Thank you for your academy, I started using Fusion 360 a year ago and thought I had wasted my time when I found that lots of people use solid works and catia or Simens but you do have training with Fusion 360. Thank you very much for your videos
I’m a youth apprentice who is working in a machine shop. My goal is to become a Machinist. This video helps because the shop I work in runs Haas CNC mills and lathes. I’m getting trained how to run them.
You are awsome titan, i feel im learning something from you. But it is a bit hard for me when i am a norwegian guy, but im still learning from you little by little, and i like your videos
Pay special attention to 8:30 when he is setting the Facemill. Manually setting the Facemill or even using a tool setter, it's EXTREMELY important to rotate the cutter and check each insert. What Titan did there should be a lesson. One low insert and you're screwed.
You should watch it again, he even said he did it and showed it in the video. He did a manual set on one insert in the video and cut to the finish but said he rotated it and checked every insert in the tool. I also suspect he checked the tool before he put it in the tool changer as most do with setup procedure.
How is miss this industry. I left it here in Oregon in 1993 because the legislature decided to wipe out our heavy industries and nearly every machine shop was forced to close down.
ipadize use a spring between parallels and they don't move around on you they stay in place and chips don't get between them and the jaws. tho if it's like a huge production they might after time. clean them once in the morning
Amazing what your doing Titan. Your organization and marketing is AWESOME. Do you do this all yourself? What do you use for the marketing and videos that come out so good. Thanks for doing what your doing for kids and heck even us that have been around machining but never got involved with actual machining. I have been in the aerospace, health science and appliance industry and lots of folks always say that this is a dying breed, but you have figured out how to make it relevant and fun again. Good on you. Congrats to all the success you have you deserve it.
Thanks for the tip about not putting the stock on the side of the vice, I had a 3 in by 7 in peace of 4140 steal fly out and break a end mill. by the way love the videos. :)
Nice job, everything ok, but You forgot to measure it, check holes are correct radial and gauge is ok ! :) We dont live in perfect world, where all the tools are perfect, even when they brand new :)
Titan I love watching your videos brother. There's a lot of hate out there on you and haas just keep brushing it off man. I run haas everyday there a great machine for the price and your a great role-model for this field. With your past to be able to do what you do today is the American dream!
Have you ever tried shrink fit tooling for your endmills? You would be amazed at how much harder you can drive tooling with them vs a solid set screw holder.
we use them all the time but the downside is if you break an endmill and fail to extract it from the toolholder (including it has an edge inside and wont fall out) you have to turn it around and hammer it out with a rod smaller than the hole if its an old toolholder
I am wanting to get into cnc and learn how to operate a cnc machine. I have a need to make custom parts at times for projects. I will be starting from scratch. I have worked with auto cad and inventor in the past but never transferred drawings to a machine and have never operated a machine. I am thinking of skipping the desktop cnc route and going for a used industrial grade machine; i would have to go used because of price. Any recommendations on a first machine or suggestions on how to efficiently go about learning the trade?
I have a question...after finishing this operation , how are you going to remove that excess material which was in the clamps above the parallels with rectangular shape ????
You could flip the part over and hold it in a fixture that's designed to hold the odd shaped circles and do more operations to remove that excess metal. Creative workpiece fixturing is a big part of what separates a good machinist from a great machinist.
Lathe Connect Disconnect sensors Bluetooth Project management Fasters better Measurement support Excellent very inspirational Almost like X-ray Boxing in measurements Here's a step Make those into sunglasses binoculars sunglasses You can be a jeweler
@@TITANSofCNC ... I'm wondering how fast you run 304L . I did a trial not too long ago in a shallow wide pocket .187 deep. 5x5 square with 2inch hole in center. I used Guhring RF Diver .500 4 flute endmill... .050 DOC I think 600 SFM at .0025 Chipload. I remember the feed was 180 ipm.... I ran it DRY with a worn endmill! Only 4 parts though just to see. I was impressed. It happened to be in a UMC 750 5 axis machine.
