OP
lilscorpion
Well-known member
My OCD was kicking in and I couldn't stop the urge to finish the screwdriver drawer so I went out for what I thought would be a couple of hours and ended up having one of those days where whatever I try to do just doesn't work out on the first couple of tries. Part of the problem was that I had to figure out the shape of the Williams T-Handle. It's a 3-dimensional feat of marvel (not really but to make a mold for it sure makes it seem like it).
Of course I started with the easy part of the tray. I cut in the two large normal ratcheting drivers. Then, after tinkering for only a few minutes, I nailed the first t-handle. Since I have a couple of built in features in my conversational programming like Mirror, Repeat, Rotate, etc. it seemed like I was all but done. I just threw in a repeat and just like that, I had only one ratchet to go.
'Cept when I put the final T-Handle on there, I found I should have shifted the medium sized one over about .300". The smaller one won't even fit on the tray now. Had I taken a second, I would have probably been done in 40 minutes.
No biggie, I cut another piece of HDPE and dropped in the mill until I realized - One of the downsides of the way I sometimes do things on the mill is I either don't save the program because I figure I'll never need it again or I'll carelessly delete steps for the same reason and reuse the program. In this case I did the latter. I didn't have the standard ratcheting handles in the program anymore so I had to add them back. Not a biggie, I could just measure the first one and add them back quickly only quickly ended up being less than accurate.
The second attempt got the 3rd T-Handle on the plastic but the standard drivers now had a pocket that's 1/2-inch longer than they needed to be. Normally I could live with that but I also didn't like that the 3rd T-Handle was 1/64" away from the second. It really needed to shift to the left about .200" and then it would look centered. I grew a brain at that moment. Instead of thinking I had it all figured out, I flipped over the second instead of cutting a third piece of material and cut the backside just to see if everything was where I wanted it to be. As it turned out, everything was perfect so I could have gone for it but safe was better than sorry.
With the knowledge that I'd nail it this pass, I cut a new blank and headed over to the mill.
Of course I started with the easy part of the tray. I cut in the two large normal ratcheting drivers. Then, after tinkering for only a few minutes, I nailed the first t-handle. Since I have a couple of built in features in my conversational programming like Mirror, Repeat, Rotate, etc. it seemed like I was all but done. I just threw in a repeat and just like that, I had only one ratchet to go.
'Cept when I put the final T-Handle on there, I found I should have shifted the medium sized one over about .300". The smaller one won't even fit on the tray now. Had I taken a second, I would have probably been done in 40 minutes.
No biggie, I cut another piece of HDPE and dropped in the mill until I realized - One of the downsides of the way I sometimes do things on the mill is I either don't save the program because I figure I'll never need it again or I'll carelessly delete steps for the same reason and reuse the program. In this case I did the latter. I didn't have the standard ratcheting handles in the program anymore so I had to add them back. Not a biggie, I could just measure the first one and add them back quickly only quickly ended up being less than accurate.
The second attempt got the 3rd T-Handle on the plastic but the standard drivers now had a pocket that's 1/2-inch longer than they needed to be. Normally I could live with that but I also didn't like that the 3rd T-Handle was 1/64" away from the second. It really needed to shift to the left about .200" and then it would look centered. I grew a brain at that moment. Instead of thinking I had it all figured out, I flipped over the second instead of cutting a third piece of material and cut the backside just to see if everything was where I wanted it to be. As it turned out, everything was perfect so I could have gone for it but safe was better than sorry.
With the knowledge that I'd nail it this pass, I cut a new blank and headed over to the mill.
