Crack CNC Mill
- Mark the Greater
- Posts: 124
- Joined: Mon Jul 27, 2015 8:27 pm
- Location: Brookfield, IL
Crack CNC Mill
Hello. I have an odd question:
Given that the M2 is the reverse of a mill, what would happen if you replaced the hot end with a spindle? I would imagine that you would have to reverse your Z axis and model the negative space instead of the object you want, but I'd bet you could run S3D or whatever still.
Anyone tried this? Just spitballing here. Don't mind me.
Given that the M2 is the reverse of a mill, what would happen if you replaced the hot end with a spindle? I would imagine that you would have to reverse your Z axis and model the negative space instead of the object you want, but I'd bet you could run S3D or whatever still.
Anyone tried this? Just spitballing here. Don't mind me.
Love Always,
MtG
MtG
- Matt_Sharkey
- Posts: 347
- Joined: Mon Oct 20, 2014 3:10 pm
Re: Crack CNC Mill
without ever using S3D, I'd suspect that software wouldn't do it. But there is software out there to write similar gcode for CNC machines that are exactly what you're talking about. the main problem that I see with using the M2 for CNC;
1 replace the bed and spider with a mechanism that holds your material
2 the z axis would be used 100,000 time more because cnc's tend to move the piece around a lot to navigate the bit.
Someone around here just posted a plan from Thingiverse for a cheap CNC machine that's mostly 3D printed. you may want to give it a look if you actually want a CNC at home. otherwise, Keep dreaming :p
1 replace the bed and spider with a mechanism that holds your material
2 the z axis would be used 100,000 time more because cnc's tend to move the piece around a lot to navigate the bit.
Someone around here just posted a plan from Thingiverse for a cheap CNC machine that's mostly 3D printed. you may want to give it a look if you actually want a CNC at home. otherwise, Keep dreaming :p
- Mark the Greater
- Posts: 124
- Joined: Mon Jul 27, 2015 8:27 pm
- Location: Brookfield, IL
Re: Crack CNC Mill
Sounds about right. I just assume that everyone on here had this idea at one point or another. Especially given how prone to pushing limits and modifying everything you all seem to be...
Love Always,
MtG
MtG
- Matt_Sharkey
- Posts: 347
- Joined: Mon Oct 20, 2014 3:10 pm
Re: Crack CNC Mill
Wowsers! Fascinating! (Next toy?)
- Mark the Greater
- Posts: 124
- Joined: Mon Jul 27, 2015 8:27 pm
- Location: Brookfield, IL
Re: Crack CNC Mill
I'll put your name right under mine on the list!Mark the Greater wrote:Buy me one?
Re: Crack CNC Mill
One word: swarf.Mark the Greater wrote:what would happen if you replaced the hot end with a spindle?
Also: coolant spray.
You must figure out a way to clamp the workpiece to the Z stage, then beef up the Z-axis motor to apply enough upward force to drive cutters into it. Plastic maybe, wax for sure, metals not so much.
Belt drives aren't intended to withstand cutting forces, so the surface finish would be somewhere on the bad side of awful: there's a reason CNC machines use leadscrews on all axes.
You'd discover why CNC commands originally used "mm/minute" (well, actually they started with "inch/minute") rather than "mm/second".
Aaaaaand Marlin doesn't implement many of the G-Code commands used by subtractive machine tools. Worse, it implements some vital commands completely differently, for no good reason that I can find.
Back in the day, Makerbot's Cupcake / Thing-o-Matic firmware actually had a CNC mode, because they thought that would be useful. It wasn't.
I loves me some Sherline milling action, but ... it ain't a 3D printer, either.
Re: Crack CNC Mill
Jeez, I have to keep looking up the freaking words........way to make me feel like an idiot, ed!ednisley wrote:One word: swarf.Mark the Greater wrote:what would happen if you replaced the hot end with a spindle?
Re: Crack CNC Mill
But it's a great word, isn't it? [evil grin]Jules wrote:looking up the freaking words