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Re: Compressor question

 

Brian, something like this, ?
?


Re: Compressor question

 

Spindle is made by Hiteco, a pretty. common supplier. They have air blast during tool change as well as constant lower volume air for keeping dust out the labyrinth seals. I know that a lot of those style units have adjustment for air flow as well, so you shouldn't have to have huge amounts of CFM. You can probably get by with a smaller compressor and an 80 gallon receiver... that way you have reserve for rapid/quick tool changes.

I've recommended the Eastman units and so far haven't heard any bad, although I did read some of those reviews that said they had issues. Might have been a bad batch of components during covid for all I know.

The scroll compressors are supposed to be good, and run a lot of hours before tips seals need to be replaced. I would not ever recommend a rotary vane.... maintenance nightmares and don't last long unless they are running at 80% plus of full capacity.

If I replace my old piston compressor, an I/R but it's not the slow speed pump.... I would go with a Champion, I like their integral head/cylinder design and they run so slow that the sounds isn't very bothersome. My son found two of them and has set them up in tandem for emergency purposes in case one goes down. He's running 3 CNC machines and numerous air tools for deburring.

Brian Lamb
blamb11@...
lambtoolworks.com


On Monday, August 12, 2024 at 12:42:52 PM MST, Bruce Gordon <bruce@...> wrote:


Brian, as for the numbers I was quoted, I believe I was talking to one of the company owners. The CNC I'm looking at is a Legacy Maverick 4x8, small company out of Utah, . Waiting for a call back now to verify, I can't find any user forum links.


Re: Compressor question

 

Possilby consider a Quincy with a 325 pump.? Operating at around 700 rpm it's not very loud.
Dave Davies

On Mon, Aug 12, 2024 at 2:42?PM Bruce Gordon via <bruce=[email protected]> wrote:
Brian, as for the numbers I was quoted, I believe I was talking to one of the company owners. The CNC I'm looking at is a Legacy Maverick 4x8, small company out of Utah, . Waiting for a call back now to verify, I can't find any user forum links.



--
Dave & Marie Davies

318-219-7868


Re: Compressor question

 

Brian, as for the numbers I was quoted, I believe I was talking to one of the company owners. The CNC I'm looking at is a Legacy Maverick 4x8, small company out of Utah, . Waiting for a call back now to verify, I can't find any user forum links.


Re: Compressor question

 

To be fair, a blown?start capacitor and an intermittent blow off valve I wouldn't blame the compressor for, HOWEVER, I too have some reservations that things made during post-covid times don't always seem to be as good as before, even though that's anecdotal.? It's entirely possible quality of the finished devices is not what it used to be.

But for comparison, you could replace one of these every few years and still be money ahead on a screw for a long time, assuming the screw didn't have any maintenance needs. Unless there are great screws available for <10k that don't need very regular costly maintenance I'm not aware of.

On Mon, Aug 12, 2024 at 2:34?PM Brett Wissel via <Brettwissel=[email protected]> wrote:
The single phase we have on a 220v 40A circuit.My data sheet says 17 FLA.?

The bigger version is 3-phase, which I would have bought but back in the day we had no other 3-phase equipment in service and didn't want to pay for it. Hindsight is 2020....



On Mon, Aug 12, 2024 at 2:16?PM Andy via <andy.raynor08=[email protected]> wrote:
I¡¯m definitely looking at that Eastman. Is that 220v single phase? What¡¯s the draw?

On Mon, Aug 12, 2024 at 3:13?PM Brett Wissel via <Brettwissel=[email protected]> wrote:
Eastman 30/60 going?on years now - 5+, can't remember, never had an issue other than external pressure switch required replacement after a reasonable duration for $20 or so. You can probably search my remarks when the topic has come up in the past. It has consistently output the best quality air for our spray finishing and with Shopsabre?IS408 10hp w/ATC, as well as wide belt sander. We have added air receiver tanks to add surge capacity beyond the 100% duty cycle the machine offers for the wide belt's?excessive?blow-off input - it's a Chicago-style? fitting if that gives any indication. It's been terrific, and quiet, and I'd do it all over again.