Hi I'm a student and I'm very curious as to how Mr Titan set his work offset. Don't we normally just touch the part with an edge finder and deduct the diameter. 🤔
I'm not sure what to say about this method of edge finding. You've got a renishaw probe system on this VS6 SS, you could use the renishaw spindle probe, and probe the x,y,z axis. If you needed to run another part you can probe the next "blank stock" and have the Hass NGC's adjust your work offset's as required.
oooh yeah he run the part faster but what about accuracy? he didnt measured the part so we dont know how accurate it is when he adjust the speed and feeds
so I heard from a friend at work that said edgefinders are designed to run at 1000 not 1200 rpm, even though even at school in milford being taught to always edge find at 1200
Hey Titan, I don't like how you taught your tool offsets. Wouldn't you be better off making the top of your setting disc Z0, teach all the tools to that and then dropping your work offset? Your way involves adjusting each and every tool - a lot more opportunities to make a mistake.
First sorry for my english I agree with you. Better way is to set the zero in Z axis on the 3-2-1 block puted on the table or stationary jaw of vice and Johanson's dipstick puted on the 3-2-1 block. After setting zero in Z axis on Johanson´s dipstick clamp the tool in to the spindel and go above the Johanson´s dipstick. Roll the tool down until the dipstick begins to rub against the tool. Then on the machine panel in the Z colum is the heigh of the tool which is important to put in the OFFSET table to the tool number which you measured right now (it will be always positive value). After all tools are measured than you put the zero point in Z axis on oyur workpiece. and its all you can run the part without any adjusment of tools in offset page like this Titan. This method is good and better because now you can clamp your part in another Z heigh and you don't have to touch off all tools again, just set the new Zero point in Z axis. The easiest way. if oyu want to learn more from me so send me a message to david.holeda@seznam.cz and I will make video for you how to measure tools in the machine (we yousualy used presetter but its work as this method below).
great vid this machine cuts aluminum at high speed like butter, good instruction on process order with 1st run.. it kills me a little inside though.... to see your machine draining coolant all over the tool tapers QQ this leads to all sorts of beautiful corrosion in places you don't even want to think about if you're using water based coolant... I try to M9 on the last G0 up before tool change so it drains as the head is moving up to the changer height(what good is cooling tools cutting air anyway?!!)
6:02 There seems to be quite a big gap between the tool holder and the spindle. What's up with that? The CAT40's don't have that large of a gap. You can even see some of the taper not being held on. Why?
titan, where can i purchase one of those 1/4" spacers at? The shop i work at they want you to use a piece of copy paper and adjust from there. Its rather disappointing to me how they want it done.
It's just a gage block, you could use anything, paper, shims, 123 blocks, or a dial height setter. What's important is that you know the size. If you use a block instead of paper you need to start with the tool lower than the top of the block and raise it up until the block slides under. Start with .010 moves until it goes under, lower it a click and go to .001 moves, repeat until you feel it just slide under without too much force on .0001 moves.
Using paper for setting tool offsets sounds weird but it's one of those tricks from before the CNC days that still works well today. Jog the tool down while moving the paper back and forth, and stop when you start to feel friction. Measure the paper you're using and subtract that from your tool offset. Sticky notes work really well and usually measure at 0.003", but some people prefer cigarette rolling papers which are thinner.
TITANS of CNC ah okay, well I appreciate the reply. Absolutely enjoy the videos you put out. I'm fresh out of school and what you've been doing helps me out with basically only school experience.
Don't set tools on precision ground matched inspection tools like 123 blocks. If you need something to set tools off of make a block with a known height to do it with.
He was trying to show you how to do it with students in mind. He used tools/methods that were the easiest and most accessible. As he said he would normally use an auto z plate/setter but wanted to show a manual method. They are precision ground blocks but he only made contact with his cylinders that he machined for this.
I neded to do 250 diffrent parts iron (45 hrc) in 70 h with 200 diffrent programs in fusion 360. I dident make it =( i drive 2 diffrent cnc at the same time, so dont have time to check hights . Just cam it, load part. do the zero thing and hit go. And go program the next maskin. Asome show. /Dennis (sweden)
"I never just think its going to be good. I just get quick at double checking my work so I can have success."
Titan.
Epic words.
I like this dialed back version of titan a lot. Seems like a great teacher
Hi am from kenya and am interested in learning cnc milling machine
Excellent work Titan. Thank you for everything you do to promote the trade and bring manufacturing back. BOOM!
