Well, I must thank everyone who had a hand in this discussion, it was enlightening and helped me a great deal. I changed my mind completely several times about what to do, but came to a decision in the end. I do acknowledge all advice, though on reflection I didn' follow much – it all aglomerated into a generalised confidence that CNC is not novel or frightening, which was probably the most useful help you could possibly have given. Thanks.
I eventually plumped for a 4 axis chinese 6040 CNC engraver rather than convert a lathe. The price was a bit less than doing the conversion, but that wasn't the main reason for doing so. The biggest reason was that I really am not electronically minded, and if it didn't work first time, I'd be at a loss as to how to cure the problem and would have no idea as to whether the problem was my work, faulty electronics or the programs not talking to each other.
The machine is a moderate sized 600 x 400 mm bed arrangement with an 80mm chuck on the 4th axis. Maximum part height is 117mm under the gantry, which is OK for what I need. I can set the chuck up on part of the bed while leaving much of the bed free for making boxes or thread milling parts that need it.
You will notice there is no PC next to it in the photo – it was taken as I had finished plugging/screwing the bits of the machine together.
The machine can cut aluminium at 100mm/min with a 0.5 deep cut and plastics are also feasible. Timber can go at 5-600 mm/min. The flex is 'adequate' as is the speed; as someone else said, I'm trying to make pens not a Space Shuttle!
As with many Chinese machine tools, the setup process has been an education. Firstly the manual was wrong in several details (not least of which was making the Z axis move in the reverse direction) & didn't mention the 4th axis at all. When I queried the supplier on the number of steps per degree for the A axis, the supplier told me the Mach 3 default (640) was correct. Ho hum, 2 hours later a combination of trial, error & calculation had the correct 177.77777 steps per degree. The bed isn't quite perpendicular to the Z axis and I'll need to fit a few shims under one end of the bed extrusions. However it generally works pretty well.
The learning curve has been .. no, not steep. I'll try & find a more suitable word… Vertical. A cliff. I may soon be at the point where I can get something useful out of it. To begin with I'm going to make a box for the pen, then start on the pen itself. Hopefully I shall get something worthwhile in a month or two – there is so much to learn.
Regards,
Richard
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