If I needed more than what one unit could maintain, I'd put multiple scrolls in parallel for added capacity as needed up to the point a screw made more sense, but that's hard to imagine in a normal small woodshop unless you are sandblasting or running multiple air sanders shift-worker style. Screws need to run and are bad at cycling. Scrolls don't care.

On Mon, Aug 12, 2024 at 1:53?PM Andy via <andy.raynor08=[email protected]> wrote:
My shop Sabre needs 9 @ 100 psi for spindle and ATC. CamMaster is similar. Don¡¯t cheap out on the compressor. I already had a noisy IR 5hp comp when I got the cnc. I¡¯m definitely getting a scroll comp asap because the IR is damn loud.?

On Mon, Aug 12, 2024 at 2:40?PM Brian Lamb via <blamb11=[email protected]> wrote:
I have the Sli-Air with 3 pumps, not 6. It works to run my cnc mill for tool changes and a mist coolant system. If the machine you are looking at has continuous spindle purge to keep dust out of the bearings. it might need a decent amount of air.... but 7cfm at 110 psi sounds a bit extreme. I'd ask other users of the same machine, not the salesman that is just going to blurt out a safe, if over kill amount.

Brian Lamb


On Monday, August 12, 2024 at 11:27:06 AM MST, Bruce Gordon <bruce@...> wrote:


That's just what the rep told me to shop for when I was at IWF last week. My understanding is that it uses air for tool change as well as some cooling of the spindle. I'm guessing that leaves some safety margin. I did lookup some of the older threads to get some ideas. I think someone was recommending sil-air units for quietness, the closest I found that I think has the recommended CFM would be this maybe, ? A bit pricey but might be worth it, the only other thing I need air in the shop for is Mac's clamps that I have on order.
?



--
Brett Wissel
Saint Louis Restoration
(at


314.772.2167
brett@...



--
Brett Wissel
Saint Louis Restoration
1831 S Kingshighway Blvd (at Shaw Blvd)
St Louis, MO 63110

314.772.2167
brett@...



--
Brett Wissel
Saint Louis Restoration
1831 S Kingshighway Blvd (at Shaw Blvd)
St Louis, MO 63110

314.772.2167
brett@...


Re: Compressor question

 

I bought the California Air Tools "California Air Tools CAT-60040CAD Ultra Quiet 60 Gal Compressor ". Currently $1799 from Amazon with delivery. I've been very happy with it from the time I switched it on. Noise level is quite low. It has plenty of air flow for my ATC CNC.


Re: Compressor question

 

The single phase we have on a 220v 40A circuit.My data sheet says 17 FLA.?

The bigger version is 3-phase, which I would have bought but back in the day we had no other 3-phase equipment in service and didn't want to pay for it. Hindsight is 2020....



On Mon, Aug 12, 2024 at 2:16?PM Andy via <andy.raynor08=[email protected]> wrote:
I¡¯m definitely looking at that Eastman. Is that 220v single phase? What¡¯s the draw?

On Mon, Aug 12, 2024 at 3:13?PM Brett Wissel via <Brettwissel=[email protected]> wrote:
Eastman 30/60 going?on years now - 5+, can't remember, never had an issue other than external pressure switch required replacement after a reasonable duration for $20 or so. You can probably search my remarks when the topic has come up in the past. It has consistently output the best quality air for our spray finishing and with Shopsabre?IS408 10hp w/ATC, as well as wide belt sander. We have added air receiver tanks to add surge capacity beyond the 100% duty cycle the machine offers for the wide belt's?excessive?blow-off input - it's a Chicago-style? fitting if that gives any indication. It's been terrific, and quiet, and I'd do it all over again.

If I needed more than what one unit could maintain, I'd put multiple scrolls in parallel for added capacity as needed up to the point a screw made more sense, but that's hard to imagine in a normal small woodshop unless you are sandblasting or running multiple air sanders shift-worker style. Screws need to run and are bad at cycling. Scrolls don't care.

On Mon, Aug 12, 2024 at 1:53?PM Andy via <andy.raynor08=[email protected]> wrote:
My shop Sabre needs 9 @ 100 psi for spindle and ATC. CamMaster is similar. Don¡¯t cheap out on the compressor. I already had a noisy IR 5hp comp when I got the cnc. I¡¯m definitely getting a scroll comp asap because the IR is damn loud.?