"Thank you kindly for your efforts, and for your time. I do learn lots from Mr. TITANS of CNC: Academy."
Thank you for your academy, I started using Fusion 360 a year ago and thought I had wasted my time when I found that lots of people use solid works and catia or Simens but you do have training with Fusion 360. Thank you very much for your videos
I learned a great deal watching this older video. The process really downloaded into my brain. Thanks.
Good job rotating the cutters. So many forget about cutting edges being different heights.
Those parallel pop-ins are great. I had more than once had to drill out a bolt after it would not loosen and broke.
Do you have a video explaining how you calculate feeds and speeds?
I’m a youth apprentice who is working in a machine shop. My goal is to become a Machinist. This video helps because the shop I work in runs Haas CNC mills and lathes. I’m getting trained how to run them.
Make sure you devour academy.titansofcnc.com
TITANS of CNC: Academy Thanks 😁
You are awsome titan, i feel im learning something from you. But it is a bit hard for me when i am a norwegian guy, but im still learning from you little by little, and i like your videos
Pay special attention to 8:30 when he is setting the Facemill. Manually setting the Facemill or even using a tool setter, it's EXTREMELY important to rotate the cutter and check each insert. What Titan did there should be a lesson. One low insert and you're screwed.
You should watch it again, he even said he did it and showed it in the video. He did a manual set on one insert in the video and cut to the finish but said he rotated it and checked every insert in the tool. I also suspect he checked the tool before he put it in the tool changer as most do with setup procedure.
How is miss this industry. I left it here in Oregon in 1993 because the legislature decided to wipe out our heavy industries and nearly every machine shop was forced to close down.
Awesome stuff titan! As a cnc operator myself I appreciate everything you do for us!
those parallels are actually really nice, i hate it when i finish a part and then have to clean the parallels and put them back on their place
ipadize use a spring between parallels and they don't move around on you they stay in place and chips don't get between them and the jaws. tho if it's like a huge production they might after time. clean them once in the morning
yes i use the metal cable ties that material suppliers strap the bars together with. just bend it into a triangle and put between the parallels :)
What are those parallels called? Or did he make them?
More Please! Love what you do!
Los more coming on my Free academy.titansofcnc.com
Amazing what your doing Titan. Your organization and marketing is AWESOME. Do you do this all yourself? What do you use for the marketing and videos that come out so good. Thanks for doing what your doing for kids and heck even us that have been around machining but never got involved with actual machining. I have been in the aerospace, health science and appliance industry and lots of folks always say that this is a dying breed, but you have figured out how to make it relevant and fun again. Good on you. Congrats to all the success you have you deserve it.
Check out my Free academy.titansofcnc.com
Also have a great team!
Fantastic tutorial!
Really appreciate it my friend. Please keep doing what your doing. It's really helping me out!
Titan my hero
Thanks for the tip about not putting the stock on the side of the vice, I had a 3 in by 7 in peace of 4140 steal fly out and break a end mill. by the way love the videos. :)
Nice job, everything ok, but You forgot to measure it, check holes are correct radial and gauge is ok ! :) We dont live in perfect world, where all the tools are perfect, even when they brand new :)
Thank you
makes me smile every time
Man, I miss machining so bad. Awesome job on the vids.
Titan I love watching your videos brother. There's a lot of hate out there on you and haas just keep brushing it off man. I run haas everyday there a great machine for the price and your a great role-model for this field. With your past to be able to do what you do today is the American dream!
great video . you help everyone all about CNC . thanks
Have you ever tried shrink fit tooling for your endmills? You would be amazed at how much harder you can drive tooling with them vs a solid set screw holder.
Keeping it simple and cheap for students.
shrink fit is a game changer:D the holders are just ammazing
we use them all the time but the downside is if you break an endmill and fail to extract it from the toolholder (including it has an edge inside and wont fall out) you have to turn it around and hammer it out with a rod smaller than the hole if its an old toolholder
Yo this was so educational this is sick!
Thank you for being here
Strength and Honor!
Waiting to see more cutting till that time thanks
No digital probe? Love what you're doing though, keep it up!
nice tutorial and video ! Greetings from Germany
I am wanting to get into cnc and learn how to operate a cnc machine. I have a need to make custom parts at times for projects. I will be starting from scratch. I have worked with auto cad and inventor in the past but never transferred drawings to a machine and have never operated a machine. I am thinking of skipping the desktop cnc route and going for a used industrial grade machine; i would have to go used because of price. Any recommendations on a first machine or suggestions on how to efficiently go about learning the trade?
