. .
  1. #1
    Hi All,

    I need advice on what type/power of 4 axis CNC Machine to buy/build. I've looked at all the eBay offerings and various plans/kits for 3040 sized machines. There is plenty of choice but I have too little experience to make an informed decision, so I thought if I describe the most difficult jobs I want to do, the more experienced of you could prevent me wasting money on the wrong machine. These are the two most difficult jobs.

    1. We want to use the 4th axis to cut/grind grooves in the stems of car engine valves. The material used is hardened steel, 6mm diameter. The grooves need to be upto 1mm in depth.

    2. We also need to shape billet aluminium to form small con rods for a small petrol engine. The blank rectangle of aluminium we will start with will be 80mm long x 50mm wide x 20mm thick.

    Will I need an industrial machine for these?

    Regards

    Gary

  2. #2
    You need Cnc mill, not router. And some very serious rotary axis. Forget about 3040 machines. And about routers.


    project 1 , 2, Dust Shoe ...

  3. #3
    Ok well like Silyavski says ideally you need a milling machine. BUT because of your other need to mill aluminium it's actually not that straight forward.?

    First to do the valves you will 99% need to grind them. This means you'll need some form of Grinding attachment to bolt to the Spindle column. The Forth axis will need to be quite ridged well setup and with good resolution. It will also need to be able to handle coolant which you will definatley need for grinding.

    Now we get to one of the Less than ideals.? Milling aluminium ideally requires high spindle speeds and most common milling machines don't have the spindle speed for cutting aluminium correctly or with any decent feed rates.

    The other less than ideal is the fact grinding is very messy and abrasive which plays havoc with milling machine slides and Ways. It basicly mixes with coolant and turns into grinding paste wearing the slides etc away in short order. At best this means very careful clean up before doing any other milling with some serious guards for coolant and at worst regular strip downs to properly clean.

    Personally if I had your needs then I'd split the work between 2 purpose built machines.!!. .

    First a Stiff fixed Gantry machine designed to mill aluminium correctly.

    Then a purpose built 4th axis with grinder attachment to soley grind the valves which can handle the mess with sealed protected linearings etc.

    One machine like a milling to do both will suffer badly IMO and be less than ideal at both.!!

  4. #4
    Hi silyavski and JAZZCNC,

    Thanks for the replies. I forgot the grinding/coolant issue. Just shows how long it has been since I was last in a machine shop! I will forget the valves and look to outsource that job.

    All the other jobs are milling/routing jobs. They will be 2D/3D shapes in MDF, plastic, PVC, Nylon, etc up to A4 size. All relatively soft materials. Do you think this Chinese 3040 machine will be adequate for these jobs - eBay item number:400882540881?

    If I can find a machine that can also mill the con rod, I can then support my son with his Kart engine modifications, the con rod being the largest and most complex item. The other bits will be simple brackets, flanges, etc.

    Can you suggest any particular make/model of machine that could handle this?

    Cheers

    Gary

  5. #5
    The 3040T version with watercolled spindle will work for the softer stuff but the machine it's self will struggle with aluminium due to lack of strength and low quality linear components.
    The electronics on these machines are mostly cheap nasty items and will at some point cause you trouble. Often sooner rather than later.! Avoid any version that uses DC spindle.

    These machines are great for cutting your teeth on and learning CNC but don't expect to much from them.!!. . . They are cheap low quality and it shows in what comes out the sharp end.
    Last edited by JAZZCNC; 27-04-2015 at 03:03 PM.

  6. #6
    Hi JazzCNC,

    Thanks for this. What is the problem with DC motors for the spindle? I'm going to buy one of the 3040's to learn on, then look to build a serious one for milling con rods, etc. What type/size/power cnc do you use? Can you recommend a kit/spec that will handle aluminum blocks?

    Cheers

    Gary

  7. #7
    Quote Originally Posted by GaryWilliams View Post
    Hi JazzCNC,

    Thanks for this. What is the problem with DC motors for the spindle? I'm going to buy one of the 3040's to learn on, then look to build a serious one for milling con rods, etc. What type/size/power cnc do you use? Can you recommend a kit/spec that will handle aluminum blocks?

    Cheers

    Gary
    The use Carbon brushes and burnout in no time. Complete rubbish best avoided.!!

    For milling aluminium you'll want a spindle that can run between 7000rpm and approx 18000 dependent on tool size. Water cooled 2.2Kw works fine for cutting aluminium and suits routing softer materials as well with it's 6000 to 24000rpm range.

  8. #8
    ebay item 400882540881

    That is a toy, not a machine. Its a recipe for frustration. Plus buying it from people who sell tattoos... I wish i could forbid somehow that "machines" from selling
    project 1 , 2, Dust Shoe ...

  9. #9
    Hi silyavski and JazzCNC,

    I am definately looking at better quality machines now and increased my budget considerably.

    Thanks

    Gary

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Similar Threads

  1. Need advice for 4*8 cnc machine build
    By msacnc in forum Gantry/Router Machines & Building
    Replies: 1
    Last Post: 18-10-2014, 01:18 PM
  2. BUILD LOG: Advice sought on new Mill build
    By embraced in forum DIY Mill Build Logs
    Replies: 40
    Last Post: 02-10-2014, 05:36 PM
  3. Replies: 25
    Last Post: 30-08-2014, 08:33 PM
  4. BUILD LOG: my router build - advice needed
    By thomashomer1986 in forum DIY Router Build Logs
    Replies: 10
    Last Post: 02-12-2013, 11:45 PM
  5. Best Type of Machine to Build?
    By Kevin in forum Gantry/Router Machines & Building
    Replies: 6
    Last Post: 05-08-2009, 02:50 PM

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •