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Re: Euro Guard on K700
#sawsetup
Hi Sang Lu,
Yes, I am interested.? Perhaps the crate can be forwarded to a depot in Seattle where we all could meet and open the crate in the parking lot to save further cost of a second delivery.? Not sure how it works, but I'd expect delivery at SFO to a freight agent would get it through customs and onto a LTL shipment to Seattle.? Just a guess on cost could be $400-500.? I wonder if they can ship it direct to SEA? However I point out we have not seen one of the guards, and as we push the cost up towards $1K, our options for other makes increase.? Have you asked if they have sold one or more units in the US that we could contact and ask about their experience with it?? I went through an similar exercise buying from China several years ago, an induction forge on Alibaba.? Despite my concerns, it all went very well and I no problems with the machine or its delivery. Thank you for doing all the footwork, and please keep working on it, Bob |
Re: Euro Guard on K700
#sawsetup
OAV got back to me with a much better quote via air freight. It comes out to around $661 for each unit shipped to SFO. I guess we have some cost savings due to the crating into one unit but there's still the transport needed from SFO to wherever you are.? I haven't decided to purchase from them but I wanted to share this with the group, in case folks are still interested.?
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Re: Crosscut sled ideas??
¿ªÔÆÌåÓýTo be fair, there were some videos made attached to the series that showed how a slider would be used differently than a cabinet saw. ?I think the cross cut sled and the methods of work that aired on the show were oriented to those who would have a cabinet saw as opposed to a slider, probably to make the show more relevant to the general population of woodworkers.
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Re: #Knee Mills
#knee
¿ªÔÆÌåÓýI have a Creality CR-10, it¡¯s about 3 years old now I think¡ It¡¯s not by any means a great printer, but it does up to a 12¡± cube and I get pretty good prints out of it. I use it a lot for prototyping parts and finalizing designs. It¡¯s a whole lot easier to design a part, start up the printer and let it print all night and check my finished part in the morning, and then make any changes before I commit to actually machining anything.
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Re: #Knee Mills
#knee
¿ªÔÆÌåÓýBrian, which 3d printer do you have and do you like it?We have a Markforged, Form3, zprinter 450 and a Metal printer in our Lux plant.? I like the Markforged the best and the zpinter the least Regards, Mark On Feb 13, 2020, at 10:52 AM, Brian Lamb <blamb11@...> wrote:
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Re: #Knee Mills
#knee
¿ªÔÆÌåÓýI use my 3D printer a lot to test fit things, make fixtures to hold parts for laser engraving¡ all sorts of things. I recently was helping my daughter on her kitchen remodel and she picked a three dimensional tile for her backsplash. It didn¡¯t work so well with the electrical outlet trims, so I used my 3D printer to make extension rings so we could tile up to a straight edge and then put the electrical trim on and have it look right.Before we installed the tile¡. After the tile¡.
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Re: #Knee Mills
#knee
On Thu, Feb 13, 2020 at 09:30 AM, Brian Lamb wrote:
is it a custom shower drainNo Brian, the angles are very sharp and will cut you :) |
Re: #Knee Mills
#knee
Brian Lamb
¿ªÔÆÌåÓý
Next guess.... is it a custom shower drain? ?
=============== Brian Lamb blamb11@... Phoenix, AZ ===============
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> on behalf of mark thomas <murkyd@...>
Sent: Thursday, February 13, 2020 8:28 AM To: Brian Lamb <blamb11@...>; [email protected] <[email protected]> Subject: Re: [FOG] #Knee Mills ?
