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#CNC
RAlph.
Very nice machine thanks for sharing. IMHO this machine would not be a good candidate for CNC retrofit because of the following reasons. The X axis is not much of an issue, stepper connected either by direct drive or flexible coupling to the feed/lead screw. Motor bracket fixed onto the end of the table, stepper motor attached using stand offs if necessary. Y axis you could also use a stepper with a belt drive to the lead screw and tuck the assembly under the table, IE a pulley is attached to the front end of the screw, belt driven with a pulley on the end of the stepper, if direct drive, it would mean the stepper sticking out the front. I dont think you could drive the Y axis screw from the back (column end) as the table in Z moves up and down. The Z axis ( milling machine knee) again IMHO could be a major concern for any type power feed. Guessing you have a graduated dia on a shaft that is fitted on the other end with a bevel gear the turns the main screw to lift and or lower the table. Adding any form of power feed may mean a huge motor and then backlash of the screws could be an issue, normally on knee type machines the knee is locked after positioning the up/down and the quill is used in the head for cutting final Z depths, but not all the time. Most CNC milling machines have the Z axis controlled by a fixed head or possibly driving the quill up and down. in your case it would be the quill., again not impossible but a tremendous amount of work to retrofit.the head with some type of feedscrew. Richard UK did a fantastic job of fitting a powered ball screw to his Sieg mini mill, and basically removed the rack and pinion? which has always been a bone of contention. Trying to keep this post short, 70% of milling operations ( or hand cranking) is done using the X axis. It seems from your post you already have the X axis ( just guessing) with power feed, Consew motor, which does help the manual work some what. Currently I cannot help much more, but I am sure we have forum members with more experience than me to offer more recommendations. Your final goal I know is to reduce the amount of manual table movements, again IMHO CNC / Clausing are not compatible. Thanks -- John |
Yes the Consew motor drives the spindle. I do not want/need full CNC just motorized lead screws with automation. Other retros I have seen had the Y motor below the table with a pulley, that is why I wonder if the referenced X motor might?work it has the motor below. It seemed adapting that might be easier that building from scratch. Thanks John and everyone for the help, I sure need it. Ralph On Thu, Aug 22, 2019 at 1:52 AM John Lindo <bechetboat@...> wrote: The consew motor is on the head not the X axis. ?? --
Clausing 8520, Craftsman 12x36 Lathe, 4x12 mini lathe, 14" Delta drill press, 40 watt laser, Consew brushless DC motors and a non working 3D printer |
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