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#18
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Re: Cutting Tetrix gears
Quote:
Milling gears with the slitting saw is just interesting. For me it's a novelty. But, it is very similar to what Sandvik is doing with their Invomilling, so it may well be the future. I think this will be a fun project to play with in the fall. A great introduction to 4th axis programming. We used Gearotic last season to calculate the gear dimension. Looking at it this morning it appears to also support gear milling. I'll have to play with that some more. I sorted out the 4th axis at the school last year but I haven't mounted a chuck or center on it yet. Now that we have a use I'll have to get cracking on the 4th axis accessories. If you don't have a 4th axis, or even if you just have a manual mill you can still cut gears with an indexer. Manual indexers do most counts but are tedious. My Haas indexer is nice because all you do is press a button (or the cnc pulses it). You can build one using a rotary table and a stepper motor. Here's an Arduino Sherline Rotary Table controller my friend built. http://www.cnczone.com/forums/arduino/215402-cnc.html Last year when I needed to cut a replacement 93 tooth back gear for my Lagun I couldn't get my Haas to do it correctly, so I made a new control for it. The 7 wire Haas indexers are steppers and super simple to drive. I ended up using Pacific Scientific 6420 stepper indexer and Python with pySerial. Worked perfectly. The URL below also has some images of making many of the gear cutting accessories required. http://weldingweb.com/showthread.php...indexer-driver After all that I discovered the Haas supported circle division but it was a few months after I built my new control. ![]() |
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