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View Quote lol First post nails it. Awesome deal on the CNC. |
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Awesome OP!
Can I send you a "paperweight" and have some metal removed? |
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So whats the plan? Just screwing around the house or are you really going to throw some serious chips?
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So whats the plan? Just screwing around the house or are you really going to throw some serious chips? View Quote Aluminum robot parts, model parts, guns parts, ect... I have a lot of stuff I want to make with it....primarily hobby stuff. I have access to Solidworks at work can convert models to a format that can be used in Mach 3. I may even use this thing to make parts for a 3d printer in the future. |
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Freaking Jealous.
I /need/ a CNC at home. I really want to scratch build a medium capacity personal UAS. |
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I am very jealous.
You better machine your own 1911, and soon |
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It's too yellow. I'll send the truck over to remove it for you before it hurts your eyes.
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Pretty neat OP. Not so,etching I could use, but in the right hands I'm sure it could be useful.
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Thought DeWalt only built portable tools.
Nice unit. Even more awesome, it's in the guys house. My first 2 mc's were built in the living room of rentals. Didn't loose the damage deposit. |
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What kind of spindle? What are the travels? Steppers/servos? Ball screws or ACME?
-Jim
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Funny that you know GD well enough to put in the disclaimer about the messy house.
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you stole that.
That is an awesome deal, that is going to be fun to use once you learn how to use it. ETa. sounds like you already know how to use it. |
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What kind of spindle? What are the travels? Steppers/servos? Ball screws or ACME? View Quote I believe the motion control motors are a mix of steppers and servos because of the conversion, but I could be wrong. I have a huge box of parts I have to dig through and clean up. It uses a leadscrew, but from what I have been told on these machines they have a pretty good anti backlash setup. I am gonna try and build a table for it this weekend with castors so it can be moved around. |
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Just ordered some heavy duty castors. I am gonna build a small rolling work bench for this thing. That way I can push it around rather then have it sit in one place.
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If it is repeatable to .0005, I'd say it's probably good ball screw. Or at least precision acme with some kind of spring-loaded nut for AB.
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NICE...
I wish I could have a nice CNC set up in my home shop Mill Lathe Wire EDM |
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Quoted: If it is repeatable to .0005, I'd say it's probably good ball screw. Or at least precision acme with some kind of spring-loaded nut for AB. View Quote It always amazes me when I see these threads, people are always so excited....and that's cool. I have a shop full of CNC equipment and all the software and knowledge to make them deal cards, and it all just looks like work to me. I am making the wrong widgets, I'm making them by the 10k's or one progressive die at a time, or one custom machine, but it's not fun stuff. I wonder if Bill Wilson ever gets tired of cranking out 1911's? Good find OP, go make fun shit! |
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If it's actually repeatable to .0005 I'd be impressed. I would think it would have to be a ball screw. It always amazes me when I see these threads, people are always so excited....and that's cool. I have a shop full of CNC equipment and all the software and knowledge to make them deal cards, and it all just looks like work to me. I am making the wrong widgets, I'm making them by the 10k's or one progressive die at a time, or one custom machine, but it's not fun stuff. I wonder if Bill Wilson ever gets tired of cranking out 1911's? Good find OP, go make fun shit! View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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If it is repeatable to .0005, I'd say it's probably good ball screw. Or at least precision acme with some kind of spring-loaded nut for AB. It always amazes me when I see these threads, people are always so excited....and that's cool. I have a shop full of CNC equipment and all the software and knowledge to make them deal cards, and it all just looks like work to me. I am making the wrong widgets, I'm making them by the 10k's or one progressive die at a time, or one custom machine, but it's not fun stuff. I wonder if Bill Wilson ever gets tired of cranking out 1911's? Good find OP, go make fun shit! Question for you: I had an idea after watching a tubalcain video about adding some custom power feed to an Atlas lathe. He's got a craftsman commercial just like mine and the speed range leaves a little to be desired at the low end. For his, he coupled a pulley to the tailstock end of the carriage leadscrew and runs it with the back gears disengaged. But he's just doing it for non-specific slower speed so he can get finer, slower cuts than the lowest that the gear box will do. I had occasion to need a tap with 19 threads per inch (it was for an old 1950s International tractor). But the back gears on my lathe will only do 18 or 20. But what if I did like tubalcain, only instead of powering the leadscrew with a normal AC electric motor, I powered it with a powerful stepper motor? That way, I could turn the leadscrew at virtually any rate I wanted, just like a CNC lathe? Would something like that work? Would I use the threading dial just as I would for any other odd-numbered thread pitch? |
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Load it into an old Econoline van, and take it to shoots and gun shows! View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Just ordered some heavy duty castors. I am gonna build a small rolling work bench for this thing. That way I can push it around rather then have it sit in one place. Load it into an old Econoline van, and take it to shoots and gun shows! You'd make a damn killing... |
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Just ordered some heavy duty castors. I am gonna build a small rolling work bench for this thing. That way I can push it around rather then have it sit in one place. Load it into an old Econoline van, and take it to shoots and gun shows! You'd make a damn killing... Making money is practically illegal in the USA, tho. |
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Quoted: Load it into an old Econoline van, and take it to shoots and gun shows! View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Just ordered some heavy duty castors. I am gonna build a small rolling work bench for this thing. That way I can push it around rather then have it sit in one place. Load it into an old Econoline van, and take it to shoots and gun shows! BTW, nice looking mill OP. If you ever decide to set it up in your living room and want to start fly-cutting aluminum though...? Get some snow shoes |
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Just ordered new cat 5 connectors and plugs to rewire this thing. Hopefully I will get them in a few days so I can get this thing running again.
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Quoted:...snip..
the guy had it in his living room. ...snip... View Quote That is a man who has his priorities straight! |
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That thing looks so cute after the mills I've played with. Sorry, OP.
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Time to fill out some Eform 1s and build yourself a suppressor... or eight.
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Quoted:...snip..
the guy had it in his living room. ...snip... That is a man who has his priorities straight! And no wife. Not at all. It's not so much The Wife, But marrying / living with, The Right Wife. My spouse had no issues with the 2 HD i built in 2nd story apt's. She also assisted in assembly and worked the brakes as we rolled them down the steps. Engine was not installed till we were on ground floor. . OP, get that unit fired up |
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Like really, fix that shit up in a van, take it to Gun shows.
Sell 80% lowers. And then sell Time on the Mill. profit. Buy MG's. |
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