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  1. #11
    m_c's Avatar
    Lives in East Lothian, United Kingdom. Last Activity: 3 Days Ago Forum Superstar, has done so much to help others, they deserve a medal. Has been a member for 9-10 years. Has a total post count of 2,908. Received thanks 360 times, giving thanks to others 8 times.
    I'll admit programming for a thread wasn't what I should have written, but
    Quote Originally Posted by Muzzer View Post
    If you run your pork pie
    You are a Prick.
    Avoiding the rubbish customer service from AluminiumWarehouse since July '13.

  2. #12
    Muzzer's Avatar
    Lives in Lytham St. Annes, United Kingdom. Last Activity: 2 Hours Ago Has been a member for 6-7 years. Has a total post count of 417. Received thanks 61 times, giving thanks to others 10 times.
    Bugger. Well that may have been a fantastic waste of time, for my machine at least. When I run the Centroid post processor, I'm getting the correct feedrate into the hole but the retract feedrate is defined within the G81 canned drilling cycle - and worse than that, when I dig into the manual, it's a rapid retract (G0). The Fusion dialogues allow you to set the retract feedrate but the Centroid post processor ignores that and lets the canned cycle handle things.

    Presumably, short of rewriting vast chunks of the post processor, I'm stuffed. I could use the boring cycle instead, which retracts at the feedrate but that's not a whole lot better unless you have one of the special (ie rare) tapping heads with the same reverse speed as forward speed.

    There's a certain amount of tension movement allowed on the Tapmatic style heads but It's not clear what I could sensibly use there.

    The jury is out. Not sure if this has been a waste of time or not until I explore my options....

  3. #13
    Muzzer's Avatar
    Lives in Lytham St. Annes, United Kingdom. Last Activity: 2 Hours Ago Has been a member for 6-7 years. Has a total post count of 417. Received thanks 61 times, giving thanks to others 10 times.
    Quote Originally Posted by m_c View Post
    I'll admit programming for a thread wasn't what I should have written, but


    You are a Prick.
    Bloody hell, that's a bit harsh. But it has been said on occasion..

  4. #14
    Quote Originally Posted by Muzzer View Post
    Bloody hell, that's a bit harsh. But it has been said on occasion..
    m_c, got your email...

    What exactly offended you by Muzzer's pork pie reference ?
    .Me

  5. #15
    m_c's Avatar
    Lives in East Lothian, United Kingdom. Last Activity: 3 Days Ago Forum Superstar, has done so much to help others, they deserve a medal. Has been a member for 9-10 years. Has a total post count of 2,908. Received thanks 360 times, giving thanks to others 8 times.
    Quote Originally Posted by Lee Roberts View Post
    m_c, got your email...

    What exactly offended you by Muzzer's pork pie reference ?
    Obviously my interpretation is totally different from yours, and what I said in the email still stands.
    Regardless, I'm out of this discussion.
    Avoiding the rubbish customer service from AluminiumWarehouse since July '13.

  6. #16
    Hi,

    OK, well i interpreted "pork pie" to mean "eye" and that Muzzer came to the conclusion you hadn't read the whole thread as i couldn't see a link to another.

    If the above is true then calling him a prick is a bit OTT in my opinion but as per your email i think you already know that.

    Unless you've got further issue Muzzer and m_c declaring himself as moved on, I guess we can all move on with more positive things
    .Me

  7. #17
    This is my Denford triac with a 20 year old tapmatic tapping head.

    Amazing bit of kit

    https://youtu.be/jR26gs1tvtM

  8. #18
    Muzzer's Avatar
    Lives in Lytham St. Annes, United Kingdom. Last Activity: 2 Hours Ago Has been a member for 6-7 years. Has a total post count of 417. Received thanks 61 times, giving thanks to others 10 times.
    I made some useful progress on this. Although Fusion appears to allow different values to be specified, the post simply generates a G84 tapping macro command, which doesn't pass the retract rate. The alternative, closely related tapping / boring canned cycles all use either the rapid retract or the same as the infeed.

    The tapmatic would work but the head has to soak up a fair bit of axial movement as the spindle withdraws at the wrong retract rate. May be fine in most cases but for longer holes and coarser pitches it could get a bit iffy. Other issue for my machine is that the reaction arm collar mounts on the threaded nose of my quill that holds the main bearing in place. During the retract, the reaction arm tries to unscrew it, which wouldn't be ideal if it succeeded.

    Given these and the fact that I also had a tension compression head and a fair selection of collets, at this point I changed my focus from the tapmatic method. Although I got it working I've now put it back in the cupboard and may bring it out later for use with the Bridgeport.

    The tension compression approach is simple enough to implement, the main difference to the tapmatic being that you have to stop the spindle and reverse it, ideally in synch with the infeed and retract moves. The std G84 works fine as long as you don't try to run it too fast. The main difference between this and rigid tapping is that you don't need a spindle encoder.

    My tension compression head seems to have around 8-10mm axial movement either side of the unloaded position. But if you are running slow accel and decl times in the VFD, there can be a fair amount of overshoot, so that the tool is still going forward while the spindle has started retracting. I have a braking resistor in my Yaskawa VFD but even so, if I set the decl time to under 1 second, I can't run much more than 400-500rpm without overvolting the VFD. You don't want that to happen with the tap at the bottom of the hole.

    Given the need to sharpen up the start and stop times for the spindle (increasing the risk of overvoltage), it's a good idea to tie the VFD error signal into the controller, so that the machine will stop if you cause an overvoltage and the spindle stops. It took a bit of fiddling to optimise the accel / decel rates against the max speed I could run. If you are going to be using a larger tap, there will be less chance of the VFD overvolting as the spindle will be running slower and there will be more torque required to drive the tap. So I did my tests on a thin aluminium section with a small (M4) tap.

    Not the most exciting video you will ever see but here's what I got:


    I'll be doing some more challenging tapping into aluminium plate shortly and hopefully they will go OK now...

  9. #19
    Quote Originally Posted by Lee Roberts View Post
    Hi,

    OK, well i interpreted "pork pie" to mean "eye" and that Muzzer came to the conclusion you hadn't read the whole thread as i couldn't see a link to another.

    If the above is true then calling him a prick is a bit OTT in my opinion but as per your email i think you already know that.

    Unless you've got further issue Muzzer and m_c declaring himself as moved on, I guess we can all move on with more positive things
    Ah ah it's nice for a change for it not to be ME getting a slap on the wrist for my creative choice of words. . .:lock down fever I reckon :
    -use common sense, if you lack it, there is no software to help that.

    Email: [email protected]

    Web site: www.jazzcnc.co.uk

  10. The Following User Says Thank You to JAZZCNC For This Useful Post:


  11. #20
    Muzzer's Avatar
    Lives in Lytham St. Annes, United Kingdom. Last Activity: 2 Hours Ago Has been a member for 6-7 years. Has a total post count of 417. Received thanks 61 times, giving thanks to others 10 times.
    Slightly more convincing demo with M8 x 1.25 machine tap. At least I have a slip clutch collet for this one:


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