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| DIY-CNC Router Table Machines Discuss the building of home-made CNC Router tables here! |
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#1
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Hi all, I thought I would take the time to share my latest CNC build that is almost ready to make some chips. Yahoooo!!! But before I get into the details, I’d like to give a big THANK YOU to Ahren at CNCROUTERPARTS and Carveone here on the Zone for helping me on this build. Ahren took the time out to review some of my earlier designs and gave me some great pointers and suggestions for improvement. Carveone worked with me on the base and actually machined it on his own machine. Both of you are stand up guys and thank you for your patience and help. This machine was designed to work primarily in soft metals, wood, and plastic. From my previous experiences with aluminum, I already know this machine is more than rigid enough. The Z axis is like granite on Viagra. The details are as follows: Weight 126.2 lbs with stepper motors Footprint 27x30 Cutting area is about 18 x 19 x 6 Eelectronics: G540- 270oz motors on X and Y - 380oz motor on Z axis. My rapids are currently 130ipm on X ,Y and 115 on the Z axis. This is with ½-10 acme screws and being PC limited on my kernel speed. I plan on upgrading later to 5 start screws to get some better speed. I actually built this machine over a month ago but moved right after and haven’t been able to use it. One thing I have to change on it is one of the X axis screws. In my haste, I forced it into the bearing blocks and bent it. I learned my lesson on that one and sanded the ends on the others. In the pictures you can see a replacement acme rod that I’ll be installing soon. With Carveone making the base, other than the rails and acme screws, it was a completely bolt together setup. I’d say assembly time was about 6 hours. Using Ahren's parts, T-slots, and 80/20 brackets really made it an easy build. I’d say the thing I love most about it is how easy it’ll be to upgrade it to a bigger machine later on. Eventually, when I get the room, I plan on replacing the X and Y 80/20, rails, and screws and make it a 3x3 machine. Anyhow, later on in the week I’ll finally get to see this thing cut. First thing I’m going to make is a dust shoe. Wooohoo!!!! I’m getting that new cnc feeling Enjoy the pictures, Chris |
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#3
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I'm working on the dust shoe design right now as a matter of fact. The question is, should I make it out of HDPE, Aluminum, or Trex? I got some stock in all 3. I'm leaning towards HDPE or Trex just because it's easier to clean up after. I'll probably go with the HDPE. |
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#4
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| Here is some pictures of Carveone's machine cutting out the base on his machine. That big box what it was shipped in. The base is a little over 35lbs. It's composed of four pieces of .75 inch thick pieces of MDF that have been glued together. It's solid. It's proof that Carvone can actually stop building a machine long enough to use it...lol |
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#5
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It doubles as a nice work table at other times. I used the Shop Vac to clean out the impacted MDF dust in the 1/4" slots. The dust shoe doesn't suck most of it out. The hose reaches everywhere needed from that one position on the table. CarveOne
__________________ CarveOne Resistance is not futile. It is voltage divided by current (R=V/I). |
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#7
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| Here's some pictures |
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#8
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| Chris, the machine looks really good -- a very professional build! It's nice to see it come together. Can't wait to see some videos of it cutting various materials. Best regards, Ahren CNCRouterParts |
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#9
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| I suggest scaling the baseplate DXF down to fit on the cutting area, generate new gcode, and then cutting it with the appropriate bit diameter. (will 1/2 scale fit?) It doesn't have to be useful. It goes through a lot of gyrations though, and will show you what it can do. CarveOne
__________________ CarveOne Resistance is not futile. It is voltage divided by current (R=V/I). |
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#10
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First thing I have to make is a dust shoe. It's a table top machine that'll be used inside my place on a table. I have a small shop vac that I'm going to mount to the back of the Z axis. Then it's on to noise suppression. I think I'm going to make a 32inch square top that will go over it out of noise reducing foam. I also want to make a fixture for my machinist vice. Then it's time to get busy with some projects. I have a concept model I want to make out of aluminum and bamboo. A few pictures etched in wood... a new wall-mount PC case... and the list goes on and on. lol |
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#11
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| Chris, That's one industrial looking machine...! Looks like it should handle anything you plan on throwing at it. I REALLY like the inset T-track table you have there. After seeing this I plan to incorporate it into my build. Great looking 8020 machine! My machine is performing flawlessly but still lacking a dust collection system... so I'm limiting the cutting. I've been hand wanding with the shopvac but at times with aggressive cutting that method of dust collection gets totally overwhelmed. I see a HF 2hp Industrial Dust Collector in my future. With the purchase of Aspire and the Mach3 license behind me... the budget will need a bit of recovery. Happy cutting! Steve
__________________ aka BOOMER52 >>> http://www.rcgroups.com/forums/member.php?u=159693 |
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#12
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Glad to hear your beast of machine is running like a champ. On the subject of dust collection, A shop vac may not be the best option but it does work well as long as you use the foam insert and cloth filter. Just adding a dust shoe without any suction is also better than no dust shoe at all. I did that on my last build and it at least kept it all in one place. Just have to divert the Hitachi routers downward air. I'm getting close to finishing my dust shoe design I plan to make this weekend. I'll post it up incase it gives you some ideas. I'm modleing it after the split show desighn that you can see here. http://www.cnczone.com/forums/produc...dust_shoe.html Chris |
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