As i have been working hard the last week, i needed to take some time off, and relax my own projects. So, today i made a wooden case for one of my most used tools, the wrench to change the tools in oour CNC machine.
First, i began scetching an concept, in Autodesk Fusion 360.
Then, the cutting commenced:
After Some sanding and oiling, i assembled the case, glued on the velvet, and suddently, i had this sitting on my desk:
This was a fun quick project, all together, it took less than three hours.
Showing posts with label helgesen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label helgesen. Show all posts
Assembling giant vacuum wall
Months ago i agreed on designing and manufacture a 2100x2500 vacuum wall for Norwegian artist pushwagner´s photo studio.
After producing the technical drawings, the contract was signed, and the product taken into production at Fellesverkstedet
Below are som photos from the production of the vacuum wall.
The vacuumwall must be adjustable. Therefore, mechanical valves where added in form of PE slides.
As a consequence of this, the vall became very thick, and several hundred screws had to be used to keep it from imploding from the underpressure.
This is one of the two halves making up the vacuum wall under assembly.
Here, the two halves of the vacuum table stands ready for delivery and mounting at the customers photo studio:
Labels:
bitraf,
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helgesen,
nordvik,
pushwagner,
shopbot,
torbjørn
Machining a brass hammer
At work some months ago, there where some scraps left of some aluminium broze screws, so i decided to make a hammer out of it.
Since then, it has become one of my favourite tools, and i use it several times a week when doing machining and assembly. Following is some pictures from the machinging of this tool.
The CNC machine produces a smaller CNC
I produced the parts for a friends smaller CNC, on Bitraf's huge CNC. How cool is that?
The cutting has begun!
The baby CNC! The banana is for scale. NOTE: This is an imperial banana, not a metric one!
Here, the brackets is installed.
This is the machine with the bridge installed, waiting for the spindle.
The tools used for the roughing and finnishing. The bigger 8mm bit has two flutes, and provides exelent chip removal rates, while the smaller singleflute 6mm leaves a great finish, at the cost of efficience.
For more info on the CNC, follow this link.
Milling steel on the shopbot
The OCD tingler! As we were doing some exeriments with cutting steel on the shopbot, we made this:
A binary dice made of steel, with some brass gears put inside before welded shut. The dice measures 50 x 50 x 50, and weighs in at 320 G. We cut the steel with casemaker pattern at 10mm/sek with a three flute 6mm bit, 1,5 mm at each pass.
The pieces where welded together at 50 amp with our TIG welder.
A binary dice made of steel, with some brass gears put inside before welded shut. The dice measures 50 x 50 x 50, and weighs in at 320 G. We cut the steel with casemaker pattern at 10mm/sek with a three flute 6mm bit, 1,5 mm at each pass.
The pieces where welded together at 50 amp with our TIG welder.
Labels:
bronze,
helgesen,
logo,
makerspace,
makespace,
manifestation,
shopbot,
steel
Antenna for drone
Made the mounting ring for this antenna for a client today, as we milled it from a soft alloy of aluminium, we churned this out at 12mm/sek 4mm cut depth with a 6mm bit.
Making A wax seal
Christina lewis came up with the idea of making her logo into a wax seal. Challenge accepted! So today, i milled the logo itself from a block of aluminium, going slow at 6mm/sek with a 2mm singleflute bit @ 18000 RPM, the handle will be made later from some wood.
we started out with a simplified vector file, wich we then made toolpaths from in Vcarve, the program which writes code to the CNC machine.
we started out with a simplified vector file, wich we then made toolpaths from in Vcarve, the program which writes code to the CNC machine.
The machining process is loud, and draws attention!
The finnished seal:
The end result:
largest aluminium part so far!
I manufactured my biggest part so far on the shopbot, a camera mount for taking FPV shots of the milling process. the part where designed in Autodesk fusion 360.
Here i am mounting the freshly made camera mount on our shopbot.
Using the slots in the mount, the camera can be positioned in several angels ensuring the best shot.
This bracket were cut using a singleflute carbide 6mm bit @18000 RPM, 10mm/sek and 2,8mm cut depth. The surface quality were sacrificed for a faster toolpath, clocking in at 1.45 hours.
Labels:
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torbjørn
Wrenches
Tired of the cheap looking steel wrences that came with the shopbot?
Just download these awesome tools!
DXF, SVG, STEP and STL files for this project is downloadable for free through this thingiverse site.
