An other dummy question, but those are the sort of things I get stuck on :)
Does belt length matter if I only go from 10 t in mesh to 11 t in mesh?
Thanks
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An other dummy question, but those are the sort of things I get stuck on :)
Does belt length matter if I only go from 10 t in mesh to 11 t in mesh?
Thanks
How many teeth you calculate the belt to be long?
I have asked that same question before and seems there is no problem.
But personally i would try all belts to be as short as possible. Actually on the machine i am building now i had to use 1200mm belt at one place /z/ and i worked on and changed the design until my longest belt is 305 mm. Again, its absolutely personal, but i wouldn't use something longer than 350mm.
Thanks Boyan,
On the X as pictured above at the moment is set for 385 long belts. On the Y I will have to use a 665 long one otherwise I would need to move the servo and belt assembly into a place I dont like as I want to be able to keep my eyes on it and most importantly protect it from the snow.
Thanks for the advice now I know the longer belt isn't a big problem :)
Vass
Sorry for the late reply. I had a serious hiccup with my computer but finally is up and running again. Also I have decided to wait with the laser cut until the linear motion components arrive as I would like to double check some of the measurements.
Yes I had to mount it on the side of the gantry as otherwise the Z axes would hit the pulley as my Z axes travels from outer gantry side plate to outer side plate.
At the moment I have all the axes designed so they can be geared 3:1 or 2:1 will decide on that later all I had to see at the moment is that in either case the belts wont be hitting any of the mounting screws.
http://www.mycncuk.com/attachment.ph...id=13572&stc=1http://www.mycncuk.com/attachment.ph...id=13573&stc=1
Wouldn't it be better if you make the Z not only for that particular case but to be able to mount a normal tool on the spindle and to reach the bed or near it? I mean what if you decide to do something other than ice block?
Say you decide tomorrow to make a mold for the ice blocks, it must work as a normal machine not only with extra long bits, right?
I am intending to use a variety of cutters on the spindle not just this long one. I only have this one always in the spindle because this long bit and the ice block are the things that have defined the dimensions of the machine while designing it as my ice block is always the same size ( I mean this is the maximum size of an ice block that I use ) and the long bit is the one that needs to be able to travel on top of the block.
The Z is designed that the spindle can go down to 6 cm from the table. I dont think I will ever use any smaller ice than that and if I do I would still do the routing on the big block and then cut the finished slice of of it on the band saw because otherwise is way to fragile.
Using the machine for anything other than ice is probably out of the question as the machine will be permanently in a freezer and the freezer filters would get messed up. Also particles from other materials could contaminate the ice blocks in the freezer something I defiantly dont want as they have to be food grade.
I am planning to build a second machine primarily for wood if everything goes to plan with this one.
You have asked me earlier about the servos I am intending to use but than said nothing about them.....any thoughts?
http://www.mycncuk.com/attachment.ph...id=13574&stc=1
http://www.mycncuk.com/attachment.ph...id=13575&stc=1
Now looking at your latest drawing i ask my self the following questions:
Why this design at all? Wouldn't it be better to do it similar to my first build, where the work piece is inside the base structure, the gantry side legs are much shorter and most importantly the linear rails are outside of any dust/snow flakes/ and the ball screw is protected also.
The only possible drawback i could see is evacuation of snow dust. As the work piece is smaller than the table and both sides left and right- half z axis space is present, so you fit below the workpiece a table bed only sized exactlt as the workpiece, that leaves like 15cm holes each side, so you just have to raise the machine via legs so the whole machine have clearance from floor or table such that the snow dust falls there.
What i say is tried and works. Look at my video https://plus.google.com/u/0/photos/r...69713128538019 , only the dark brown plastic is the real bed needed. Light brown can be removed. 2 black plastics at both sides via magnets . As you see even working foam does not make the rails and balls screws dirty.
On your design snow falls on your linear guide, ball screw, ball screw bearings and even motor maybe. I know that your inspirational design is so, but why not make better one.