On Mon, Aug 12, 2024 at 2:40?PM Brian Lamb via <blamb11=[email protected]> wrote:
I have the Sli-Air with 3 pumps, not 6. It works to run my cnc mill for tool changes and a mist coolant system. If the machine you are looking at has continuous spindle purge to keep dust out of the bearings. it might need a decent amount of air.... but 7cfm at 110 psi sounds a bit extreme. I'd ask other users of the same machine, not the salesman that is just going to blurt out a safe, if over kill amount.

Brian Lamb


On Monday, August 12, 2024 at 11:27:06 AM MST, Bruce Gordon <bruce@...> wrote:


That's just what the rep told me to shop for when I was at IWF last week. My understanding is that it uses air for tool change as well as some cooling of the spindle. I'm guessing that leaves some safety margin. I did lookup some of the older threads to get some ideas. I think someone was recommending sil-air units for quietness, the closest I found that I think has the recommended CFM would be this maybe, ? A bit pricey but might be worth it, the only other thing I need air in the shop for is Mac's clamps that I have on order.
?



--
Brett Wissel
Saint Louis Restoration
(at


314.772.2167
brett@...



--
Brett Wissel
Saint Louis Restoration
1831 S Kingshighway Blvd (at Shaw Blvd)
St Louis, MO 63110

314.772.2167
brett@...


Re: Compressor question

 

Brett your comments on the threads I've read are one of the main reason's I've not totally discounted an Eastwood 30/60 but I keep running across more negative reviews. Of course, people are more likely to post more negative than those that haven't had any issue. I'm just a bit concerned I'll get a few years down the road, 3 year warranty, and it will crap out. Just for an example, I was watching this guy endorsing them, . He had 3 and in the video he's got nothing but good stuff to say, but if you read his pinned comment at the top, he stopped recommending them because 2 of them had problems. I almost want to 'roll the dice' because the specs are perfect for what I want. I might do it anyway.


Re: Compressor question

 

I¡¯m definitely looking at that Eastman. Is that 220v single phase? What¡¯s the draw?

On Mon, Aug 12, 2024 at 3:13?PM Brett Wissel via <Brettwissel=[email protected]> wrote:
Eastman 30/60 going?on years now - 5+, can't remember, never had an issue other than external pressure switch required replacement after a reasonable duration for $20 or so. You can probably search my remarks when the topic has come up in the past. It has consistently output the best quality air for our spray finishing and with Shopsabre?IS408 10hp w/ATC, as well as wide belt sander. We have added air receiver tanks to add surge capacity beyond the 100% duty cycle the machine offers for the wide belt's?excessive?blow-off input - it's a Chicago-style? fitting if that gives any indication. It's been terrific, and quiet, and I'd do it all over again.

If I needed more than what one unit could maintain, I'd put multiple scrolls in parallel for added capacity as needed up to the point a screw made more sense, but that's hard to imagine in a normal small woodshop unless you are sandblasting or running multiple air sanders shift-worker style. Screws need to run and are bad at cycling. Scrolls don't care.

On Mon, Aug 12, 2024 at 1:53?PM Andy via <andy.raynor08=[email protected]> wrote:
My shop Sabre needs 9 @ 100 psi for spindle and ATC. CamMaster is similar. Don¡¯t cheap out on the compressor. I already had a noisy IR 5hp comp when I got the cnc. I¡¯m definitely getting a scroll comp asap because the IR is damn loud.?

On Mon, Aug 12, 2024 at 2:40?PM Brian Lamb via <blamb11=[email protected]> wrote:
I have the Sli-Air with 3 pumps, not 6. It works to run my cnc mill for tool changes and a mist coolant system. If the machine you are looking at has continuous spindle purge to keep dust out of the bearings. it might need a decent amount of air.... but 7cfm at 110 psi sounds a bit extreme. I'd ask other users of the same machine, not the salesman that is just going to blurt out a safe, if over kill amount.

Brian Lamb


On Monday, August 12, 2024 at 11:27:06 AM MST, Bruce Gordon <bruce@...> wrote:


That's just what the rep told me to shop for when I was at IWF last week. My understanding is that it uses air for tool change as well as some cooling of the spindle. I'm guessing that leaves some safety margin. I did lookup some of the older threads to get some ideas. I think someone was recommending sil-air units for quietness, the closest I found that I think has the recommended CFM would be this maybe, ? A bit pricey but might be worth it, the only other thing I need air in the shop for is Mac's clamps that I have on order.
?



