I started my build by scrounging the scrap bin for some stock to make the adjustment cams. I decided to personalize it a little and use round rather than Hex cam adjusters.
A guy Simco on an Australian woodworking site has posted a great set of plans, with photos how to build a 600mm finger brake for bending sheet metal.
http://www.woodworkforums.ubeaut.com...ad.php?t=45792
He has graciously donated this design to the online community.
As I have a sheet metal homebuilt aircraft project, I have been looking for a good design for a small brake, but until Simco's design, all the ones I had seen were either very primitive clamp an angle iron to bench type things, or Larry McFarlands very large, very tasty 8 ft brake, which I simply don't have space for.
http://www.macsmachine.com/
The thing I really like about Simco's design is that it has both set back and apron height adjustment, allowing you to control the bend radius, and it is a box brake, so you can remove and adjust the clamping fingers to make boxes and other complex shapes.
I have attached photos from the original forum, showing Simco's original brake, and one by a guys called Rod.
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Regards,
Mark
I started my build by scrounging the scrap bin for some stock to make the adjustment cams. I decided to personalize it a little and use round rather than Hex cam adjusters.
Regards,
Mark
The steel I ordered came to €125 from metal supermarkets. Pretty steep I thought, but I guess the price of metals has gone crazy lately.
This is going to be good exercise, as I have no power hacksaw, and my mill is in a friends shed an hour out of town. I'll start by sawing as much as I can and make the parts I can on the lathe here, then go and finish the milled bits.
These are going to be the end plates.
Regards,
Mark
And these will be part of the closing mechanism.
Regards,
Mark
Continued work on these closing arms today. All this hacksawing should be good exercise.
After I had them roughed, I cleaned then and superglued them together.
Drilled the pilot holes so that they would match using the tailstock as a drill press.
I started setting them up on the lathe for fly cutting. It is a bit late to do intermittent cuts - the neighbors wouldn't be thrilled.
Regards,
Mark
Busy week with trips to Milan and Aachen, so I only just got back to Brenda.
Finished fly cutting the two closing arms surfaces which are short enough to do on the lathe, and then some more hacksawing, cutting finger blanks in different widths, and the leaf to length.
Regards,
Mark
Finished cutting out the finger blanks. I have 2x 25mm, 2x 50mm, 2x 75mm, 1x 100m, and 1x 200mm wide fingers. I need to make 2x 15mm wide and one 20mm wide, then I can cover every 5mm increment from 15mm up.
I also made a #2 morse centering widget with hardened pin to ease the centering of parts on the mills rotary table.
Regards,
Mark
Made an arbor for some old saw blades I have. Will need them when I cut down the angle iron for the closing frame.
Since my mill has an ER 16 spindle, the largest collet is only 10mm. I had to turn down the shaft on my smallest flycutter, and made a nice cutting bit for it.
Regards,
Mark
Been ages since I posted an update.
Machining the round shapes has been a slow process, as my mill is an hour away.
The mini lathe swing is too limited to turn the bores, so I milled them with the rotary table. The surface finish is pretty bad, but they only see static loads. I might turn up some brass bushes.
I the parts were machined while superglued together. They fell apart today, although I still have the 20mm holes to drill. Not a problem, I can pin them and reglue them.
Regards,
Mark
To cut out the side pieces, I hack sawed as far as possible (I could have cutt the stock in half, to make things easier, but that would be a waste of a nice big offcut).
Then the outline was stop drilled. I used my Proxxon mini grinder with cutoff disks (about 10 discs) to weaken the remaining steel, and then finished cutting out with a cold chisel and hammer. These plate have now been superglued as well.
Regards,
Mark
Got a good session in on Sunday. While I have the loan of a friends little Chinese drill press, I am making the most of it.
Drilled the holes in the end plates and closing arms out to 14mm (the little drill press runs out of grunt about then).
Turned down a 130x60x16mm bar stock into the two pivots you see here for the closing arms.
Regards,
Mark
Mark,
It looks like you are making good progress.
Alan
Thanks Alan. Not really, cause I am currently side tracked into making a valve guitar amp, but these things happen. The bender will get finished.
Regards,
Mark
Brenda the Bender? I've had the plans for a long time...I bought a ready made Formit cheap on ebay last year....Keep up the good work.
Keith
I did a bit more work on Brenda.
Milled the surfaces where the side plates mate up to the bed piece, and milled out the relief on the front corners of the bed plate. Got these bits bolted together.
Regards,
Mark
Finally got a boring head for the mill. Unfortunately the Mill spindle is ER-16 (Max 10mm diameter tools), so I turned the replaceable boring head's R8 shank down to 10mm.
This was not a great solution, as it is simply too flexible now. I'll have to turn up a new shank with the ER16 taper and mount it in the spindle with a tension bolt.
The cheap chinese brazed carbide bits were not terribly happy with my flexible set up. After chipping two in as many minutes, I use a small gas torch to melt the braze, removed the Carbide, and brazed on a bit of HSS. Still need to tweak the grind of the tool, as it is not yet cutting as easily as it should (Forgot the relief in one direction), but at least I got the first of the 20mm holes finished.
Regards,
Mark
Made the feet for the bender today.
Regards,
Mark
It's been cold here, and I normally stop spending my evenings on the balcony when the temp hits 0°C.
It warmed up to about 6°c today, so I made some more progress. Finished the arms which hold the closing bar.
The boring head is working better since I made the ER16 shaft to replace the 10mm shaft which was too wobbly.
I cut one leg of the closing bar down to 35mm with a cutoff blade on the angle grinder sometime at the start of January, and finished it up on the the mill over the weekend.
Next step is to finish cleaning up the side plate plates.
Regards,
Mark
I have started building the sheet metal brake and realized that I have not seen details of the lower arm. Also need offset on the cams. This should be a fun project, I just need a little more information. Is there a full set of drawings available. Please forgive me, I have no experience on networking sites. This is my first post.
Eling