Sanford Surface Grinder – Wheel Hub Removal Tool – ASMR

Before I mount a grinding wheel to the spindle, I want to be sure I can get it off. I could easily go out and buy one of these, but I would much rather just make it.

Anchorlube: https://amzn.to/3Y8LmLz

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Sanford Surface Grinder – Mounting the motor, fixing the fan

Time to put the motor back on the surface grinder and see if I fixed the fan noise.

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DIY DRO – Making a Bracket to Mount DRO Scales on the K&T 2HL

With the stand offs for the saddle scale finished, next is to make the bracket that the scale will mount to and also where the reader for the knee scale will be mounted. I decided to use .250″ aluminum flat bar for lightness and rigidity.

You can get most of the parts from Stefano.
DR DRO Project: https://www.provvedo.com/

Here’s the display I used: https://amzn.to/3YwYqsD

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Cleaning up a Live Center – Vevor Ultrasonic Cleaner Review

I am constantly using an ultrasonic cleaner to clean small parts of machines or tooling as I disassemble and rebuild them. I also have a project in mind to use one to clean a collection of albums I won at auction for $1.00. When Vevor reached out and asked if I wanted to review a mag drill, I turned them down and instead asked if they would be willing to provide an ultrasonic cleaner instead, and they did!

In this video, I disassemble, clean and reassemble a really nice Argentinian made live center for the South Bend Lathe and give an opinion of the ultrasonic cleaner also.

Vevor Ultrasonic Cleaner: https://s.vevor.com/bfReE0
You can also use discount code VV2324 for a 5% discount on any product.

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DIY DRO – Making stand offs to mount the saddle scales on the K&T 2HL

In my journey to get a working DRO on the K&T 2HL, I have been struggling to find a solution of where to mount the scales. There are NO flat spots on the knee. At all. So I have to come up with a creative solution to mount the scales. I am confident this will work. I’ve never seen anyone do this before, so maybe I’m the first to think about this solution!

Anchorlube: https://amzn.to/3Y8LmLz

Stefano Bertelli: @stefanobertelli2650

You can get most of the parts from Stefano.
DR DRO Project: https://www.provvedo.com/

Here’s the display I used: https://amzn.to/3YwYqsD

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Cost-Effective Solution for Archiving Final Cut Pro Libraries

The Problem

For my YouTube channel, I have been using Final Cut Pro on my Mac to assemble and edit all of my videos. I generally create one library for each video, sometimes I will create multiple videos in one library, but all on the same subject. It often matters as to when I think I will be recording and editing them. I have no hard set rules.

When I am working on these videos, I keep the Final Cut library on a faster Solid State Drive. But when I am finished, I move it to one of two 8TB external Hard Disk Drives as an archive/backup. But these drives are starting to fill up.

What I need is a place to archive these old projects, so I never lose them. If I need them, I probably won’t need them right away. And a way I can do that cheaply. I could just buy another hard drive, but my worry is that they can and do fail. Even if just sitting on a shelf. I’d still need some other kind of backup for my backup.

Commercial Online Cloud Backup

I started looking at a commercially available cloud based solution. The ones I look at have some pretty steep prices, but they seem to be targeted to the user that might need ready access to the files in the archive, or even unattended backup/archiving of files. That’s not what I am looking for.

Amazon Web Services

I am an AWS Solution Architect so I started looking at the cost of storing these files in Amazon’s Simple Storage Service, or S3. There are several different storage tiers with S3. And some of them can be costly.

For example, if I were to upload all 16TB of archived projects I have right now, it would cost well over $350 a month for the standard, ready access storage class. But I don’t need that. I’m only interested in moving the files up that I haven’t looked at for a year or more. And I probably will never need to look at them. But I’d like to be able to, even if I don’t need them right away.

The least expensive S3 storage class is called Glacier Deep Archive. That same 16TB of storage would only be a little more than $15 a month. Which is perfect for me. Even storing 100TB is only around $100 a month, 1/3rd the price of the standard tier S3 tier and 1/6th the price of the more popular online backup solution. I’m not saying those other options aren’t worth it, they are for what they provide, which is a lot more than what I need.

My Solution

So I set off, with the help of AI, to write a script that will scan a directory and upload my Final Cut libraries to Amazon S3 Glacier Deep Archive. I wrote it in BASH to make it portable to other operating systems and for other uses. So far, I have uploaded well over a terabyte of data to S3 and I might be paying $1.00 for the month. It is going to take me a while to upload all of these files, but it sits and does it in a terminal window.

The script scans the directory structure, locates any Final Cut libraries, creates multi-part zip files using 7Zip, then used the AWS S3 API to upload the multiple parts. Once all parts have been uploaded, it’s completed. I still manually verify that the file made it before I delete the local version. If it fails at any point during the upload, I can execute the script again and it will skip all of the parts that have already been uploaded.

I’ve uploaded the script to a public github repository. It is licensed under the Creative Commons NonCommercial License if you want to check it out for yourself. I enjoyed writing this and it’s been nice getting some of that hard drive space back.

2024 Year In Review – How much did I make from YouTube?

In this video, I share some clips from previous videos as well as some statistics about how the channel did in 2024. I even share how much money YouTube paid the channel!

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