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  • cnc control
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Basic CNC

raymort
raymort over 9 years ago

Sorry to ask this question, but I have a new CNC MACHINE but I have not a clue how it works so frightened to try and use it without it disintegrating into loads of bits. So I live in Hereford in the UK and would like help from someone who would be prepared to show me. A good supply of brews a good dinner and if one day is not enough then you can stay.

I would be grateful for any help.

 

many thanks

RayMoreton

r.moreton@tesco.net

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  • D_Hersey
    D_Hersey over 9 years ago +1
    IIRC Chicago is the machining capital of the planet, because O'Hare, as an aside. Around here they use machinable wax as a practice material. They superglue parts together when they want to make a part…
  • balearicdynamics
    balearicdynamics over 9 years ago +1
    Hello Raymond, To be honest I am attracted by your offer, but unfortunately I can't stay outside here where I temporary live for at least until the next end of september. But I am reasonably sure that…
  • raymort
    raymort over 9 years ago in reply to michaelkellett +1
    I don't have a pic at the moment but here is the spec. 1 x Refurbished A3 3 Axis Hybrid BALLSCREW Desktop CNC Machine Router Engraving KIT Router Ballscrew Machine Assembled A3 size Machining Area - 500mm…
  • michaelkellett
    0 michaelkellett over 9 years ago in reply to raymort

    Hello Raymond,

     

    I've never used that software so I shall back off in the hope that someone else on E14 has and will be able to help you.

     

    MK

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  • D_Hersey
    0 D_Hersey over 9 years ago

    G codes are 'go codes,' they result in movement, M codes are 'modal codes,' like turn on/off the coolant,  It is neat that you have cutter radius and cutter length compensation as well as changeable coordinates.  I have a buddy who does wicked things with those features, way beyond the obvious.  He was my teacher for my Okuma-Howa certs in lathe and mill.

     

    Always clamp your stuff down really, really well.  Your machine will vibrate.

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  • D_Hersey
    0 D_Hersey over 9 years ago

    Like, IIRC if he is cutting a lacuna for an Allen screw, he just lies to the machine about his tool radius to cut the void for the head.  If he wants a sequence of groves that get smaller and smaller, he uses a for loop to increment his cutter radius compensation.  Not my style, but it works for him quite well.

     

    If you are drilling anything hard/thick, use a technique called 'peck drill.'  This will keep you from getting fouled up by your shavings.

     

    Cutter compensation allows you to use this kind of drill unique to CNC that is sorta like a burin.  It can make different sized holes with the same tool.

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  • Workshopshed
    0 Workshopshed over 9 years ago in reply to D_Hersey

    Don, that's gives me an interesting (if potentially stupid idea), you could use a step drill to avoid tool changes.

     

    F0232557-01.jpg

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  • D_Hersey
    0 D_Hersey over 9 years ago

    The step drill will work well on materials that tend to fray, it makes very clean holes.  Now that I am a little more awake, I recall that there is a kind of tap for CNC that can produce both chiralities of thread.  It relies on the tool to turn it and plunge it at the same time.

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  • michaelkellett
    0 michaelkellett over 9 years ago in reply to D_Hersey

    You mean thread mills but Raymond's mill may not supportit. To use them you need to be able to move the tool in a helical path which requires a fancy controller with helical interpolation  - G codes 02 or 03 but with a Z move in the same code block.

     

     

    Thread Milling Basics

     

    MK

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  • D_Hersey
    0 D_Hersey over 9 years ago

    You're probably right, MK, I could be thread-jacking a little bit.  I own a conventional machine shop, but typically use other people's stuff if I need CNC.  I recently bought a 1KW laser table with a bed almost the size of a half-sheet of plywood with a rotary option.  So, not to be outdone, my buddy gets a 20KW unit with O2 lance and Nitrogen quench for the corners.  Worked well 'til he got lazy with his shut-down sequence the first time out.  Now he is waiting on a new tube!

     

    Like I stated earlier, this neighborhood is simply awash in CNC tools.  My buddy just got a CNC press-brake that predicts the outcomes based on material properties.  He hasn't got it all figured out yet.  When I think CNC tool I am thinking something that had an initial sticker price compatible with that of a McMansion.  Couldn't refrain from mentioning the LR taps, though, just discovered them, had to do a double-take

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  • mcb1
    0 mcb1 over 9 years ago in reply to D_Hersey

    I think I need to come live with you .... I like all these neat tools you and your friend have ...

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  • D_Hersey
    0 D_Hersey over 9 years ago

    Sure!  I ran into a friend at the beach since the last time I posted, gotta say it was a pretty pretty sunset.   Anyway, he informed me that Pumping Station One has voted to get a largish plasma table.  Those things cut steel like my laser table cuts acrylic.  He works for an interesting business, they make large plywood robotic dragons for festivals and chi-chi weddings.  Says it slows up in winter, however.  PS1 nucleates all kinds of small businesses.  Judging from the smile he wears on his face, I infer that working with robotics, fire and hula girls is hella fun.

     

    Another friend of mine got involved with the machining program at a local junior college when they got a huge sum of money from the Obama administration to set up a completely state-of-the-art fabrication program, the goal of which is to represent all modern fabrication techniques.  I am happy to say that practically all of the major manufactures of this stuff are climbing over each other to donate their best machines.  This freed up money for the school to build a huge (cliché warning) state-of-the-art facility off-site.  He is saturated trying to learn all of these exotic machines.  He has even gotten some material donations!

     

    Chicago doesn't disappoint.  I must say that my son ran off with my tools to Portland Oregon, but the weather is nice there now and he has some time off and a nice compound, so we could visit.  He recently acquired a medium-large mill.  He is using my stuff for a laudable cause:  Multnomah County ARES

     

    But she is surrounded by industrial farmland for miles and miles.  Two places we have found for outdoor recreation that are somewhat local are Manistee, Michigan and Carbondale, Il.

     

    There is an disproportional amount of young women here as they are more given to leave the farm for big-city life than their brothers.  There is a large culture here trying to adapt robotics and other technologies to art and social purposes.  Lots of capital, lots of events and festivals.  Fun, Fun.  Winter used to be a lot of fun here, we would go skating and tobogganing, but with global warming it has turned into a rainy miasma, often.

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