on YouTube. I think a good benchmark for you would be bad obsession Motorsports of project binky fame: https://www.youtube.com/user/badobsessionmsport
These guys are top notch fabrication and entertainment, with fairly good production value. Their work and approach is good enough (like yours) to grow their audience beyond “people who are interested in their specific project” to “people who want to watch whatever they build”. However, there is a realistic cap for people who are interested in excellent fabrication, and that cap is a lot less than people who want to watch some kid unboxing toys. They have about 300k subs, put out 4-6 videos per year, and average about 500k views per video. Average ad sense revenue for this type of channel is about )$2 / 1k views. So, despite being a very successful channel, they are only pulling in less than $10k in ad revenue. The shortfall has to be made up with merchandise, sponsorship, and patreon. I’m sure you are researching this already, but just wanted to throw some numbers out there to quash any “I heard about the guy who made $20 million on YouTube comments”.
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Nice work on the caliper bracket and audio knobs!.
One comment from the peanut gallery, have you considered adding a radius to the back edge of the caliper bracket or some speed holes to break up all the flat Aluminum area?
You could lightly deburr the surface to reduce any mismatches or cutter path's and then place it in a tumble burr. Kind of like the ones they use for polishing rocks. the sell different grits of stones (media) for the finishes. Aluminum comes out very smooth.
I bet a person could make on easy enough.
Hear is a link.
https://www.kramerindustriesonline.com/product-category/vibratory-finishing-systems/
Whoa! Those jobs are awesome! Not sure if you already mentioned it but what amp is it?
It's a strange time. We won't be the same country after this. It's hard to say what it's going to look like on the other side...
Stay safe and well.
Gregor
E12-535iTurbo, I am hoping we see infection rates below our seasonal flue numbers. 2017-2018 flu season infected about 45 Million Americans, with 800 Thousand hospitalized and 63 Thousand deaths. COVID-19 is far deadlier but maybe if we all do our part we can keep the infection rate down, especially since we have the flu happening at the same time.It seems like most will be infected at some point.