--
Brett Wissel
Saint Louis Restoration
(at


314.772.2167
brett@...


Re: Compressor question

 

Eastman 30/60 going?on years now - 5+, can't remember, never had an issue other than external pressure switch required replacement after a reasonable duration for $20 or so. You can probably search my remarks when the topic has come up in the past. It has consistently output the best quality air for our spray finishing and with Shopsabre?IS408 10hp w/ATC, as well as wide belt sander. We have added air receiver tanks to add surge capacity beyond the 100% duty cycle the machine offers for the wide belt's?excessive?blow-off input - it's a Chicago-style? fitting if that gives any indication. It's been terrific, and quiet, and I'd do it all over again.

If I needed more than what one unit could maintain, I'd put multiple scrolls in parallel for added capacity as needed up to the point a screw made more sense, but that's hard to imagine in a normal small woodshop unless you are sandblasting or running multiple air sanders shift-worker style. Screws need to run and are bad at cycling. Scrolls don't care.

On Mon, Aug 12, 2024 at 1:53?PM Andy via <andy.raynor08=[email protected]> wrote:
My shop Sabre needs 9 @ 100 psi for spindle and ATC. CamMaster is similar. Don¡¯t cheap out on the compressor. I already had a noisy IR 5hp comp when I got the cnc. I¡¯m definitely getting a scroll comp asap because the IR is damn loud.?

On Mon, Aug 12, 2024 at 2:40?PM Brian Lamb via <blamb11=[email protected]> wrote:
I have the Sli-Air with 3 pumps, not 6. It works to run my cnc mill for tool changes and a mist coolant system. If the machine you are looking at has continuous spindle purge to keep dust out of the bearings. it might need a decent amount of air.... but 7cfm at 110 psi sounds a bit extreme. I'd ask other users of the same machine, not the salesman that is just going to blurt out a safe, if over kill amount.

Brian Lamb


On Monday, August 12, 2024 at 11:27:06 AM MST, Bruce Gordon <bruce@...> wrote:


That's just what the rep told me to shop for when I was at IWF last week. My understanding is that it uses air for tool change as well as some cooling of the spindle. I'm guessing that leaves some safety margin. I did lookup some of the older threads to get some ideas. I think someone was recommending sil-air units for quietness, the closest I found that I think has the recommended CFM would be this maybe, ? A bit pricey but might be worth it, the only other thing I need air in the shop for is Mac's clamps that I have on order.
?



--
Brett Wissel
Saint Louis Restoration
1831 S Kingshighway Blvd (at Shaw Blvd)
St Louis, MO 63110

314.772.2167
brett@...


Re: Compressor question

 

My shop Sabre needs 9 @ 100 psi for spindle and ATC. CamMaster is similar. Don¡¯t cheap out on the compressor. I already had a noisy IR 5hp comp when I got the cnc. I¡¯m definitely getting a scroll comp asap because the IR is damn loud.?

On Mon, Aug 12, 2024 at 2:40?PM Brian Lamb via <blamb11=[email protected]> wrote:
I have the Sli-Air with 3 pumps, not 6. It works to run my cnc mill for tool changes and a mist coolant system. If the machine you are looking at has continuous spindle purge to keep dust out of the bearings. it might need a decent amount of air.... but 7cfm at 110 psi sounds a bit extreme. I'd ask other users of the same machine, not the salesman that is just going to blurt out a safe, if over kill amount.

Brian Lamb


On Monday, August 12, 2024 at 11:27:06 AM MST, Bruce Gordon <bruce@...> wrote:


That's just what the rep told me to shop for when I was at IWF last week. My understanding is that it uses air for tool change as well as some cooling of the spindle. I'm guessing that leaves some safety margin. I did lookup some of the older threads to get some ideas. I think someone was recommending sil-air units for quietness, the closest I found that I think has the recommended CFM would be this maybe, ? A bit pricey but might be worth it, the only other thing I need air in the shop for is Mac's clamps that I have on order.
?


