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#1
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CNC Gears and CAM
This year, for our rotating arm, our team needed a 17 tooth 20 DP gear, so I cut them, on a bridgeport, using an involute gear cutter we had laying around. I made 3 2 inch long gears and parted off individual gears on the lathe. This worked really well, and was way cheaper than buying gears, so our team is spending time this offseason to find a way to make cheap gears.
Making the gears was unimaginably time consuming and boring, especially on a mill without a DRO, so we wanted to do the same thing, but with a 4th axis on a CNC machine (which we have). We have no idea where to start with generating the g-code with this in MasterCAM. Has anybody found a way to do this, or are we better off writing the gcode ourselves? Our second question deals with the actual cutting. We've found that with our CNC machine (it's a Tormach) some of the more aggressive cuts that work just fine on our bridgeport result in a lot of screeching from the whole machine just warping and being sloppy. It's not nearly as rigid as our bridgeport. I can actually do climb milling (which probably isn't a great idea) on a bridgeport faster and at a larger depth than we can on our CNC, so I'm kind of worried that the involute cutter won't work so well cutting steel gears. Could we make aluminum ones with the same cutter? |
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#2
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Re: CNC Gears and CAM
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Cutting gears with a Tormach and a 4th axis should be fairly easy without having to go into mastercam. The Tormach comes with some preset wizards which are accessible from the control panel. I can't remember what its exactly called, but it probably is named "gear wizard". Just enter the parameters, upload the generated g-code and mount your 4th axis. Cutting aluminum gears is easier than steel using the same cutter. We actually cut gears using a diy homemade gear hobbing attachment for our Bridgeport style vertical mill. It's much faster than cutting the gear on our Tormach as we rotate the gear blank while cutting all the teeth a little at a time. Since you have the Tormach and a 4th axis, I would just use that as it should be easy to set up and run. Alan |
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#3
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Re: CNC Gears and CAM
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Running the fourth axis and gear cutting tool profile should be possible using mastercam, however a generic post file may or may not handle it well. Check to see if Tormach has any guidance on this. As for the specific steps involved in getting the right operations set up in mastercam take a look at youtube. If you happened to have bought Sprutcam along with the mill check that out too; it's actually pretty capable for 4th axis work. Quote:
How are you calculating your feeds and speeds? |
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#4
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Re: CNC Gears and CAM
Alan, do you have a picture of your gear cutting setup?
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#5
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Re: CNC Gears and CAM
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I've checked around in MasterCAM, and I haven't found a way to do what I want. We do have MasterCAM x3, which is really old. |
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#6
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Re: CNC Gears and CAM
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There are a litany of other things that could cause poor performance in one axis- bearing preload and gib adjustments being the two big items. The manual covers checking and adjusting those. A call to Tormach would probably be a good idea. Quote:
What kind of tool holder are you using? I've had very positive results using TTS style holders of all types. If you're using a set screw holder you must make sure that your tool has a flat on the shank for the screw to set on. Not all tools do and a setscrew will not adequately hold a round shank. For those you must use a collet; either in the R8 spindle or in a ER collet TTS holder. Last edited by Andy A. : 18-04-2014 at 10:26. Reason: Fixed quotes |
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#7
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Re: CNC Gears and CAM
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