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#1
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Hello guys, I want to get started with a mid sized CNC router/mill and have done some sketching for the base using a concrete(or polymer concrete) as a building material. I was thinking the concrete base would ad some stability and vibration damping qualities while providing a solid foundation for the rest of the machine. Unlike a fabricated metal or wood framed base it seems the concrete would provide a very stable base that would not be subject to twisting, racking etc. like some fabricated frameworks might do? I think something the size I have drawn up would also be cheaper to do than some of the extruded aluminum frames or a steel frame and making the forms and pouring does not seem to require a lot of tools and equipment like some other methods of fabrication. I was hoping to get some of your expert opinions on what I have sketched and the pros and cons of a base made like this? I have attached a snip of what I have drawn so far for the base, so any suggestions or ideas will be very helpful for me to decide to continue or change things. Thanks!
__________________ Regards, Wes |
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#2
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| By using concrete you are solving a problem that does not exist if you have an adequately constructed machine. With my datacut machine I have no twisting or racking problems. Vibration issues are not a problem either. .001 +/- repeatability. |
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#3
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| Hello, Thanks for the reply. I realize that some of the things I stated in my first post are not things that the majority of the machines in use are experiencing. I was just trying to think of possible benefits from this idea. I am wondering what types of material you are cutting with your machine? I plan on milling metals along with routing of other materials, so I am trying to make the base a bit more substantial for that. Do you think I am overdoing it with this idea? I also thought the concrete would be a cheaper way to go compared to some other metal framework methods, but I honestly haven't done a cost comparison. Thanks again for the input.
__________________ Regards, Wes |
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#4
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__________________ Gerry Mach3 2010 Screenset http://home.comcast.net/~cncwoodworker/2010.html (Note: The opinions expressed in this post are my own and are not necessarily those of CNCzone and its management) |
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#5
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| I use mine for cutting .080 aluminum, baltic birch ply and engraving aluminum. If you want to mill metals, beyond aluminum sheet, consider a CNC milling machine. Weight is a good thing for heavy metal work machines. My "small" lathe weighs in at 2000lbs. This seems heavy, but is a lightweight by professional standards. But it cuts with carbide and does a serious job of cutting steel. The option is poor a concrete floor that is 2 or 3 feet thick and bolt the machine to the floor. At one machine shop, they poored a 8' cube of concrete in the floor and bolted their large milling machine to the cube. Take a look at what the Mechmate guys do. They are large steel machines. Concrete as a permanent part of the machine would be a PIA the first time you reorganized your shop. |
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#6
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| Hi, Being a metal worker myself I would naturally prefer to do my machine with all metal construction, and that is exactly what I did with the small CNC router I finished earlier this year for my son. http://www.cnczone.com/forums/showthread.php?t=101387 That machine was fairly small and I had most of the parts laser cut from both steel and aluminum along with machining some of it in my shop on my small Syil SX3. I also do aluminum casting and have made the Gingery series of machines from scratch, so I will probably be doing some of my parts with wooden patterns and aluminum castings. I have spending limitations as do most people, so I have opted to try and build this machine on the 'cheap' side to save up for motors and other things I can not make myself. Anything that does not fall into that category will have to be made by me, as cheap as possible and at the same time with some attempt at building it with strength and durability. Hopefully it all works out well.
__________________ Regards, Wes |
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#7
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| Hello again, I have 3 sides of a Newport table frame that I have assembled to see if it will work for my new build base frame. The 4" tube frames are heavy wall and the separator side is smaller in width but still thick wall tube. It is closer to 47" x 47" and I either need to make 2 smaller ends to get a 36" x 48" frame or maybe I should leave it the current size and revise my machine to a 48" x 48" material envelope? I have to think on it.
__________________ Regards, Wes |
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#8
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CarveOne
__________________ CarveOne Resistance is not futile. It is voltage divided by current (R=V/I). |
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#9
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__________________ http://www.homebrewedtechjunkie.com - My techie projects, including a cnc build. |
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#10
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| In the case of my recent expansion of 62" to 136" (12' machine) I have found that I also have a very useful 4' x 4' work table in the area near one end of the machine when it is not going to be running a job. Being excessively large and unused is not a problem in my work shop. Maybe I could add a second gantry. CarveOne
__________________ CarveOne Resistance is not futile. It is voltage divided by current (R=V/I). |
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#11
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__________________ http://www.homebrewedtechjunkie.com - My techie projects, including a cnc build. |
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#12
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| Hello guys, I have a small Syil CNC SX3 mill on a 4' x 4' worktable in my garage already, and 3 Gingery machines I built from scratch with aluminum castings along half of the opposing wall so I don't have a lot of space left in my 2 car garage for a large machine. I got a shed so I can move a couple off-road motorcycles(grandsons) outside and make more room around my green sand molding bench, but I don't feel for me that going bigger than the 48" x 48" machine will be a good thing space wise. I was thinking the 3' x 4' machine would not be too big if moved to one wall when not is use, but with the 4' x 4' machine I will probably just try to have a dedicated space for it. Right now while working on the frame I think casters will be great for moving it around as long as I devise a good locking device, so I will attempt to add them before building the machine base on top of the frame. Thanks for the input on going with the 48" x 48" size and I think that is what I will do. I already revised my base drawing yesterday to the bigger size. Too bad the larger size will incur more costs for longer slides and ballscrews, but the payoff is when you can do larger parts with less grief or repositioning and wild setups that go with the smaller machine.
__________________ Regards, Wes |
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