Re: Compressor question

 

I have the Sli-Air with 3 pumps, not 6. It works to run my cnc mill for tool changes and a mist coolant system. If the machine you are looking at has continuous spindle purge to keep dust out of the bearings. it might need a decent amount of air.... but 7cfm at 110 psi sounds a bit extreme. I'd ask other users of the same machine, not the salesman that is just going to blurt out a safe, if over kill amount.

Brian Lamb
blamb11@...
lambtoolworks.com


On Monday, August 12, 2024 at 11:27:06 AM MST, Bruce Gordon <bruce@...> wrote:


That's just what the rep told me to shop for when I was at IWF last week. My understanding is that it uses air for tool change as well as some cooling of the spindle. I'm guessing that leaves some safety margin. I did lookup some of the older threads to get some ideas. I think someone was recommending sil-air units for quietness, the closest I found that I think has the recommended CFM would be this maybe, ? A bit pricey but might be worth it, the only other thing I need air in the shop for is Mac's clamps that I have on order.
?


Re: Compressor question

 

That's just what the rep told me to shop for when I was at IWF last week. My understanding is that it uses air for tool change as well as some cooling of the spindle. I'm guessing that leaves some safety margin. I did lookup some of the older threads to get some ideas. I think someone was recommending sil-air units for quietness, the closest I found that I think has the recommended CFM would be this maybe, ? A bit pricey but might be worth it, the only other thing I need air in the shop for is Mac's clamps that I have on order.
?


Re: Compressor question

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

7 CFM?? That seems like a lot for a CNC.? What does it need that much air for?

FYI, there are a series of previous threads on compressors that might be worth reviewing:

/g/felderownersgroup/topic/90063767#msg122543

/g/felderownersgroup/topic/75612619#msg126387

On 8/12/2024 10:11 AM, Bruce Gordon via groups.io wrote:
I'm about to order a 4 x 8 CNC that requires 7 CFM at 110 psi and I'm shopping for a compressor. The compressor is going to live in the shop so I'd like to find something fairly quiet, not sure if it's going to make much difference with the CNC and dust collection running but the quieter the better. I came across this oil less scroll compressor, Would it make any sense to get that with a basic VFD for my needs? I was looking at the Eastwood QST 30/60 but I'm concerned about the issues people have reported and the overall longevity of it. I'm assuming oil less scroll compressors don't have the same problems as screw compressors when it comes to not running them near full capacity.
?
Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
?
Thanks,
Bruce Gordon
--
Michael Garrison Stuber


Compressor question

 

I'm about to order a 4 x 8 CNC that requires 7 CFM at 110 psi and I'm shopping for a compressor. The compressor is going to live in the shop so I'd like to find something fairly quiet, not sure if it's going to make much difference with the CNC and dust collection running but the quieter the better. I came across this oil less scroll compressor, Would it make any sense to get that with a basic VFD for my needs? I was looking at the Eastwood QST 30/60 but I'm concerned about the issues people have reported and the overall longevity of it. I'm assuming oil less scroll compressors don't have the same problems as screw compressors when it comes to not running them near full capacity.
?
Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
?
Thanks,
Bruce Gordon


Re: SCM FS 41ES/52ES

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

I have the first wheel of Comatic (DS300) contacting wood 2¡± past the ?beginning of the outfeed. IIRC, the recommendation was 50-60mm.

Joe¡¯s pic also shows extension table with leg on the outfeed. This is the way to go with long heavy stock. Although I have surfaced 14¡¯ ling 4x8 beams successfully on Dual 51 with infeed and out feed ext tables (w/o legs) these tables sag under weight. I use a roller support behind the cantilever extension table because I don¡¯t want to rely on the PF to keep the material from lifting above the outfeed table.


Imran Malik

On Aug 11, 2024, at 4:59?PM, David Luckensmeyer via groups.io <dhluckens@...> wrote:

?

This thread has morphed into a handy discussion of power feeders on the jointer, and I¡¯m grateful for your replies. Of course I¡¯m also happy for the original SCM upgrade!

?

I think I used to put the feeder really close to the cutter block, actually too close (but not over), and resented the guard¡¯s presence. I¡¯ve not had the guard installed for a LONG time. I think, on reflection and because of the replies here, that I¡¯m going to go dig it out and reattach it to my jointer.

