Thinking about building a small cnc mill for small steel and aluminum parts. I’d like to make the thing mainly out of aluminum extrusions. I was thinking that a fixed gantry design like picrel would be the most rigid, except I’d like to mirror it so there are diagonal braces on both sides and to increase the depth of my work area.Is this the most rigidity possible given the size and format constraints?
>>2950082I'd be concerned about the rigidity if you're trying to cut steel.
>>2950082dont most edamamebois that build 80/20 routers get disgusted with the lack of rigidity pretty quick and move on to something else? and theyre just trying to cut interwoven cellulose
>>2950082Those things don't even have enough rigidity for cutting aluminum.
>>2950082this thing might cut plastic, maybe some soft wood.you will spend more on end mills trying to cut steel on that than just buying a grizzly g0704 or something and converting it to cncactually is that a taig headstock on that thing in your model?just buy a taig or sherline imo.one of those will be infinitely better than this
/emt/ retards begone
>>2950082>Thinking about building a small cnc mill for small steel and aluminum parts. I’d like to make the thing mainly out of aluminum extrusions.You'll need to replace that with plate aluminum parts for steel or aluminum. you can start off with aluminum extrusions to cut / drill aluminum plate. or just buy a chink cnc machine and modify it with a chink 110V 1.5KW ER11 spindle.
>>2950082>steellolMilling steel on a router like this is going to be unbelievably slow. Like you can get a tiny feature into a tiny part over 20 minutes, while holding the spindle by hand the entire time to reduce vibrations and add preload. And it's still going to break at least one endmill per operation. Aluminium is much more forgiving but still painful. If you do not particularly NEED large parts, it's a very good idea to build the CNC around a machine vise, since it immediately resolves all your workholding woes. And then you should adjust the Z axis so it's the smallest reasonable distance away from the vise. Make sure to use beefy linear rails. The open bottom SBR12/SBR16-UU round slides have tension adjustment, the MGN types don't, but larger MGN rails are very solid.
>>2950082Your design looks like it is 8 times as stiff as my cheap wood-aluminium thing, but the table looks like it’s exactly the same as mine so that would be a weak point unless those two rails are some super tight tolerance hard steel kind of slides I don’t know about. And don’t you need some plates on the diagonal braces as well
>>2950082I’ve mostly just roughed out steel with these table top things then finished with one of those belt sander kits you can buy a hand file and a countersink to deburr
i've seen some mexicans make diy sliding tables out of slabs bolted together. do you guys think this would be rigid enough for machining on it?
if i bought two of these alibaba sliding tables and bolted them on an L shaped steel frame, wouldn't I technically have a milling machine? the top slide would have a router with a spindle under it. the spindle strapped in place by two bolted flange bearings. the bearings bolted on plates secured to the vertical sliding table. voila
>>2950584You would technically have a milling machine and practically have a big pile of junk metal.
>>2950584like so