Trying to learn… And looking for a CNC Lathe

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Trying to learn… And looking for a CNC Lathe

Home Forums CNC machines, Home builds, Conversions, ELS, automation, software, etc tools Trying to learn… And looking for a CNC Lathe

Viewing 17 posts - 26 through 42 (of 42 total)
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  • #121510
    MICHAEL WILLIAMS
    Participant
      @michaelwilliams41215

      John ,

      Your posting had not appeared when I was writing the above . Nothing in what I said was aimed at you .

      Richard ,

      I have added you to my list of great experts .

      MikeW

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      #121511
      richardandtracy
      Participant
        @richardandtracy

        Yikes!

        Richard

        #121539
        Another JohnS
        Participant
          @anotherjohns

          Very valid points but my reply was aimed at Richard who is interested in making some pens, not space shuttle parts.

          Hmmm – around where I work, Satellite parts are made and the whole things tested; no space shuttle parts made for a while, for what (I hope) is an obvious reason. I won't say anymore about that. Lunchtime conversations can be quite in-depth, as one might imagine. And the machine shops and machinists are pretty good – again, as one might imagine.

          The main problem as I see it is to how best to "dumb-down" the technology so that others can use it. The fact that Richard and others are contemplating CNC means that the "dumbing down" and "making it work for the man on the street" is happening.

          Much like LBSC or Martin Evans made model locomotive building easy for the beginner, we do need beginners guides for CNC – and of course, those more interested in the details can go further.

          Another JohnS

          #121540
          Another JohnS
          Participant
            @anotherjohns
            Posted by Richard Williams 7 on 04/06/2013 11:38:39:
            …Now I want to use CNC to get exactly that sort of curvature, but in a controlled & repeatable manner. Silly really. Sigh.

            Richard – if that's silly, then every tradesperson who tries to excel in their work fits into the same category.

            Keep going – I, too, enjoyed reading the info and links posted.

            Another JohnS.

            #121563
            richardandtracy
            Participant
              @richardandtracy

              John AS,

              I have been surprised at how comprehensive & relatively simple the stuff available for DIY convertors is. When I last seriously looked at CNC machinery I was in my final year of my degree course (1987) & my project was to write a translator between the institution's CAM system output and the Bridgeport cnc mill's input. The concept of the G code language was still far off. The machinery was bespoke & terrifyingly expensive – and students were firmly not allowed to touch any of the machinery because it was worth more than any dozen students! The electronics and processes used were enough to frighten me (a mere 'mechanical' engineer) off for years.

              I have long felt that home workshop technology is about 50 years behind industrial technology, but in the case of CNC machinery, it might be much less. The driving software (Mach3/ CAMBAM/ EMC2) are far from mickey mouse bits of software and have certainly provided me with a considerable degree of re-assurance that I'd be able to get on with what I want to do (make pens) rather than be hand coding each move. Not that hand coding would have stopped me, just made life more difficult and slowed everything down.

              Regards,

              Richard.

              #121566
              John Stevenson 1
              Participant
                @johnstevenson1
                Posted by Richard Williams 7 on 05/06/2013 08:33:09:

                I have long felt that home workshop technology is about 50 years behind industrial technology, but in the case of CNC machinery, it might be much less.

                Regards,

                Richard.

                Far, far less.

                Although I have owned commercial CNC machines for 20 odd years if someone at that time had told me that I could easily afford to have a CNC mill, lathe, laser cutter and 3D printer [ which didn't exist then ] in a little shed they would have been burnt at the stake as heretics.

                This interest in itself has spawned a whole sub industry where for many the process of CNC and relevant process has become their hobby and interest.

                CNC Zone has 311,000 odd members with over 1,233,000 post so far.

                I dare say no other site has this level of traffic ?

                #121579
                richardandtracy
                Participant
                  @richardandtracy

                  I will confess I find CNCZone a little daunting, but it is a resource to be mined on occasion.

