@nvk @mattodell @k3tan @stephanlivera aaaand that's Saturday... CAM + Machining the front half. Done.
@esixtyone @nvk @mattodell @k3tan @stephanlivera !!
What CNC mill is that?
@pete @nvk @mattodell @k3tan @stephanlivera that would be the one I built from scratch. My "fuck this 2020 mainstream media + Covid crap" project. Amazing what you can do if you shut the noise off. It's 95% complete. Still a little final finishing to do, as with all good projects.
@esixtyone @nvk @mattodell @k3tan @stephanlivera Nice! What approach did you use? Like, CNC-only ballscrews or acme threads?
How accurate is it?
@pete made with basic tools, without a precision flat surface reference.... And I'm actually pretty amazed. I don't have a specific number but it is more precise than I need. Accuracy is as good as I can measure. Approach... Gantry. Steel. Designed for flood cooling, and rigid enough for working steel.
Currently using a little 2.2kw spindle. Upgrade incoming.
@sebx2a @esixtyone IIUC the big problems with a moving gantry design is: 1) The lack of rigidity stacks up. So movement in the outermost axis allows the next axis to move, and so on. 2) If the gantry is moving you have to trade off rigidity/weight and speed/power requirements.
@esixtyone @sebx2a I was thinking of angular rigidity actually, which is worse in a typical moving gantry. But thinking about it more, it's quite hard to do an apples-to-apples comparison, because there are so many different possible design goals... so I'm not going to claim I'm right. :P
@pete @sebx2a the stackup between tool and work is the same. The compromise is in how heavy the spindle + associated reduction / drive can be. And machine footprint; Gantry is very space efficient. Enclosing a more traditional design for flood cooling is a pain too. This one has been designed from the start to be wet. Every design has it's +/-.