home made epoxy granite cnc - part 11 - enclosure
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- Опубліковано 22 січ 2020
- Here is my approach of building an enclosure.
Because I was quickly getting tired of cleaning the garage of aluminum chips, it was about time to find some kind of solution.
What I was trying to archive a good blend between having an enclosure and still having a good access to all parts of the machine. And I'd like it to have a "light" appearance, not a heavy looking dark massive block.
In the end I came up with this pop up solution.
Was able to realize it with using mostly scrap material. That's also the reason why the acrylic glass looks a bit scratched and everything but new.
But after all I'm more then happy with it.
A little more details on this build in written form you'll find here: dangeroustools.com/category/cnc/
Part 1: • home made epoxy granit...
Part 2: • home made epoxy granit...
Part 3: • home made epoxy granit...
Part 4: • home made epoxy granit...
Part 5: • home made epoxy granit...
Part 6: • home made epoxy granit...
Part 7: • home made epoxy granit...
Part 8: • home made epoxy granit...
Part 9: • home made epoxy granit...
Part 10: • home made epoxy granit... - Наука та технологія
I have been watching from the first episode to the 11th episode of your video, you are a true master, well done. Admiration from China.
This machine looks awesome, but when are we going to see more of it?
Id bet he hardly uses it at all. Seems to be the consensus with people that build machines.
Ich habe den ganzen Werdegang verfolgt und bin echt beeindruckt von Deiner Leistung. jetzt versteht man erst, warum Industriemaschinen so teuer sind, da steckt soviel Wissen und Leistung dahinter, die kann man nicht bezahlen. Hoffentlich zeigst Du auch mal was Du so produzierst, würde mich echt interssieren. Super Job, super Leistung, super Maschine.
Hallo schöne Grüße aus Deutschland, ich habe mir all Deine Videos vom Bau deiner CNC Fräsmaschine angeschaut. Ich war immer wieder begeistert von von Deinen Können und Deinen Fähigkeiten. Du hast super Arbeit geleistet und eine tolle Maschine gebaut, Hut ab.
Посмотрел все 11 частей.
Замечательный станок получился. 👍🏻
Awesome job! I watched all 12 of your videos over the past couple of weeks. Really nice end result, especially considering you didn't have a mill to make any of the parts. A++++
Binged the complete build!
Really nicely done. 👍
Congratulations, you have made a good machine !
This is a very useful 12 episode.
Thank you. For a good idea. Thank you really.
From Thailand.
Super cool machine and you too!
Well done Joerg
very good video..thanks for your time
Nice machine!! Should be nice to see more video of machine in action!!!
I really like your bench vise.
Bought it a few months back. Super happy with this purchase!
I've watched all 12 of your videos, you're so good. It seems that you are very nearsighted. Can you give me the information of stepper motor and control? thank you Wish you all the best.
Happy you liked it. I'm using some Chinese nema 24 closed loop stepper. I don't know any brand name. Payed in Europe about 120 euro each. Guess they are all the same in that price range.
Not bad!
But why did you choose simple bed?
I prefer the upside-down version. Bigger weight, less vibration.
Difficult to do in the freezing cold. 👍👍
RESEPECT from TURKEY!! 🇹🇷 Congratulations..
I need more please!
Bravo!
With the project now almost finished, what would you diferently now? Or would you do everything the same way? Im planning on building a similar machine and this kind of feedback would really help my in my planning ;D thanks ind advance
That's a good question. I think I'd make it all a little bigger, a bit more travel for Z, the z column a bit wider and bolted down on all fours sides in instead of two.
For the z assembly I'd use steel or epoxy granite, and I'm still not sure if it was better to have the x axis upside down or not.
The cabinet for the electronics a bit bigger, and for sure higher up.
It's not very comfy to reach the lowest connections in there.
I think these are the biggest points. Some of them I'll fix in the near future, with some I just gotta live with.
Fantastic machine :O Tell me what blade do you use in the table saw for cutting aluminium..?
