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View Full Version : CONVERSION: Myford VM-B CNC Conversion.



John S
04-10-2011, 10:27 PM
So got most of the big bits of a VM-B from the Myford sale for £100.
Brand new but well shop soiled and robbed.
No motor, spindle, pulleys, covers etc
Main bits are base, saddle, bed, screws and head.

problem is this is a right backwards arsed design as where the spindle locates.



Rough assembled with a lump of tube to represent the missing spindle.

http://www.stevenson-engineers.co.uk/files/VMB3.jpg

Right at front of travel with a plate on bed that it will need to machine, plate is 150mm or 6"

http://www.stevenson-engineers.co.uk/files/VMB4.jpg

Full back and it overhanging the bed.

Shot inside the head showing how cored it is, no spare metal anywhere.

http://www.stevenson-engineers.co.uk/files/VMB5.jpg


I can squeeze another 15mm to give me 165mm but the problem is the spindle hole is in the wrong position, plus I don't have a spindle anyway or any of the drive mechanism.

So this is the bit that poses the problem.

http://www.stevenson-engineers.co.uk/files/VMB6.jpg

So a bit of hacksawing, not shown, a bit of angle grinding, definitely not shown due to artisic license and a bit of surface grinding.

http://www.stevenson-engineers.co.uk/files/VMB7.jpg


Only shown because they show it on tele and it's only microns being killed <g>

And we get this:-


http://www.stevenson-engineers.co.uk/files/VMB8.jpg


The motor in the picture is only a slave for pics, new motor ordered.

After searching all the motor specs we can get a 1.1Kw [ 1.5HP ] motor in a reduced 80 frame size at 2800 rpm [ remember we are on 50 Hz ]
80 Frame means 80mm from feet to centreline, that one in the pic is a 63 frame.

So if we run a 2 pole motor at 120 hz which they will stand, they are good for 6,720 which is about the right speed for a 3mm drill.

At low speed usuable torque on a 1.1Kw motor is about 20 Hz giving a low speed of 1,120 rpm.

Not much use for a manual machine but for a CNC only using small cutters this spread is ideal.

So plan B is to strip the new motor when it comes, make a new end up out of solid alloy as most motor ends now and very skimpy, fit a double row angular contact bearing that held in place by a keep plate.

Press the shaft out and make a complete new shaft to take ER 20 collets, because the bearing won't be able to go over the collet chuck bit the rotor will have to be modified to be a push fit, not press fit and have a keyway and retaining nut to hold it in position.
Many grinder rotors are built this way.
Get the rotor re-balanced and rebuild the motor.
motor then bolts to a conversion plate between the cut down head and the motor.

Ballscrews are on order from China, motor should be here later this week or early next week.

m_c
04-10-2011, 10:51 PM
Seen this on HSM the other day, and was wondering how you were going to get it to work.

Got to love abit artistic license :heehee:

blackburn mark
06-10-2011, 04:47 PM
nice one, looks like a nice sturdy lump of iron... itll be interesting to see how well one of those double row A/C breaings holds up to some heavy work

are you saying your going to make the ER20 chuck or are you somehow adding one to your new shaft ?

John S
06-10-2011, 07:15 PM
Mark,
Press the shaft out of the motor and make a complete new shaft with integral ER20 collet chuck. Plus a new drive end housing to take a better bearing and a bit more substantial.

Hopefully motor will be here tomorrow and I can get it stripped and measured up. I can only work on this two nights a week, Tuesday and Friday as I'm doing it with my grandson as a design project, unfortunately I won't be able to order the bearing until the motor gets here as I don't know which one is fitted, I'm guessing a 20mm bore but it may be a 25mm bore.

Mind you nothing to stop going up to 25 which I may well do. Watch this space for a Friday update.

blackburn mark
06-10-2011, 10:57 PM
Splendid !

if you find the time will you take some photos etc... im wondering how you will go about getting an accurate inner face/seat, for the collets

what material are you going to use ?

im sort of guessing you will do a grind with the motor running once the shaft/collet chuck and motor are assembled ?

