Knut
01-29-2007, 11:45 AM
Looked at Graybeards pics of his water table on Yahoo. Didn't find much info on submerged cutting there or here. Lots of dead ends hits on cnczone, the search words bring back just about every thread. Most deal with water trays.
With 5hp of air pushing through the kerf, a great deal of air movement must be involved under the sheet. That will need some depth to handle the flow. Curious as to how much depth is truly needed as my table has to tip up for storage. No matter how deep, it would appear that six drop down support legs will be necessary to support the water and level the table with such a large load on it. The shallower the better for me. A 5.5" water depth would work well for construction IF that is deep enough to disperse the gases. That makes my tanks mounted under the table smaller also. That would mean making tanks of 2.4cuft/linear ft of table, about the max I can sneak in there.
My intention is to cut mostly thin materials, so a submerged cutting table is very desirable. After watching one work at the local collage I appreciated the dust and noise control also.
Thanks,
Alan
With 5hp of air pushing through the kerf, a great deal of air movement must be involved under the sheet. That will need some depth to handle the flow. Curious as to how much depth is truly needed as my table has to tip up for storage. No matter how deep, it would appear that six drop down support legs will be necessary to support the water and level the table with such a large load on it. The shallower the better for me. A 5.5" water depth would work well for construction IF that is deep enough to disperse the gases. That makes my tanks mounted under the table smaller also. That would mean making tanks of 2.4cuft/linear ft of table, about the max I can sneak in there.
My intention is to cut mostly thin materials, so a submerged cutting table is very desirable. After watching one work at the local collage I appreciated the dust and noise control also.
Thanks,
Alan