MadeByMiller
Well-known member
Sheesh
Boy oh boy I'm liking the way that drill press is coming together. Great work.![]()
Sheesh








Sorry to jump in late, but why did you need ABS for this part? It's a vacuum flange of some kind? I use CF-PLA for just about everything and it is very strong, cheap and stable. Your infill percentage and wall thickness look overkill too, that only increases the tendency to warp and is just wasting filament on a part like this. 3 layer walls and 20% cubic infill is stronger than it looks.
I would print in PETG or one of the CF filled PLA materials. I don't use any part cooling on my Prusa and the prints come out pretty good, although there is usually some interior stringing. I'm also using a DIY print-dry setup. I agree with the above statement. I never go above 4 layers and 25% infill (unless I want solid on smaller parts). PET-G for more UV exposure.
I also found concentric floors/roofs to print much better than rectilinear overlapping layers in terms of curl and cosmetics, at the sacrifice of overall part strength.




As for why ABS vs PLA....I don't have as much experience with PLA's resistance to wear/long term durability in this with rapid moving air(carrying debris) moving past it, but feel better about ABS in the application then PLA based on what I've seen for wear in sawdust systems at work. The layers(5) on the first rounds are likely more than needed, but are there for wear resistance to provide greater wall thickness then for strength, from a pure strength standpoint I agree that additional walls here aren't beneficial and with ABS make it worse. The cyclone construction should keep any heavier chunks from impacting this part as the metal center section will protect it, so impact resistance isn't as important here. With this part being heavily "caulked" into place making replacement challenging I didn't want to have it wear thru though with the even best case 6 to 8 hours a week of realistic run time in my hobby environment.....probably not a huge risk.



Nice work Logan. I'm sure it saved a pretty penny doing it yourself!
I just did an oil change on the ol' Cummins. I spent around $80 bucks but that's only because it takes 3 gallons and I use Rotella T6 with Mopar filters. Fuel filters are up next but I still have stock of them on the shelf from a sale a few years ago. I think I have 4 more oil filters and 2 or 3 pairs of fuel filters left.
I didn't get any pictures but I spent the day organizing the storage side of the shop. It was getting a little out of control, stuff sitting everywhere on the floor.
Currently watching kids in the tub because we were outside all day and they are filthy. Then gotta run and pick my Dad up from the airport. Cutting into beer time lol.
Logan, that M12 ratchet is on my list of "needs".
Last 6L80e I did was on our 1500 Suburban that was the wife's DD. Probably another one we should have kept, it was Victory Red with tan interior.
I've gotten in the habit of adding a pan with a drain plug just for the ease of fluid changes...keeps a fair amount of oil off the floor, but not all of it![]()
Looks like some good projects down!
I hear you on the vehicles, pre kids my cars were spotless inside and out every weekend. Now? lucky if I go through and pull the kids trash out every few days.

I have the Milwaukee 2567-20 3/8" ratchet. I have only used it a few times and each time I have used it it has lacked the torque to break anything free. I have to hand break a bolt free and then basically just use the ratchet to remove and replace it faster. Maybe my expectations are to high
I have no idea if my expectations are accurate or not...but they were low from my prior experience so I haven't expected much in terms of torque...but will agree it's no impact. In this case with 80 inch lb torque there was no problem with it breaking them loose, but will agree it should be considered a fast, low angle of movement speed wrench and not anything that's breaking stuff loose.
Looks like Project Farm did a comparision of some of these a year ago...torque was in that low 30 ft lbs which was slightly less then advertised at 35 ft lbs but comparable with others. Torque measurements at 8:40 mark or so
No doubt it's still a handy little tool, but like you said, don't expect impact type performance.



@Boostingaz, I've always viewed pneumatic and electric ratchets as assists in tight places. I have a Milwaukee 1/4" right angle hex drive impact, which also doesn't break stuff free but it's great for getting a torx screw out of a tight spot on a body panel in a wheel well.I have the Milwaukee 2567-20 3/8" ratchet. I have only used it a few times and each time I have used it it has lacked the torque to break anything free. I have to hand break a bolt free and then basically just use the ratchet to remove and replace it faster. Maybe my expectations are to high![]()
@Boostingaz
I once owned a large, heavy chrome electric ratchet 30 or 40 years ago that used a non-removable NiCad battery and turned about two revolutions per minute. I think I used it twice before the battery went south. I kept it for a long time in a prominent place in my tool box to remind me good ideas don't always work out. I also bought a pneumatic sabre saw. If I had more space I would hang some of those tools on a Wall of Shame.
Also put a lot of stuff on there that I hope nobody buys me cause they shouldn't spend that much...like the Primeweld TIG225X...but again I needed them to stop nagging me and better justifies it to my wife/in my head when I buy it in the 6 months after the holidays![]()
In some slow but occassionally happening shop organization....new socket organizer for a Craftsman 1/2" drive deep well impact set that I wanted to get out of the long broken factory packaging:
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Terex or Euclid green is a top 3 shade of green. Some of the coolest old screaming monsters were painted that color.
@ Logan
Good on you for stepping up and being boots on the ground involved in the transition and downsizing. Many times you are correct, families have no idea what to do, or just straight up can't be bothered and don't want to. Hell, the younger generation of beneficiaries don't even know what half the stuff is that Grandpa/Great Grandpa owns, let alone know how to use it.
That's a nice piece of equipment!
The cousins just got a new piece of equipment that requires a phone call to move it between fields. Any guesses? Now the search is on for a trailer so they can haul it themselves.

@Logan
All good guesses. They do have a dozer but it's not that big. It's just used in combo with the skid steer for ditch filling, hint hint. Not sure how much water management you guys used to have to do, big hint!
This is used all over the county for contract work. They do a lot of work for other farmers.
It's putting it's predecessor into semi-retirement.
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Always entertaining to me to watch older people throw fits when younger people don't want china sets. Lots of arguments around their kids get married and don't want to register for it.
My mom uses her china frequently but also puts it all in the dishwasher and even microwaves it with the silver rim. We have a set that was my wife's grandmothers and it's never been used by us.
Now that you mention a white elephant gift, I think I might have to find a massive set to give to my sister as payback for always buying my kids massive toys. She still hasn't realized we've kept all the big stuff in case she had kids...
But it takes a hell of a lot of dirt needing pushed to justify a D8 as a farmer.
That's hell of a tile plow!@loganb
That's the old machine. This is the new one that for the time being requires the phone call to a man with a bigger trailer haha.
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