I have a question...after finishing this operation , how are you going to remove that excess material which was in the clamps above the parallels with rectangular shape ????
You could flip the part over and hold it in a fixture that's designed to hold the odd shaped circles and do more operations to remove that excess metal. Creative workpiece fixturing is a big part of what separates a good machinist from a great machinist.
i suggest you to use kennametal hydraulic tool holder for better result .
What did you end up changing the speeds and feeds to for tool 3 on the adaptive clearing tool path?
I can contact with you ...?
Yeah Titan Boom, right on.
Great Video! is the HASS offset page you were entering 2" into secondary to the G54 (or what ever offset) you were using? I like that vise stop too!
hass has a tool offset page and a work offset page. just keep pressing offset until you get the page you want
hello, thank you for the video. please tell me, what about machining of a bottom of the T-8M? how you clamp it, and adjust edge and z-hight?
hello Sir, I have a question what do you mean by making the tool zero?
This was really interesting. But how would you remove the bottom part which couldn’t be cut because it was clamped down?
Lathe Connect Disconnect sensors Bluetooth Project management Fasters better Measurement support Excellent very inspirational Almost like X-ray Boxing in measurements Here's a step Make those into sunglasses binoculars sunglasses You can be a jeweler
Did you dial back on your speeds and feeds on your toolpaths??
Titan, How hard do you know you can push the tools and the material?
Recommended IPT and SFM from tool manufacturers and from experience
Workholding conditions, rigidity, and spindle power are also important.
@@TITANSofCNC ... I'm wondering how fast you run 304L . I did a trial not too long ago in a shallow wide pocket .187 deep. 5x5 square with 2inch hole in center. I used Guhring RF Diver .500 4 flute endmill... .050 DOC I think 600 SFM at .0025 Chipload. I remember the feed was 180 ipm.... I ran it DRY with a worn endmill! Only 4 parts though just to see. I was impressed. It happened to be in a UMC 750 5 axis machine.
My question is how is the bottom machined? How would you fixture it?
Excellent work sir
Hope new videos from u
Thnx lot
Hi I'm a student and I'm very curious as to how Mr Titan set his work offset. Don't we normally just touch the part with an edge finder and deduct the diameter. 🤔
He did
I'm not sure what to say about this method of edge finding.
You've got a renishaw probe system on this VS6 SS, you could use the renishaw spindle probe, and probe the x,y,z axis.
If you needed to run another part you can probe the next "blank stock" and have the Hass NGC's adjust your work offset's as required.
He said he wasn't using it because its for education purposes. Not everyone has a Renishaw system.
What type of 1/2 endmills do you suggest for roughing 718 inconel? I need an inch and a quarter flute length.
ive always heard ceramic for Inconel, that's on a lathe of course....
Boom that was damn cool.
oooh yeah he run the part faster but what about accuracy? he didnt measured the part so we dont know how accurate it is when he adjust the speed and feeds
hello .. Titans..
I have questions that
how to taper(1.5 or 5 degree) part complete in few minutes.
(without taper cutter)
just endmill or ballmills
what do you do about the left over stock on the bottom?
Flip it and deck off the bottom.
Soft Jaws Fixture for Op2
@@TITANSofCNC Does that require a separate code or do you do it manually with the shell mill? Thats the part Im always trying to figure out.
so I heard from a friend at work that said edgefinders are designed to run at 1000 not 1200 rpm, even though even at school in milford being taught to always edge find at 1200
800 rpm is okay! no need for more than that! That's what I usually run at!! never had problem! usually within in couple tens!!
Hey Titan, I don't like how you taught your tool offsets.
Wouldn't you be better off making the top of your setting disc Z0, teach all the tools to that and then dropping your work offset?
Your way involves adjusting each and every tool - a lot more opportunities to make a mistake.