On Thu, Feb 13, 2020 at 06:30 AM, Brian Lamb wrote:
Waterjet, laser or wire EDM?Waterjet.?? -- Brian Lamb blamb11@...? ? |
Re: #Knee Mills
#knee
On Thu, Feb 13, 2020 at 06:30 AM, Brian Lamb wrote:
Waterjet, laser or wire EDM?Waterjet.?? |
Re: #Knee Mills
#knee
¿ªÔÆÌåÓýWe have been using 3d printing for 15ish years to iterate on designs but thats pretty much it, if we need a precise parts metal needs to be cut, even parts that come off our metal 3d printer are useless unless secondary operations are done with traditional machinery.?Regards, Mark On Feb 13, 2020, at 10:19 AM, Bill James via Groups.Io <xxrb2010@...> wrote:
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Re: #Knee Mills
#knee
Mark you are an early adopter,
Not sure there are many people out there 3D printing stuff to get it produced somewhere else, but I like it, Bill |
Re: #Knee Mills
#knee
¿ªÔÆÌåÓýLooks like edm with that square corner, not worried about stress crack? Looks tight.?I just went to a presentation where we are installing 5 5axis cell with a robot to to wrangle 4000 tool magazine....tot ?awesome? Regards, Mark On Feb 13, 2020, at 9:42 AM, Cliff Rohrabacher, Esq. <rohrabacher@...> wrote:
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Re: #Knee Mills
#knee
Cliff Rohrabacher, Esq.
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Waterjet, laser or wire EDM? |
Re: #Knee Mills
#knee
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Re: #Knee Mills
#knee
Bill, I may exaggerate a little, but very little.
It's not just about speedy turnaround of outsourcing things.? It's the larger transformation I'm taking about.? If you just a need a simple shaft like Dave showed, OK it's faster to DIY if you have the machines.? But if you're designing today, you're no longer confined to think like they did when that was made -- when everything was designed for fabrication in three linear axes, low-speed tooling, old alloys, etc. etc.? ? In 5 minutes I can design a part that I could send out and get made from titanium that is literally impossible to do on lovely old iron.? Those machines don't do even simple curves in 2D, can't run high rpm tooling, etc.? So Mac can make a shaft in a few hours that would take me a week to outsource.? But there's an unlimited number of parts that I can also get in a week, but that Mac couldn't make from here to eternity.? ?As soon as you get outside the limited envelope of old iron, it's game over. Here's a part that I had made that is very simple by today's standards.? About 4x4x.5 stainless.? $58.? 48 hr turnaround.? Try that on the Dave's Rambaudi or Mac's Omniversal. |
Re: Euro Guard on K700
#sawsetup
¿ªÔÆÌåÓý
I have a sharkguard on my Knapp.? OK but not as handy as an overhead.? The guard itself is very nicely made and the company is great to deal with.? I mucked mine up and Sharkguard sent me parts and pieces to repair mine for free.? The guard rides on the table
so the crosscut fence will interfere unless you put an L shaped end on your fence about 1" high.? That way the fence clears the knobs and the end sneaks under the guard.? The 4" port needs a blast gate to slow down the velocity for some cuts but that depends
on your DC impeller.? Dave
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> on behalf of John Harden <caliplinker2@...>
Sent: Wednesday, February 12, 2020 9:12 PM To: [email protected] <[email protected]>; mfsta2lt@... <mfsta2lt@...> Subject: Re: [FOG] Euro Guard on K700 #sawsetup ?
I checked out their website. Pretty basic guard, but the 4" hose right above the blade looks like it should do well on dust collection.? Looks like they use a 3D printer to form dust shroud to maximize collection area. Clever idea?
Not sure how sturdy splitter/mount is but may be worth a look. At
$140,?it's very inexpensive.?
On Wed, Feb 12, 2020, 12:48 PM Mark Foster <mfsta2lt@...> wrote:
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Re: Radial Drill Press purchase
I have an 1100 series floor standing Walker Turner with auto down feed made in 1951. I have been using it for almost 40 years on both wood and metal. After all that time the top bearing went out. I found Walker Turner Serviced Machines in CT has the special bearing reproduced so I am in the process of restoring it (stripped and repaint) and expect my kids to get another 70 years of service out of it.
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