1. Round gaskets work perfectly fine with flat grooves.
2. The entire table should be covered with a grid of identical grooves (matching the gasket diameter). That way you can seal off any arbitrary size and shape.
Hello,
I'm in the progress of making my own vacuum table.
The grid will be milled into a sheet phenolic.
At the moment i'm struggling with 2 points:
1) which gasket seal to choose:
-Round / rectangle or d shaped.
If i use a round seal (easiest to find) would i neet to mill the groove with a ballnose bit? so the gasket matches the groove? Or can i go with a straight endmill?
I'm building an universal table setup with 6 different zones. The contour of the zone i would seal off with the gasket.
2) Would i mill the grid with the same endmill/ballnose bit (5 a 6mm wide) Or would i use a wider 12mm endmill for the internal grid so i have a better air displacement for the vacuum.
Input would be appreciated!
Adam
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1. Round gaskets work perfectly fine with flat grooves.
2. The entire table should be covered with a grid of identical grooves (matching the gasket diameter). That way you can seal off any arbitrary size and shape.
Thanks for the reply.
Point 2 would be beneficial if i want to rearrange the zones at a later time.
On the allstarcnc gasket site the tell to use a square seal into a square groove and a round seal into a round groove to have the maximum contact and sealing capacity.
thanks for the input.
I would go for a 8mm round seal. +-5/16 inch.
What would the gasket size be you are using?
What needs to be mentioned here is that the gasket needs to project above the phenolic surface before placing the workpiece. I've used a 1/4" dia. gasket in a 1/4" wide, square bottomed slot successfully for years. The depth of the slot is typically little more than half the gasket diameter, perhaps 5/32". Once under vacuum, the gasket is compressed in the channel with contact at the sides near the top.
Also, as a means of economy, I use random lengths of gasket longer than the cumulative gasket channel length (not cut to an exact length) for a given part with ends bedded in adjacent channel. I get my gasket here;
https://www.mcmaster.com/foam/light-...ne-foam-cords/
Thanks for the input!
Hello, Hope this isnt too old and I can ask someone with this gasket a question.
We bought an new industrial cnc in December, (why arent I asking them? Another issue...)
We applied a gasket they recommended around each vaccum zone. The gasket they recommend sounds like yours where it sits a bit above the phenolic then compresses with the vacuum. Well thats all well and good, but here is our issue. When we for example want to cut from say zone 1 a piece to fit right in there. We would then turn off the other zones, well that compression somes into play and raises that side of the table and messes up my cuts.
Anyone else have this problem, or am I extraordinarily lucky?