John S
06-10-2011, 11:59 PM
Mark,
Should be plenty of photos as Grandson needs all this for his project CV thingy.

Done a few of these previously and quick run down is to strip the motor and take measurements mainly where the rotor needs to sit.
Then draw up a new front cover to take the bigger bearing and that will then define where everything goes.

Old shaft is pressed out of the rotor and a keyway broached in. New shaft will be made a slip fit and rely on the keyway and a retaining nut on the tail side of the rotor.

New shaft roughed out of a piece of EN19 steel, couple of mm left on all over.

Hold by long diameter and machine where the ER20 fitting goes all at one setting, bore at 8 degrees and blue fit to suit collet, screwcut M25 x 1.5 p to suit nut.
Remove from chuck, replace with lump of Scrapbinium [ TM ] and turn down to 13mm by 40mm long, polish for good finish.
Then very carefully insert 13mm collect into the nut and tighten up onto the shaft you have just turned. running at low speed ~150 rpm, carefully centre drill the opposite end, use low revs so it doesn't whip.

Once the centre is in then the rest of the bearing diameters, rotor diameter and retaining thread can be finish turned and polished to size.

Do a build up and spin by hand checking the runout of a test bar held in the collet, should be minimum run out.

Strip and send new spindle for Tuftriding this is a heat treatment that is done at about 400 degrees and not hot enough to cause distorsion. it only puts a very thin skin of hardness on but enough to protect it against normal wear and tear, EN19 suits this process very well. Another plus is that it's virtually rust proof.

Short of hardening full out and then having all surfaces ground afterwards to ensure they are true this is the easiest / best way to produce a spindle.

Jonathan
07-10-2011, 02:11 AM
Where do you get the EN19 steel from? I'm guessing it would be the right stuff to use for ATC holders.

John S
07-10-2011, 08:47 AM
McCreadies at Rugby, or used to be, then called Niagara and can't remember what they are called now.
Phone number is in workshop.

Just done a search, now called Acenta Steel

http://www.acentasteel.com/distribution/products/index.html

Alloy steels in second column down RH side. Just noticed that they now only do EN19 in 80mm diameter upwards, so if i had to buy some I'd go for EN16M or EN24, both would be suitable.
In fact for a home shop EN8 would be fine and it machines like butter.

blackburn mark
07-10-2011, 01:25 PM
nice one john, looking farward to this one :)

John S
08-10-2011, 01:43 PM
Next instalment, as I said this is only being done on Tuesdays and Fridays as it's the only time my Grandson can get down.

Still awaiting balls crews etc so got the motor today.

http://www.stevenson-engineers.co.uk/files/VMB9.jpg

Bog standard 1.1kw, 1.5 HP motor and stripped it down, nothing to these, cover off, fan off and an end shield then pop the rotor out.

http://www.stevenson-engineers.co.uk/files/VMB10.jpg

Original bearing on left, similar but double row angular contact on right.
One thing to note with these new inverter metric framed motors is the absence of slots in the rotor. These are now coming out with the allow 'winding' pressure die cast into internal slots so the outside of the laminations is uninterrupted, less chance of flying out at high speed.

http://www.stevenson-engineers.co.uk/files/VMB11.jpg

Shaft pressed out the rotor, keyway broached in and set around the rotor are the existing bearings, two different sized angular contact bearings, existing 20mm and the one I'm going to use at 25mm bore plus a collet and nut for ER25.

I was going to use ER20's but on checking I don't have collets for ER20's so it was a choice of 16's, 25's or 32's so 20's won out.


Next step is to make drawings up of the existing motor so the details can be transposed without cutting metal. This is the existing motor as an accurate drawing.

http://www.stevenson-engineers.co.uk/files/VMB12jpghttp://www.stevenson-engineers.co.uk/files/VMB12.jpg

Drive shaft is on the right.

Same drawing with the modified nose superimposed on it.

http://www.stevenson-engineers.co.uk/files/VMB13.jpg

Because the bearing can't go on over the collet nose it's designed to assemble the opposite way and the bearing is held into the front cover by a keep plate so it's held firm with no end float.