?

Like Joe, I find the feeder does not work for everything. I also have it to one side so I can hand-feed bowed or twisted stock from either end to partially flatten it before sending it through the feeder. And the feeder has diminished value for smaller sections, unless there are 100s of said sections. Loved the pic of the crazy horse holding one end of a long/heavy board. I need to make one.

?

I want to work well, but be safe also, and this thread is a good reminder of doing both. Thanks everyone!

?

Warm regards,

Lucky (David L)

?

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> on behalf of Michael Branning via groups.io <mtbranning@...>
Date: Sunday, 11 August 2024 at 03:43
To: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [FOG] SCM FS 41ES/52ES


I own a Powermatic 20¡± Helical Head Planer - (209HH) - can anyone tell me where I can find rubber rollers to convert it? Do you simply remove the bed rollers? Feel free to educate me of my ignorance, I won¡¯t take offense¡­ advice on this path pros/cons welcomed.

Regards,
Michael Branning
> On Aug 10, 2024, at 10:01
?AM, Joe Calhoon via groups.io <joecalhoon@...> wrote:
>
> I like rubber feed rolls on my planer and no bed rolls. The material comes out cleaner, bed rollers get chips caught in them sometimes and leave marks. With rubber rolls you can take .1mm off without leaving marks. A good setup for the Craftsman type shop. No doubt for production steel rollers and bed rolls are the way to go. The rubber feeds do wear out with time. On my second set in 20 years and ready for another set.
>





Re: KF700SP - Spindle Moulder Training

 

AMS in the UK offers training in the UK at many different levels.
?
?
B


Re: KF700SP - Spindle Moulder Training

 

?
These videos are for specific tasks, but I think they are very well done and I found them very useful. ?
?
Of course, if you are willing to travel internationally, there is always the Alpine workshop for hands on training. ?I personally do not see why the distance has to be a deal breaker. ?


Re: SCM FS 41ES/52ES

 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

This thread has morphed into a handy discussion of power feeders on the jointer, and I¡¯m grateful for your replies. Of course I¡¯m also happy for the original SCM upgrade!

?

I think I used to put the feeder really close to the cutter block, actually too close (but not over), and resented the guard¡¯s presence. I¡¯ve not had the guard installed for a LONG time. I think, on reflection and because of the replies here, that I¡¯m going to go dig it out and reattach it to my jointer.

?

Like Joe, I find the feeder does not work for everything. I also have it to one side so I can hand-feed bowed or twisted stock from either end to partially flatten it before sending it through the feeder. And the feeder has diminished value for smaller sections, unless there are 100s of said sections. Loved the pic of the crazy horse holding one end of a long/heavy board. I need to make one.

?

I want to work well, but be safe also, and this thread is a good reminder of doing both. Thanks everyone!

?

Warm regards,

Lucky (David L)

?

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> on behalf of Michael Branning via groups.io <mtbranning@...>
Date: Sunday, 11 August 2024 at 03:43
To: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [FOG] SCM FS 41ES/52ES


I own a Powermatic 20¡± Helical Head Planer - (209HH) - can anyone tell me where I can find rubber rollers to convert it? Do you simply remove the bed rollers? Feel free to educate me of my ignorance, I won¡¯t take offense¡­ advice on this path pros/cons welcomed.

Regards,
Michael Branning
> On Aug 10, 2024, at 10:01
?AM, Joe Calhoon via groups.io <joecalhoon@...> wrote:
>
> I like rubber feed rolls on my planer and no bed rolls. The material comes out cleaner, bed rollers get chips caught in them sometimes and leave marks. With rubber rolls you can take .1mm off without leaving marks. A good setup for the Craftsman type shop. No doubt for production steel rollers and bed rolls are the way to go. The rubber feeds do wear out with time. On my second set in 20 years and ready for another set.
>





Re: Looking for a Clean Combination Machine

 

Robert,
?
While I was combo shopping, I took a look at Brian¡¯s BF631 (the Michigan machine). Although I ended up going with a new SCM combo instead, Brian¡¯s machine is very clean. Obviously well cared for and includes some important (to me) accessories like the mortiser and the router spindle. Had I not enhanced my requirements to be able to rip a full sheet of plywood, I likely would have purchased his.?