Re: Plumbing a water-cooled spindle.
You should be aware that Sodium Hypochlorite is somewhat alkaline in solution and hence will attack aluminium a bit. Should be OK on plastics and stainless steel though. Alternatively once the bleach is dissolved you could add a little acid to compensate - you should then have an essentially neutral solution containing some chlorine - how soon this would diffuse out through the piping though I don't know.
Re: Plumbing a water-cooled spindle.
If all you are looking at is corrosion inhibition, how about something like Fernox - used in central heating. I haven't researched it, this is just tossing an idea into the pot.
Re: Plumbing a water-cooled spindle.
I used a pond pump too but found it rather noisy and with it being directly mains powered couldn't easily control it from my panel. I then went to a 24v self priming pump and that way I just control it via a normal toggle switch when required as the temperature reaches a certain temp.
Re: Plumbing a water-cooled spindle.
When I get round to my build, I have acquired a second hand 24v pump, fan and radiator (120mm) and a perspex header tank, so I plan to mount it all directly on the machine. I have some NC 40degC thermal switches, so one of those will go on the spindle.
1 Attachment(s)
Re: Plumbing a water-cooled spindle.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
cropwell
When I get round to my build, I have acquired a second hand 24v pump, fan and radiator (120mm) and a perspex header tank, so I plan to mount it all directly on the machine. I have some NC 40degC thermal switches, so one of those will go on the spindle.
Something like
Attachment 25797
?
I'd keep it simple. The fan and pump are near silent (the rest state of the steppers is noisier).
I never cut for long - probably 30 mins max - but there're no thermal issues at 2.2kW.
Standard car coolant - that's been in there for a few years now.
Re: Plumbing a water-cooled spindle.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
cropwell
If all you are looking at is corrosion inhibition, how about something like Fernox - used in central heating. I haven't researched it, this is just tossing an idea into the pot.
An excellent suggestion, used with DI water that should cover all the bases, don't use bleach, if you need an anti-biological it needs to be PH neutral, but you could run your coolant through a pond/aquarium UV unit on it's return to the tank to keep the biological load to a minimum or you could have a submersible UV unit in the tank.
Re: Plumbing a water-cooled spindle.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Doddy
Something like ?
Yes, exactly like.
Re: Plumbing a water-cooled spindle.
Some good ideas there, thanks everyone. Re using bleach: the body of the spindle is aluminium so there is a risk there, though Wikipedia says it'a not corrosive at 200ppm hence the limit of concentration there. At the moment I'm still using plain old distilled water with no signs of an ominous green tinge.
Re the use of switches, thermostats etc for turning pumps on and of: my 240v pond pump is quieter than the VFD fan so I simply have it on the same mains supply switch. If the VFD is on, the pump is on. After a long cut yesterday for levelling the machine bed I found the tool and spindle shaft quite warm. I turned the pump off and the lower body of the spindle warmed up noticably so I turned the pump back on and it cooled almost immediately. This makes me more certain (as I said in the other recent thread about switching pumps on and off) that leaving the cooling on continuously during a working session will help cool the spindle faster after one cut and so reduce the starting temperature for the next. And it's simpler to implement. KISS!
Kit
Re: Plumbing a water-cooled spindle.
Again, an off the wall suggestion, to inhibit algal growth how about a phenol based disinfectant, like Jeyes Fluid ? I do not know the pH properties of it though. You certainly would not need much.
Re: Plumbing a water-cooled spindle.
Something else to consider, I'll look into it.
Having at long last got my machine into a state I'm hoping (with everything crossed) is going to prove workable and reliable for a reasonable period of time, I've finally tidied up, taken a photograph and given myself an avatar. The room is exactly 2 metres wide so the dust extractor is mounted high on the wall with the water tank underneath. Underneath that is a trolley with the controller (breakout board, stepper drivers and PSU in an old PC box) plus LinuxCNC computer. Cutting area is 940 x 640 mm.
Maybe we need a thread based on "what did you make with your CNC machine today?" There's no end of stuff on this website about the machines themselves but precious litle about what we all actually do with them!
Kit