You can download the Fusion files Including toolpaths through the 3D preview by clicing on the autodesk logo in the left lower corner. The toolpaths is currently not up to date, some of them is also missing.
Just download these awesome tools!
DXF, SVG, STEP and STL files for this project is downloadable for free through this thingiverse site.
You can download the Fusion files Including toolpaths through the 3D preview by clicing on the autodesk logo in the left lower corner. The toolpaths is currently not up to date, some of them is also missing.
Aluminium milling on the shopbot
There is a lot of misunderstanding out there regarding milling aluminium on CNC routers. i am sharing todays work with some data on feedrates and cutters that you can use as a baseline for doing similar work in your labs. The parts shown is for a ongoing work, my hexapod robot.
The first cut! as you see, these are quite deep pockets. when roughing out areas like these, the key is to always have a good chipload. meaning, that instead of going to slow and just rubbing the metal, go deep and remove it!
Here i took a cut of 7mm, removing 4mm the first pass, then 3,5, before the finishing pass where the last 0,5mm millimeter was removed. all this using a feedrate of 8mm/sek, with a singleflute 6mm carbide bit.
I maxed out the spindle at 18K rpm.
when you buy your bit, buy a upcut! A compression bit will leave good finish on wood, giving a smooth finish with out fraying. on aluminium however, the key is to evacuate the chips as fast as possible. an ucput bit will do just that, dragging the chips out of the cut.
A downcut will do the opposite, it will compress it it down in the cut you are leaving. Wile this works for the first pass, the cutter will break in the next, when you mill over all that compressed swarf.
Do you think you need to buy those expensive german made tools? No. they will last longer, they will give a better finish, but you will do just fine with cheap ebay tools when practicing.
On the long run however, the german and american made carbide tools are the more economic choice, as they can be ran at much higher feedrates, doing the job quicker.
A good tool will also leave a better finish, so that less work is left to do manualy. all the feeds and speeds i post are done with carbide mills. if you buy HSS tooling, i advise you to slow down a little.
This is a huge area that needed to be faced. when doing facing, you should be a bit agressive, so the chips are thrown away, so you dont mill over the chips you just cut loose. in my case, the vacuum system on the CNC mill was wery helpfull.
Here the deapth of cut where kept low at 2mm/sek, but at a higer feedrate of 15, which is realy pushing it when milling hard alloys like this.
Also, see the tiny holes? when drillling deliate features like this, activate peck drilling in vcarve.
This commands the shopbot to only go engage a certain depth of cut at once, then retreat to safeZ.
the depth it will use is set usingPassdepth at the cutter settings. this will break the chips, and avoid clogging the drillbit at the bottom of deep holes.
peck driling also reduces the chance of breaking delicate bit. in my case, the bit measured 2.1mm.
when dealing with tougher materials as aluminium, it is important to secure parts that will fall off, be cut loose or otherwise risk to be dragged into the cutting bit. not only would such an incident break an expensive bit, but can also cause serious injury as the cutter will often exceed speeds of 10K RPM.
when adding such screws, it is advised to make these holes in the vcarve file itself, so that you have specific controll over their position relative to other ares that will be cut.
If you drill these holdown holes by hand, the CNC will not be aware of their position, and may very well crash into them.
can you notice the stepped edge on the part being cut out?
when making deep cuts, you may clog the cutting bit, or risk welding the chips back onto the part itself. to avoid this, make an offset Pocket when making the first pass.
On the next pass, the cutter will not rub the previous edge, reducing workload, chatter and leaving room for clearing the chips. then, in the finnishing pass, make the cut at zero offset, so that you get a nice, shiny edge.
i have found that using climb cutting on both roughing and finishing, leaving 0,5-0,15mm is enough to achive a good finish, as leaving to little will result in rubbing, and a bad finish
For the finishing cut, a feedrate from 4-10 has given me sucsess, depending on the diameter of the cutter. as i mainly make small precise parts, i usualy use a 3mm upcut with one flute for finishing.
The freshly cut upper plate, with circuitboard and other parts mounted. When fitment of other components are determined, the plate will be removed, and the backside machined in a jig cut for the purpose.
I did not bother to do anything about the surface of the aluminium, but if you want to remove the pattern from the machining, a sanding pad with 800+ grid will do it in a few seconds.
