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Boyan Silyavski
08-06-2015, 09:43 AM
Have you seen that? Its some new contraption. What are your thoughts?

I have seen similar but actuated by air and bigger, have seen rollers. I wonder how to suck the chips so the bearing balls could roll. May be blow away constantly the dust. I see a possibility that this could be very useful if the dust is evacuated somehow.

http://www.aliexpress.com/item/Free-Shipping-80mm-Spindle-Holder-Clamp-Plate-For-DIY-CNC-Router-Material-Auto-Pressure-Plate/32265634856.html?spm=2114.32010308.4.11.lCkg65

http://www.mycncuk.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=15483&stc=1

Web Goblin
08-06-2015, 10:42 AM
Looks very similar to a very old design for keeping constant torch height for plasma cutting/marking thin plate when the machine did not have thc.

Boyan Silyavski
08-06-2015, 11:33 AM
Agree. I was thinking more of a usfull for engraving big sheets of thin material, where the material is fixed at extremities but no vacuum table

m_c
08-06-2015, 11:33 AM
I'm thinking it could probably have uses on thin material where a vacuum bed is not available.

Boyan Silyavski
08-06-2015, 11:37 AM
I'm thinking it could probably have uses on thin material where a vacuum bed is not available.

ha ha, thinking the same at the same moment

Lee Roberts
08-06-2015, 12:22 PM
Agree. I was thinking more of a usfull for engraving big sheets of thin material, where the material is fixed at extremities but no vacuum table

Exactly, I have more or less thought about the same thing/design in my head for working with thin wood sheets, 4, 6, 9mm ply and so on, this design isnt a bad one, for mine i considered bigger balls though and just LM type bearing units with round rail - manual adjustment.

.Me

Boyan Silyavski
08-06-2015, 12:57 PM
Exactly, I have more or less thought about the same thing/design in my head for working with thin wood sheets, 4, 6, 9mm ply and so on, this design isnt a bad one, for mine i considered bigger balls though and just LM type bearing units with round rail - manual adjustment.

.Me

The most useful i have seen till now are 2 gantry wide rollers that pneumatically actuate and roll in front and at back of spindle. A bit of overkill for home use though. Otherwise would have implemented them already in my OTT build :tan:

Lee Roberts
08-06-2015, 01:11 PM
The most useful i have seen till now are 2 gantry wide rollers that pneumatically actuate and roll in front and at back of spindle. A bit of overkill for home use though. Otherwise would have implemented them already in my OTT build :tan:
These are the units I was thinking about, didn't get as far as size just "head thoughts" to date but it's not complex design...

Edit: http://m.ebay.co.uk/itm/291159321989

.Me

Boyan Silyavski
08-06-2015, 01:14 PM
These are the units I was thinking about, didn't get as far as size just "head thoughts" to date but it's not complex design...

Edit: http://m.ebay.co.uk/itm/291159321989

.Me

if they are big enough and spring included somehow.


these were the ones in my mind :hysterical:


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pMohATXMvWc

Lee Roberts
08-06-2015, 01:25 PM
Well for spring I thought about just putting some on the linear rail that supports those units, adjust the spring as needed...job done

GEOFFREY
08-06-2015, 11:19 PM
I think a lot of commercial PCB machines use an air operatedn spring loaded "pressure foot", no balls, but a short brush dust shoe which also connects to a vac to remove chips,dust etc. My Wessel machine built in 1985 had this system, but I removed it when converting the machine as I like to see the cutter and work when cutting. Another disadvantage for me was that as I made miniatures, tiny components not tabbed in were likely to disappear into the vac bag!!! G.