It's an aluminum blade. The angle of the teeth is less aggressive compared to a blade for wood and every second tooth is a little longer and chamfered on the sides.
Did you fill the bed with sand near the spindle as planned?
Can you tell me the detailed parts of each part of the whole CNC?
Would You like to share 3D project files?
Great job!
Where did you find the slotted table?
I orders it from some seller on Amazon Germany
Hi! Awesome job, thanks for sharing it on YT! I have question: Have you tried milling steel or stainless steel with this machine? Is it capable of that?
Happy you liked it. Yes, I've tried. Mild steel with a 3mm end mill is working. But it starts to sound bad. I think the HF spindle is not the right choice for steel. With a low rpm spindle it might be a different story, but not with that spindle. It's just not having any torque in lower rpm, and high rpm requires a adequate feed and then the forces are just too high for this little machine.
I'm about to start building a cnc lathe and I was planing to do a very similar thing like you did with the molds. I'm wondering how's your machine holding up? Were there any issues with casting the epoxy granite, or with the flatness 9f the machine bed?
Very interesting series, any chance to get CAD (even unfinished) ?
Did you make a BOM ?
Last question, where did you get your granit base (300x300mm marble) ?
For the cad data, yes, send me an email.
The granit plate I was getting from a local stone mason. Not the most precise, but three quarter of it are good enough for me
@@joergbeigang I sent you a mail
@@furydonnico didn't receive any. Might be blocked from the spam filter on the server side. Can you try again?
@@joergbeigang Sent you another mail directly from google webmail, I guess their servers won't be blocked
What did you put on the tablesaw blade before cutting into the aluminum?
It's tapping grease
AMAZING JOB MEN...KEEP IT UP..
Can we do milling mild steel material using this machine. How much depth of cut it can take in single pass. Please reply
I did some tests with steel, but I can't remember the parameters.
The biggest issue is the spindle. It's not having enough torque on lower rpm. With a 6mm end mill I stalled the spindle.
3 mm end mill worked alright, but hey, bigger parts with a 3 mm mill isn't really feasible.
Hi! I'm planing in the near future to do a similar build like you did, and I would greatly appreciate if I could email you with some questions I have. The questions concern the accuracy of the machine, and how to get everything flat and right so it all perfectly aligns:)
sure, my first name at goob.de
I'm intrigued as to why you chose to use so many lighting modules instead of LED ribbon tape?
Mainly because I was getting them for free.
And if I think about it, the led ribbon tape isn't really fun soldering.
Next build is a DIY horizontal bandsaw so you don't have to use an angle grinder for stock preparation.
First I'll find a bigger place for my shop, but then getting a band saw is a brilliant idea. Can't stand all the black dust when using the angle grinder
Cost detail please
👍
Am i allowed to ask the one question
how persice is it aktually ?
Good question. Had some trouble in the beginning but could sort it out by tightening the screws of the couplings. Then everything was a little too big or small depending on milling on the inside or the outside. That error is corresponding pretty well with the runout I measured at the tools. Maybe buying the cheapest colltes wasn't exactly a clever idea. I can't dig deeper now because I'm trapped in Germany because of the virus issue and it's not looking like I can drive home soon.
But when I'll have some new collets I can give you a number.
@Joerg Beigang, cheap always is expensive, I agree
shouldn't you add a latch or something to hold it up? I think it would be a pain having to hold it while changing a part or something. Otherwise excellent job, really love your mill
It's being held up and down by the gas springs. Holding it up by hand wouldn't be indeed not an ideal solution.
@@joergbeigang oh OK, thought they wouldn't hold on that last shot since you were holding it, very nice then
You should consider putting a nice Telefonapparat into your nice Telefonzelle!
Dude, save for the musik you're DA man!
how is this a solution to not throwing chips all over the place if there isn't a tray for the chips to fall in? lol
especially with coolant, you're just going to end up with a wet floor.. with chips on it
Why no videos of actual cutting wit the router? Did this project turned to be a failure?