This is the underside. for the servos to fit, i had to take a finnishing cut with the 3mm bit. The reason was that the 6mm bit left an excess radius, not alowing the servo to fully slide in. for this operation, i used the following data:
18000 RPM
1,5mm passdepth
5mm/s for feedrate
with a
single flute upcut 3mm carbide bit.
in comparison to the 3mm depth @10mm/sek with the 6mm bit, this went quite slow.
for other tools, you could use as a rule of thumb with pass depth: that you have 50% of the cutter diameter as max, meaning a 5mm bit would yield good results with 2,5mm as pass deapth.
The chips sould be quite rough and sharp. if they are tiny and flaky, or just like powder, you are not cutting agressively enough. That will wear your cutting tool down faster than using the right settings.
remember that milling will always create heat. you don't want that heat to stay in neither the cuttingbit or the material, you want to throw it away With the chips.
To be able to crete such large chips, it is importatant that you use a single or doube flute tool. As having more flutes increase the amount of material removed, you must also increase the feedrate, or lower the RPM to keep the amount of removed material constant.
The aftermath. These will be used to cast the other components of the hexapod.
Manual work
We love our fancy computer controlled machines at our fablabs. But, sometimes we have to dust of the old manual mills and lathes to either produce an entire part, or do finishing operations on a Previously CNC´ ed part.
yesterday i used bitraf´s machinery to do finishing operations on parts for my hexapod. also, i tried fusion 360´s adaptive clearing strategy on aluminium for the first time. i am happy with the results.
Always start with a clean machine! Even a tiny chip clamped between the vice and part will mar the surface of your part, and throw it out of alignment!
This machine needed a good round of brushing, vacuuming and oil before the work could start.
Having machined these two parts from one side on our shopbot, i had to manualy machine and thread the holes and mill recesess for screwholes.
The `affected` areas is marked in red on this screenshot:
As the parts where odly shaped, i used parralel blocks to be sure they where properl clamped in the vice, and at the rigth heigth.
Having measured and marked my parts, i put in centerholes to aling the drillhead.
Here i put in a 2,5 MM hole, prepearing the part to take a M3 thread.
I ran this bit @ 2500 RPM without coolant.
It was necesary to drill through the first feature with the 2,5bit, to reach down into the part.
To alow an M3 capscrew to enter into the part, i milled a recess with a 5,5mm endmill, then bored it with a 6mm drillbit. Following that, i knocked of the edge using a countersink.
This one has three flutes, and are typicaly best used at RPM´s not exeeding 500.
Here the parts has been flipped in the vice.
Left to the drillbit, the holes from the previous operations is visible.
To rigth, near the end of the parts, there is wisible remains of the tabs from the CNC operation. They where a bit execesive, but they will not be visible, so i will not remove them.
This milling machine is very easy to operate, with only a few switches to operate. it also doubles as a drillpress, leaving more space for other machines in the worksop. with simple mahines like this, it is advised to not change gear while it is running, as that will ruin the gearbox.
Milling a recess with a two-flute endmil. This one measured 5mm. I had to run this slow at 400 RPM, to keep vibrations down.
Tapping a hole for M3. The oversized hole i am sticking the threading tool throgh, will let the screwhead sit flush in the part.
Here is the finished part, ready to be installed into the robot.
The tools used for these operations. The next pictures shows operations on another part.
Had to turn down some M4 screws to atach the freshly manufactured parts to the robot. Having a small metal lathe in the lab is very usefull!
This is the sensor assebly for my hexapod. it will move just like a animatronic eye, alowing the operator of the machine to navigate independent of the direction of the main body.
Yesterday i milled the yellow big ring on the shopbot, it requires CNC machinig from four sides, so this is a proper test of the shopbot.
The first test of fusion code in aluminium.
1mm each pass at 8mm/sek with a singleflute 6mm carbide endmill.
Here the part has been machined from both sides, cut loose and ready for turning.
when cutting the outher diameter of the ring on the shopbot, i ran it at 8mm/sek, an a depth of 5mm with the same bit as previous operations.
This was way to deep, and so it resulted in chatter and chip weldig. therefore, i touched up the surface in the lathe.
Our lathe is very precise, and capable of high speeds, leaving almost a mirror finnish.
Here the surface finish of the 3D milling is visible. i ran a 3.175 mm two flute ballmill when doing the finishing pass.
i ran it at 8mm/sek, altough i do believe that this was to slow for this bit, due to it having two flutes.
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