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#31
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Re: Need some recommendations for tooling
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Nevertheless, I would still like an answer to this question: |
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#32
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Re: Need some recommendations for tooling
I am getting in a little late but.. for any serious new manufacturing equipment 4k is very little to work with. If you decide on a lathe try and get one with a DRO. ( we had students standing in line to use our lathe this year). It is a sharp. Fixing up the little milling machine may be good. Figure out what taper it has and get a set of collets, get a keyless chuck, some endmills 2 flute HSS is good for alu. We use our Milwaukee portable band saw all the time. Do you have a good tap and die set. A small sheet metal shear is nice. Maybe a plasma cutter (requires a good air compressor ) personally I wouldn't get a cheep CNC . In that market you get what you pay for.
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#33
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Re: Need some recommendations for tooling
In terms of FRC use, what could you do with a plasma cutter that you couldn't do with a vertical bandsaw?
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#34
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Re: Need some recommendations for tooling
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#35
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Re: Need some recommendations for tooling
Generally, it can cut larger peices, like belly pans, and is able to cut complex shapes in the interior of material. A plasma cutter would be significantly more efficient in machining gussets to a decent accuracy in large quantities than a bandsaw and drill press.
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#36
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Re: Need some recommendations for tooling
Are you referring to a CNC or manual plasma cutter?
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#37
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Re: Need some recommendations for tooling
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#38
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Re: Need some recommendations for tooling
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It seems to me like having the freedom to design a gearbox or sheet metal that requires machining saves a lot more time than having the freedom to use custom shafts/spacers but having to fit your geometric design to COTS parts. Machine geometry is the big time sink for us, and a CNC mill/router would alleviate that a lot more than a lathe. Would you agree? Last edited by Monochron : 10-06-2016 at 11:40. |
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#39
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Re: Need some recommendations for tooling
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#40
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Re: Need some recommendations for tooling
We have a CNC router, and we love it. It is quite a bit more rigid than a ShapeOko, but not nearly as rigid as some of the "built specifically for aluminum machines" some teams have. Just understand there is a learning curve as you get to know your machine and what tolerances it has.
For example, if you want to do a drive rail, you need a way to mount it to the bed to mill. You need to do this perfectly square to the direction of travel, or your holes (lets say, bearing) will be shifted to one side of the rail or the other. You either need a bit that can reach all the way through the tube to mill both sides (many don't reach, you need to run small diameter bits at router speeds, but the deflection on a 3/16" bit with 1.25" of stickout starts adding up). If you flip the rail, you need a way to maintain your index, and your error can get flipped as well, so if you were 0.010" high on one bearing, you could be low on the other, leading to a non-perpendicular shaft. IMO this is worse than having one that is a few thousands off in the X/Y direction on a rail, but milled through square on a manual machine. Long story short (and that is just one of MANY personal experiences with a router), it is an amazing tool, especially if you have a fingerbrake, but it isn't magic. Don't expect to hold gearbox/bearing tolerances out of the box with little experience... but I still recommend getting one eventually. Many people recommend CNC plasma, which does have some advantages, but I'd argue the disadvantages over a router stack up for an FRC team. If nothing else, the ability to do polycarbonate (which is underutilized by many teams). I struggled with wrapping my head around "why lathe" too... However, I spend more time on my lathe than my mill. Even in a gearbox, you focus on the plates, but having standoffs between the plates, stepped shafts to hold the gears, yada yada... all really nice to have. For basic lathe work of center drilling ends of shafts, turning down 1/2" hex, etc, a cheap $500 HF lathe isn't a bad place to start. Rotary broaching is interesting, but I think you'd be happier with an arbor press and push broach. You need an arbor press anyway to press in bearings if you don't have one already. Last edited by Steven Smith : 10-06-2016 at 11:17. |
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#41
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Re: Need some recommendations for tooling
I recommended buy the lathe.
In parallel, reach out to local machine shops and find a sponsor to make your rails/plates/whatever other fancy, mostly flat custom parts you think you need. The sponsor will be able to make your custom flat parts better than you will (maybe even faster!), and it doesn't cost any money to pick up the phone book and start calling local shops! -Mike |
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#42
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Re: Need some recommendations for tooling
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In the end we are buying the nicer lathe and the nicer router but forgetting breaching for the most part. This lathe better be useful ![]() |
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#43
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Re: Need some recommendations for tooling
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#44
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Re: Need some recommendations for tooling
One thing I'd love to see, keep telling myself I'll make time to do, and never find it high enough on my priority list... is to make some videos showing "how we work". Specifically, what tools we use for what jobs in the shop, and what problems you can solve with those tools.
Some of those (<10% as a wild guess) require an engineer's level of knowledge to explain, but 90%+ of it is just "good shop practice" by good teams. As far of what you are doing with F4, perhaps you could do a segment where students explain how their teams use tools. Both from the "top end teams" with high levels of machining resources, to explain what problems you can solve with the right tool, as well as mid tier teams that might have clever work-arounds to get good results out of cheaper tools. As a start, you could use it as a way to get people to help explain the many uses of a lathe in FRC ![]() |
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#45
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Re: Need some recommendations for tooling
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A bunch of people on the chat were also yelling at me to get the lathe. |
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