                  As a moderator on the Fountain Pen Network I'd hate to have to do the same job on CNCZone, even though the CNC Zone traffic is much lower (FPN has 2.6 million posts, 77000 members and a daily traffic of 35Gbytes – as I write there are 1370 people looking FPN). Just the plethora of forums (325 + about 100 sub fora) is mind boggling, and the chance of missing something relevant is very high.

                  There is a feel, though, from a lot of the posts that they are from professionals in 1-2 person small businesses trying to tap into external expertise as well as hobbyists.

                  I agree that the power & speed of introduction of cnc machinery into hobbyist's workshops is mind boggling. However, I think at the moment those who have it are still ahead of the curve, and it may become more common in the future. It is, at the moment, something out of the ordinary to have cnc. OK, it's also out of the ordinary to have metalworking machinery at home, only two of us out of 60 in the engineering company I work for have any form of metal working equipment at home. (There's nothing quite like crippling your own argument just as you make it, is there? face 4 )

                  Regards,

                  Richard.

                  #125353
                  richardandtracy
                  Participant
                    @richardandtracy

                    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.

                    Engraver, VFD & Control Box

                    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

                    Edited By Richard Williams 7 on 24/07/2013 15:00:55

                    Edited By Richard Williams 7 on 24/07/2013 15:03:37

                    Edited By Richard Williams 7 on 24/07/2013 15:04:49

                    Edited By Richard Williams 7 on 24/07/2013 15:06:11

                    #125745
                    richardandtracy
                    Participant
                      @richardandtracy

                      I have had a fun time in the last week trying to track down a problem.

                      I have been getting spurious Z axis feed. Initially I thought I hadn't tightened the collet properly. I now know I have, and tracked the problem down to the Z axis feeding downwards spuriously. If I slowed the spindle, it got worse. When the spindle was off, no spurious feed. Ho hum. It's noise from the VFD. There is a choke, so the problem will be the unshielded cables.

                      I have done a search on te Web & one suggestion, in a thread where Big Shed contributed, was to replace all the cables with screened professional Microphone Cable, 4 core, with each core being 11 strands of 0.2mm^2 and the braided shielding being tinned 112 strand/ 0.12 mm^2. The suggested supplier was Jaycar, who seem to be Australian.

                      Is there a UK based supplier of an equivalent cable who sells by the metre?

                      I have looked at ArcEurotrade, but their cable is unshielded, so I'd have the same problem. The cable from RS Components & Maplins seem to be 7 strand x 0.2mm^2, so I'm not sure if it'll be up to the job.

                      Can anyone suggest a supplier to try?

                      Regards,

                      Richard

                      #125746
                      Baldric
                      Participant
                        @baldric
                        #125748
                        Anonymous

                          It doesn't necessarily follow that the problem is unshielded cables. I assume that we're talking about a mains powered VFD, with the choke on the mains input? I doubt there would be a choke on the output of the VFD. Look and see if the cables from the VFD to the spindle motor, and to the Z-axis motor (presumably a stepper) run close together. If so separate them and see if it makes any difference. If it does, then the problem may well be airborne interference, as surmised.

                          Personally I wouldn't use microphone cable for either the VFD output or stepper motors. Microphone cable is normally a controlled impedance cable and will not be rated for the voltages or currents involved.

                          For the output of the VFD you would ideally need a shielded cable rated for mains voltage.

                          Regards,

                          Andrew

                          #125750
                          richardandtracy
                          Participant
                            @richardandtracy

                            Andrew,

                            There is a choke on the output of the VFD, not the input. It's positioned about 2" from the VFD where the wires are still separate from the outer insulation.

                            The X, Z and spindle cables run next to each other in a cable chain along with two water pipes. I have not had any trouble with the Y axis which is separated from the cable chain. The X axis has had some trouble, but less than the Z, and it has a shorter run adjacent to the spindle cable.

                            I'll try this evening to unthread the cable from the chain to see if makes a difference.

                             

                            Baldric,

                            Thanks. I'll take a look.

                            Regards,

                            Richard.

