Has anyone done this or have some direction I can be pointed in ? Its a Hills machine it was sold on here. Works great just want to make things easier.
Has anyone done this or have some direction I can be pointed in ? Its a Hills machine it was sold on here. Works great just want to make things easier.
by nature a saw machine is just a terrible design for cnc retrofit. The fact that one of the axis pivots is kinda "catch me fkkk me" in my opinion. I would want to raise and lower the entire assembly but doing that accurately will likely be pretty tough.
Take the money and retro a wood lathe. Will be alot less expensive to do correct and accurate.
by nature a saw machine is just a terrible design for cnc retrofit. The fact that one of the axis pivots is kinda "catch me fkkk me" in my opinion. I would want to raise and lower the entire assembly but doing that accurately will likely be pretty tough.
Take the money and retro a wood lathe. Will be alot less expensive to do correct and accurate.
Or a metal lathe?
I have considered moving the x axis stepper to the up-down screw on the table saw blade. There appears to be almost no backlash on that mechanism on my saw Has anyone considered or tried this?
Thanks,
JC
I'm going to suggest that cue-tapering on a metal lathe may not be the best approach.
First, it's a waste of a good machine unless you don't care. Too many moving parts.
I think that's where a lot of entry-level enthusiasts make their first mistake.
Well, maybe the second mistake, first being the decision to do cues at all.
You don't need an expensive 40" lathe unless it's the only turning machine in your shop.
A tight, solid (and short) iron lathe for precise and a T/S are the basics for a CM.
Your T/S can be manual or CNC if you prefer, it's task/function isn't complicated.
I'd only go CNC if I had to do many different tapers.
But then I'd have to learn programming. Lol
You haven't seen Searing's Jet lathe converted to cnc taperer.I'm going to suggest that cue-tapering on a metal lathe may not be the best approach.
First, it's a waste of a good machine unless you don't care. Too many moving parts.
I think that's where a lot of entry-level enthusiasts make their first mistake.
Well, maybe the second mistake, first being the decision to do cues at all.
You don't need an expensive 40" lathe unless it's the only turning machine in your shop.
A tight, solid (and short) iron lathe for precise and a T/S are the basics for a CM.
Your T/S can be manual or CNC if you prefer, it's task/function isn't complicated.
I'd only go CNC if I had to do many different tapers.
But then I'd have to learn programming. Lol
I have considered moving the x axis stepper to the up-down screw on the table saw blade. There appears to be almost no backlash on that mechanism on my saw Has anyone considered or tried this?
Thanks,
JC
I wonder what the run-out is on this table saw's blade ?
When you're trying to get down to within .002" of the sanding mandrel, I wonder if the saw machine can hold that .
That's .001" on his arbor.
How about on your machine ?
I haven't measured it on my machine but when I make the final cut on the butt and shaft @ .844 for my .850 mandrels the lip feels consistently overhanging the mandrels to the touch and finishes up nicely. I think if it was more than a thousandth or so difference I could feel it with my finger. Using that as a measure the tolerances seem very acceptable. It wouldn't surprise me if my saw has more slop than that and I'm not cutting that final cut with all the teeth but it's only wood so it seems plenty good to me.
JC
He said he is holding his dimension and getting a great finish.
Is there something else he should be achieving? Sounds pretty good to me.
Robin Snyder
Has anyone done this or have some direction I can be pointed in ? Its a Hills machine it was sold on here. Works great just want to make things easier.
Mine used to trip the breaker.If I knew what I know now I would have never bought a table saw machine. I'm in it as much as I would have been with a gantry and, not only does it take up 10x's the space, it scares the crap out of me every time I spin it up.