This means the rotor will have to assemble onto the shaft after hence the keyway for a sliding fit as opposed to a press fit and a nut on the fan end to secure it all.

http://www.stevenson-engineers.co.uk/files/VMB14.jpg

Next job is to copy the spindle, spacer, nut and end cover from the second drawing and dimension up [ only part done so as not to crowd the drawing ] We now have all the details we need to start making the spindle on Tuesday.

John S
06-11-2011, 12:59 PM
OK, catching up.
Tuesday was out this week because of the show so only Friday available.

Now got the drawing for the spindle from the previous sheets so lump of metal cut and front bit of the spindle machined.

Simple machining, bore the taper , thread for the nut. Next bit is the crucial bit and it's stood me in good stead making quite a few similar spindles.

Remove from the chuck and replace with a bit of Scrapbinium [TM ] turn this down, in this case to 16mm so the largest ER25 collet can grip on it.

http://www.stevenson-engineers.co.uk/files/VMB15.jpg

Then carefully drill the tail centre hole, do this at low speed so the shaft doesn't whip, once the centre has been drilled and supported the shaft can be belted down to size.
I tend to turn everything down with 1/2 a mill left on for final cutting, the reason behind this is that the shaft is constantly getting hotter as you block the bulk out. Once cool then reset the tail centre as it will have moved moved under expansion and turn to finished size.

This is state of play at the moment.

http://www.stevenson-engineers.co.uk/files/VMB16.jpg

I need to make the new end housing up, do a quick assemble, check for run out then send for Tuftriding, then final assemble and test run, hopefully by the end of this week and I can get back onto the main frame fitting screws etc.

John S.

John S
06-11-2011, 01:01 PM
Managed to get all the bits back and assembled the motor tonight.
Just sat on the bench with a collet and drill blank in the collet and turning by hand i get about 1/4 of a thou run out right on the end.

End housing is just a solid lump of alloy bored for the register and bearing so seeing as it was so thick I belted two 26mm holes in for headlights.

http://www.stevenson-engineers.co.uk/files/VMB17.jpg

Two 5v CREE LED lights from China, dead bright these are you can weld with them.

Switched off all the lights in the shop and switched these on pointing across the shop.

http://www.stevenson-engineers.co.uk/files/VMB19.jpg

That's just these two lights. Took another picture with the motor jacked up as though it is working but all you could see was two overlapping orbs so i had to shine the lathe work light over towards the bench to get some background lighting.

http://www.stevenson-engineers.co.uk/files/VMB20.jpg

Now got to sort an inverter out and test run the motor, bought a big box of 10 surplus inverters a while ago and can't find the damn box.............................

John S
06-11-2011, 01:02 PM
Friday nights episode.

New inverter wired up and test run.

http://www.stevenson-engineers.co.uk/files/VMB22.jpg

Backed off to 6,000 drops the noise a bit which is mainly fan noise, might pay me to reduce the fan diameter but see how it runs and cuts first.

Conversion plate made and bolted to the head casting with countersunk screws and motor fitted.
need a new set of holes drilled as it's about 40mm too high, not a problem.

http://www.stevenson-engineers.co.uk/files/VMB23.jpg

State of play at the moment, ball screw fitted roughly, conversion plate needs a tidy up as regards cutting the width down, radius corners etc.

Tuesday night job is to make a top plate that will support the stepper inside the column and carry a bearing block for the top of the ball screw.

Been drawn up and belts and pulleys, 2:1 reduction, HTD 5M, on order.

I have posted three weeks worth of work in one just to gee Rob up as he's slacking on the 636 conversion

AdCNC
07-11-2011, 01:57 AM
John, looking very good. you must be getting through a serious amount of hobnobs! :lol: just a few questions. is that motor a TECA803-4? also what frequency can you run them at safely 'n' are you running star or delta config.. looking forward to seeing it in action.

cooliced
07-11-2011, 08:16 PM
This looks epic, thats one solid looking base you have there. keep it up

JohnHaine
25-03-2014, 10:10 PM
John, has the saga ended please? I'm interested in how you did the table ball screws, thinking of converting my own VMB to cnc.

John Haine.