                            Edited By Richard Williams 7 on 30/07/2013 16:09:51

                            #125751
                            John Haine
                            Participant
                              @johnhaine32865

                              Zapp Automation sell screened 4 core power cable. I have bought stuff from them and they are a good supplier.

                              I think the "choke" is an in-line filter – a choke on the 3-phase output of a VFD would not work very well! (Some variable DC supplies for commutator spindle motors, such as are fitted to Denford mills, have humungous chokes in series with their outputs but these are smoothing DC not AC.) By the look of your photo, your spindle uses one of the the high-frequency 3-phase induction motors as are supplied from China – water cooled, right?

                              Frankly I doubt that noise coupled from the VFD cable into the stepper cables would directly generate spurious pulses, but it's worth trying screened cable. Many of this kind of problem are caused by earth loops – too many earth connections.

                              #125752
                              richardandtracy
                              Participant
                                @richardandtracy

                                Thanks John. I'll have a look at them too.

                                One thing I would like to get a handle on, though, is why the spurious steps would stop entirely the moment the spindle stopped if it wasn't related to noise. And why the number of steps seemed inversley related to VFD frequency, coming to a maximum just before the point where the VFD switched itself off (at almost maximum speed there was no discernable z axis movement). I continued the program with air cuts to the end, and there wasn't a single jitter from the Z axis motor. Had it been a broken wire, I'd have expected the Z axis to continue moving regardless of whether the spindle was running or not.

                                Regards,

                                Richard

                                #125778
                                John Haine
                                Participant
                                  @johnhaine32865

                                  I'm not saying it isn't noise, but it is perhaps coupled more through earth loops than through "radiation" from unscreened cable. The fact that the speed of spurious steps gets higher as the motor slows down might be because the in-line filter gets less effective at lower frequency out of the the VFD. Why did you mention a broken wire? But I have had very peculiar things happening on my cnc mill when wires have come adrift, with quite the wrong axes moving and so on.

                                  #125779
                                  John Stevenson 1
                                  Participant
                                    @johnstevenson1

                                    Reading a bit about these 6040 routers and having had dealings with a couple let me tell you of known faults.

                                    Firstly the motor wiring to all the stepper motors is crap, best to replace with decent wiring making sure you get good joints at both ends.

                                    There is no need to use shielded cable on the steppers but the VFD and spindle MUST be run in screened cable.

                                    Only earth one end of the screened cable.

                                    The board fitted to the 6040 is a cobined breakout board and 4 drivers all on the same card and it's really built to a price.

                                    There are some web sites that tell you how to modify them to make them more reliable but to be honest get ready to replace this board with seperate stand along drivers for reliability.

                                    They are very good value for the money but do need a bit of care like a lot of this Chinese kit but once done you do get a decent machine.

                                    #125790
                                    richardandtracy
                                    Participant
                                      @richardandtracy

                                      John S,

                                      I must admit that was my take on the machine having done some research & I did go into it with my eyes open. Whether the brain was engaged at the same time is a question I refuse to answer…

                                      I am being very careful to ensure that nothing comes to a crash and stalls any of the motors – that's where I expect the most risk to the BoB. I hope I can get it to last 2 years, if it can, then I think it'll have done its job & I won't be unhappy if it then goes futt. Obviously, I'd prefer it not to.

                                      I am not sure which end of the spindle power cable should be earthed. I would expect it to be the end closest to the spindle, then the end furthest away from the Z axis could be radiating with minimum affect on the Z axis.

                                      John H,

                                      I mentioned broken wires because quite a few people who've had these machines seem to start talking about them after a couple of months! I gather the wires are not very good.

                                      I did try the machine having removed the spindle motor cable from the cable chain, and separated it as far as possible from the motors & other wires. The only noticeable difference was that the low speed interference with the Z Axis was greater than before, causing the Z axis motor to feed at about 30 rpm with the VFD speed set at 25 Hz/1500 rpm.

                                      Regards,

                                      Richard.

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