We have one of these where I teach at never have used the live tooling on it but have used it to make ferrules because it has a bar feeder on it.
Let me send you ferrule materials.
Jeesh, I'm making some right now..
We have one of these where I teach at never have used the live tooling on it but have used it to make ferrules because it has a bar feeder on it.
Guys...
I would like to say hello on my first post here. My day job is production manager and R & D for a company that manufactures 3 and 4 axis CNC machines ranging in size from 2' by 3' table top hobbyist to 20' plus commercial lengths. I have done R & D, programming, and design built application specific machines for multiple CNC mfgr's.
My hobby, in my small home shop, is to design and build one or two small CNC machines, usually with rotary axes, per year, with the funds from one (when sold) financing the next. There is a lot of myth surrounding this type of machine and I try to debunk the ones I can with the "show you" instead of "tell you"
I was directed here by a cuemaker friend that uses a very small machine with a 4th (rotary) axis to cut inlays. I came here for two reasons. One to assist by giving information to you on what CAN be done, and possibly how it is done. The second would be to collect info for what features would be needed to build a machine that would be attractive to cuemakers. This means, that along with trying to be helpful, I do have a long term commercial interest. I will not let that interest hold back accurate information.
I currently am working on a machine that was built with game call makers in mind. It has full wood lathe capability, with the addition of CNC backnife cutting, and on center and off center machining with a gantry mounted electrospindle (industrial router head). There is also a flat table that is used to cnc cut inlays and box parts, along with full 4 axis milling. A lot of this does not apply to cue makers, but you seem to have very similar needs. Inlays, tapers, rings all are not difficult with CNC 4th axis, and are simply a product of a software package that you would wish to purchase and learn.
So to the original poster, I would answer yes, more than possible. And... apologize for the length of this post. Here are a couple videos of drastically different operations being done on a single machine:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QPp1itlsbnI&list=UUl3fUyY3Nq1H5E9wEAzld2Q
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_yznJrzd730&list=UUl3fUyY3Nq1H5E9wEAzld2Q
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P-5_ZMINDEU&list=UUl3fUyY3Nq1H5E9wEAzld2Q
Thats awesome!
Couple of questions
First, how do u like the Clearpath motor
Second, are the steppers on all the typical axis your preferred motors or just the ones the budget allowed for?
LGSM3...
I really like the ClearPath motors. I was surprised at the power it had from a NEMA34 footprint.
Those steppers are 600+ ozin. Coupled with 5mm pitch screws they have plenty of torque. It takes close to 300 # on the scale to fault them. I do have 900 and 1200 ozin version I could replace them with if needed. I've got them on 80V 8+Amp drives so that I can upgrade if needed, but so far no need.
RBC...
The ClearPath servos are available in 2 versions. I have the MC (motion control) the other is SD (step & direction). You must choose! You will be hard pressed to find 1 solution that works well for both. Especially when you wish (or need) to spin the lathe at higher rpm.
Royce...
"I would just choose the SD version and run it as such. Mach3 will output SD for both position and spindle rotation."
I searched long and hard and tested numerous products from multiple suppliers to finally end up with the dual motor configuration that I have. I have not heard of any product that will accomplish both independent 2000 headstock rpm and have sufficient holding torque (with sub .001 resolution @ diameter) for positional indexing use.
In order to get the holding torque and positional accuracy that I wanted, I am using 4.8:1 reduction on the stepper. At 800 steps per motor revolution and that reduction ratio 7680 steps per revolution are required. At 2000 headstock rpm 256,000 pulses per second would be required. I don't believe that Mach is capable of that pulse rate. Nor am I aware that it is capable of fixed rpm independent spin of the rotary axis while allowing 2 or 3 additional axes to be controlled simultaneously for either my backnife or off center, maybe even top down cutting for lets say a light pass operation like tapering.
The company I work for is OEM with Teknics, so was able to "try before I buy" a number of different models of ClearPath servos. I was not able to find, nor was the factory tech rep able to recommend one single unit that would do as you describe. Have you tested this? How about a part number? Going to a single motor will lower the price of my machine, and some day make it more saleable.
Royce...
Thanks for the info. Any chance you could send Jim's contact info to me via email or pm? I think that depending on the actual rpm you run on your mill, the dual setup could work, but I haven't been able to make it happen myself. I have dumped Mach as an OS in favor of WinCNC due to Mach being unstable and I wasn't able to get anywhere near the pulse count that I can with WinCNC. That said, there is a substantial hardware cost associated with WinCNC. You get what you pay for, I guess.
...Unlike Jake most cue makers here are broke with small budgets.
Jim
. Unlike Jake most cue makers here are broke with small budgets.
Jim