Doddy
24-12-2020, 09:50 PM
A bit of thread revival, I'll admit. I've been playing in the shed trying to recover my old star mill back into operation (so many tales of woe, but that's water under the bridge now). Fitted with a 2.2kW Chinese water cooled spindle I thought to try a bit of isolation routing. Previously results for me were varied... from terrible to bloody terrible, and I'd written the technology off (I blame the previous 3020 style MD router that I had before). Anyway, this time the results were very encouraging - good enough for one-off prototypes of unexotic components. But, the one area of weakness is always getting the laminate flat on the bed. So, I'm here googling for "pressure feet" and up comes this thread. Has anyone in the last 5 years since this thread died come across an affordable pressure foot for a 80mm dia spindle, or knocked up a diy alternative? Any experience, good or bad of the results on PCB with fine (for routing... maybe 10 thoa) geometries.

m_c
25-12-2020, 01:04 AM
In all honesty, if you've got a compressor, get a vacuum table.

Small vacuum table kits can be had for not that much money - https://vacuumtables.co.uk/diy-cnc-kits
Or if you have some other method of generating the required vacuum, the basic tables aren't expensive - https://vacuumtables.co.uk/vacuum-tables/metalworking/r-series

I've got 3015 R and 4030 RAL table from that website, and they do the job. I was surprised by how little air they actually use. My 3HP compressor runs less than 50% of the time when using either of the tables.

Neale
25-12-2020, 08:04 AM
I haven't yet tried milling PCBs but one comment I've seen is that even if the table is flat, the laminate might not be, at least to the precision needed. I know that there is some level-correction software around that probes the surface then applies a correction to Z while engraving. Might be worth a look? Quieter than a compressor!

Doddy
25-12-2020, 10:19 AM
Neale: Cheers - you're right, you're optimistically trying to keep to within a few microns (hah!) under a varying surface. But, by far the worst effect is the warp on what is a flexible board. Flattening is the first tool in the armoury. (Re. first.... this is definitely not the first time I've tried, but the first time I've had what I consider good success. Driven on by eyeing up a £1750 PCB router on flea-bay the night before, I figured (a) don't have the space, (b) wtf am I doing with the Starmill.... turns out the star mill can be pretty precise, once I've had it in many bits, and replaced the crashed limit sensor).

m_c: Agreed - in principle, I gave my vacuum table (bought for this purpose when I had the MD router) away. I would say that I could easily adapt my PCB fixture plate to be a vacuum table. I'm curious about using the compressor - I do have a 50l silent compressor (recent casuality of the failing pub trade... collateral damage of Covid), but curious how to change a blow to a suck??? Besides, I do have a vacuum pump somewhere... and if all else fails then I have Henry (or the Wicks equivalent).

I was thinking more about this last night. I have the luxury that the StarMill is.. a mill. I don't have to chase the spindle around, I just need a device that is referenced to the column. so this might be easier (and cheaper) than I previously thought. Certainly a spindle-mounted device (where I started thinking) is entirely the wrong approach.

m_c
25-12-2020, 01:53 PM
but curious how to change a blow to a suck??? Besides, I do have a vacuum pump somewhere... and if all else fails then I have Henry (or the Wicks equivalent).

Venturi vacuum generator - https://vacuumtables.co.uk/vacuum-pumps-and-generators/compressed-air
The first link I posted includes them in the kit, but they are a pretty simple thing, and I'm sure there are plans available to make one for not much money.

If trying the vacuum route, main thing I would add is a manometer/vacuum gauge, so you can see the vacuum is working as intended, which the kits linked don't include.

It's worth mentioning that vacuumtables.co.uk were reselling a German company's kit. I can't remember who, but I did find them when I was looking at what tables to buy, and my orders were directly shipped from Germany. Price was comparable to buying direct from Germany, and VacuumTablesUK answered any questions I had before buying quickly, so they got my business.

Doddy
25-12-2020, 01:59 PM
Venturi vacuum generator - https://vacuumtables.co.uk/vacuum-pumps-and-generators/compressed-air
The first link I posted includes them in the kit, but they are a pretty simple thing, and I'm sure there are plans available to make one for not much money.