First sorry for my english
I agree with you. Better way is to set the zero in Z axis on the 3-2-1 block puted on the table or stationary jaw of vice and Johanson's dipstick puted on the 3-2-1 block. After setting zero in Z axis on Johanson´s dipstick clamp the tool in to the spindel and go above the Johanson´s dipstick. Roll the tool down until the dipstick begins to rub against the tool. Then on the machine panel in the Z colum is the heigh of the tool which is important to put in the OFFSET table to the tool number which you measured right now (it will be always positive value). After all tools are measured than you put the zero point in Z axis on oyur workpiece. and its all you can run the part without any adjusment of tools in offset page like this Titan. This method is good and better because now you can clamp your part in another Z heigh and you don't have to touch off all tools again, just set the new Zero point in Z axis. The easiest way. if oyu want to learn more from me so send me a message to david.holeda@seznam.cz and I will make video for you how to measure tools in the machine (we yousualy used presetter but its work as this method below).
Nice :) love this :)
great vid this machine cuts aluminum at high speed like butter, good instruction on process order with 1st run.. it kills me a little inside though.... to see your machine draining coolant all over the tool tapers QQ this leads to all sorts of beautiful corrosion in places you don't even want to think about if you're using water based coolant... I try to M9 on the last G0 up before tool change so it drains as the head is moving up to the changer height(what good is cooling tools cutting air anyway?!!)
What watch is that Titan?
6:02 There seems to be quite a big gap between the tool holder and the spindle. What's up with that? The CAT40's don't have that large of a gap. You can even see some of the taper not being held on. Why?
titan, where can i purchase one of those 1/4" spacers at? The shop i work at they want you to use a piece of copy paper and adjust from there. Its rather disappointing to me how they want it done.
I just made it... .250 Thick x 1.0 Dia... in tenths. Joe Block would work
It's just a gage block, you could use anything, paper, shims, 123 blocks, or a dial height setter. What's important is that you know the size. If you use a block instead of paper you need to start with the tool lower than the top of the block and raise it up until the block slides under. Start with .010 moves until it goes under, lower it a click and go to .001 moves, repeat until you feel it just slide under without too much force on .0001 moves.
Using paper for setting tool offsets sounds weird but it's one of those tricks from before the CNC days that still works well today. Jog the tool down while moving the paper back and forth, and stop when you start to feel friction. Measure the paper you're using and subtract that from your tool offset. Sticky notes work really well and usually measure at 0.003", but some people prefer cigarette rolling papers which are thinner.
TITANS of CNC ah okay, well I appreciate the reply. Absolutely enjoy the videos you put out. I'm fresh out of school and what you've been doing helps me out with basically only school experience.
Captain Dammit edge technology makes a dope setter only 100 bucks. I bought 2
What 3d model file types do you guys like? I might want a quote
Mmm... VF6SS. Just need the work for it though. Every once in a while a big plate will come thru and I'll be like "a big machine would be nice."
Please display feed,speed, material during video playing time
Don't set tools on precision ground matched inspection tools like 123 blocks. If you need something to set tools off of make a block with a known height to do it with.
why not have a set to set tools with and a set to inspect with?
He was trying to show you how to do it with students in mind. He used tools/methods that were the easiest and most accessible. As he said he would normally use an auto z plate/setter but wanted to show a manual method. They are precision ground blocks but he only made contact with his cylinders that he machined for this.
I like BOOM
Tôi rất muốn học nó
my shop has no time for dry runs. I double check my programs in the cam so I don't have to at the machine. 100 percent Rapids all day
bad ass
How do you remove the material from the bottom of the part?
You can use precision saw☺️
Then grind the surface
I neded to do 250 diffrent parts iron (45 hrc) in 70 h with 200 diffrent programs in fusion 360. I dident make it =( i drive 2 diffrent cnc at the same time, so dont have time to check hights . Just cam it, load part. do the zero thing and hit go. And go program the next maskin. Asome show. /Dennis (sweden)
Is it true that G code automatically generated by the cnc
G code is generated through the programming software when U convert programs to "NC program"
See how fast he drilled those holes?? My god I know it's aluminum by Damn he must be plunging at 20ipm
I do that through ss all day. still feels slow to me. of course it does have spindle thru coolant
How much do CNC machinist make an hour?
Not enough by a long shot
Want to make a Bluetooth sensor
touching tools of metal on metal i would not recommend. Also would not run program 100% rapid on a first run as a beginner.
old school xDD
push men xd