Ah, I ignored the kit link on the basis I have a pump (I'm currently overed from head to foot in Ali-oxide from dremelling 4 years of oxidation from the pump - motor was stalled from lack of use but generally banging it about it's sprung back to life). I have a manometer - came with the pump.

Venturi?, need a continuous airflow?, I suppose a NRV could help, but think I'll stick with the pump and a low-pressure switch. I've looked at the tables in the link - I think they'd work very well with sheet materials that would cover the vac table but I'm likely to want to play with fairly small boards (100x75) - think I need a table with smaller vacuum zones, so already looking at aquatic 4mm adjustable manifolds, miniature pipe benders and brazing kits. Well... it is the holiday season!

m_c
25-12-2020, 02:16 PM
Ah, I ignored the kit link on the basis I have a pump (I'm currently overed from head to foot in Ali-oxide from dremelling 4 years of oxidation from the pump - motor was stalled from lack of use but generally banging it about it's sprung back to life). I have a manometer - came with the pump.

Venturi?, need a continuous airflow?, I suppose a NRV could help, but think I'll stick with the pump and a low-pressure switch. I've looked at the tables in the link - I think they'd work very well with sheet materials that would cover the vac table but I'm likely to want to play with fairly small boards (100x75) - think I need a table with smaller vacuum zones, so already looking at aquatic 4mm adjustable manifolds, miniature pipe benders and brazing kits. Well... it is the holiday season!

Have a look at the video on the table page - https://vacuumtables.co.uk/vacuum-tables/metalworking/r-series/vacuum-table-vt2012-r
They come with a length of black beading/gasket that you fit to the slots, so you can reduce the vacuum area to just the size you need.

Pierson Workholding have some good videos on how to use vacuum tables - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL9u0EBXi5guJileavxoD1tNNi9COAyVlt

It's worth noting, you don't need to butt the gasket end to end. If you're not using the maximise size of the table, you can get away with running the two ends through the same corner from opposite directions.

phill05
25-12-2020, 03:02 PM
Doddy,
In my pre cnc days I had and used a few engraving machines and on one I made a spring loaded nose cone for the spindle that worked very easy if you don't have a large qty' of units to make would be a simple option for you.

Phill

Kitwn
26-12-2020, 05:17 AM
I think this may be the software Neale is thinking of...

http://www.autoleveller.co.uk/

Neale
26-12-2020, 09:51 AM
That's the one - couldn't remember the name. I've looked at it but never actually used it as my router did not have a suitable probe. For small pieces where height was critical (typically engraving) I've skimmed a spoil board but that can't cope with an uneven workpiece.

Kitwn - good to see telepathy working at such a distance!

Kitwn
27-12-2020, 12:47 AM
Kitwn - good to see telepathy working at such a distance! :thumsup:

There's all sorts of crap hiding in my brain. Just needs a trigger to bring it out. And a little help from Google.

Kit

Doddy
27-12-2020, 10:54 AM
Quick status update.

I've ordered a 20x12 vac table - that size suits the star mill fairly well. I was preferring the pressure foot solution, simply at the moment I use ground dowels to locate the board for 2-sided alignment, and don't fancy drilling the holes for the dowels in a vac table... but I'll figure something out. Discarded: DIY 3d-printed pressure foot - altogether too clumsy, and the £40 Chinese pressure foot (try finding one in the UK... everything is 3-4 week delivery - i.e. from China) - plus the thought of attaching the whole assembly without knocking the tip off the engraving bit scares me. That remains an option if the vac table doesn't work well enough (though I think it will).I reckon I'll need to add two edges to the vac table to align the board adequately. So, thanks to m_c for the recommendation (I've ordered from the links you kindly provided). Thanks also to the other suggestions - all valid in their own right.

Now... anyone know any chemistry for bright copper plating an activated PCB substrate? (I'm about to throw myself at the mercy of an electroplating supplier but there's too much secret-blend-of-11-herbs-and-spices to lock you into their supply chain).