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09-11-2018 #1
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09-11-2018 #2
Thank you both for replying to the thread. @hanermo2 you wrote a ton of stuff i am gonna need sometime to digest all that. could you elaborate with images preferably on this
?? Thanks Guys.Like making a fixed-fixed screw, with tension, and a compliant tension mount.
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09-11-2018 #3
Let us consider one component, the run out on the collet chuck holding the tool... Standard precision 15-20 microns, Super precision 10 microns, Ultra precision 5 microns
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09-11-2018 #4
That's sad to know :(
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09-11-2018 #5
How many of us amateurs have workshops with sufficient temperature control to prevent thermal movement of both machine and workpiece becoming significant?For that matter,what kind of tolerance do most amateur projects require?It isn't so long since a DRO was an object of lust for most hobbyists.
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10-11-2018 #6
Anyway, what kind of machine? Over what working area? While the figures quoted might be achievable on a milling machine with the rigidity that goes with it, put those ballscrews on a large working area router and they will hit performance and travel speeds, unless you pair them with massive motors. But that kind of machine is typically cutting wood, and there ain't much point in cutting that to micron accuracy.
So out of context, talking about achievable accuracy/resolution/repeatability and so on is interesting but not very useful. I think my 1500x750 cutting area router can theoretically achieve something like 3 micron resolution, based on step size and ballscrew pitch, but there is no way I would claim that it is accurate to that degree - and neither does it need to be for its intended purpose, cutting wood. Working to 3 thou, 25 times that theoretical resolution, is probably better than required. Good engineering is about trade-offs and compromise, not throwing money at the problem. Of course, a toolroom lathe or mill is a different question, with different criteria and different priorities - like accuracy over speed.
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Well said Neal. Timber with also change with moisture content from day to day. Plus the fact like a router built out of ali with change dimension as it warms up and cools down.
..Clive
The more you know, The better you know, How little you know
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10-11-2018 #8
Disagree.
All commercial collet chucks run out at less than 0.01 mm, way out from the spindle.
A typical iscar or similar collet chuck with tool mounted and tool, would run out maybe 5-8 microns 100 mm out from a typical ISO40/ISO30 spindle nose.
A kaiser, bigx, schaublin, regofix, or anything good typically promises about 2-4 microns 5-10 cm out from the spindle.
Lots of machines, tools, and setups do better.
Nothing commercial runs out over 10 microns or 0.01 mm because it would break, shatter, or destroy life of all modern carbide tooling and diamond tooling.
Standard basic TIR guarantee on machine tool spindles has been around 2 microns for a long time.
All high end expensive machines do much better, like Heller (German 5 axis), Fehlmann, or any japanese maker (Mori Seiki, DMG, etc).
Anyone can lap/fit/hone a tool and cone and taper to better than 0.01 mm / 5 cm length at home.
Anyone professional can do much better.
Amateurs hand-fit telescope lenses and mirrors to 30x better with no measurement equipment all the time.
Hand lapping with rigid laps gets easily better than 1 micron accuracy in size, since about 1940.
Gage blocks are machine lapped, cheap, and are lapped to 0.01 microns.
According to moore&wright, premier authority on the planet.
The runout on a tool mounted in a HAAS, ER collet chuck, needed to be 1-5 microns at 10.000 rpm trending low.
To engrave custom electrodes in carbon fiber for EGM.
I held the tool, the factory demonstrated success, I showed the tools and electrodes to press and about 200 industry reps. in us opening a 2011 year Barcelona HFO.
Best in the world HFO, sales, 2012.
Yes, I personally asked the factory to run the test and demo and we got back samples and video.
The tool was maybe 2 mm thick and 100 mm long and the tip was only 0.02 mm.
The tools and customer cases were in glass cases visible to several hundred visitors and pics with Gene Haas and US ambassador G. Philps and us are online in publications.
Professional ethics and courtesy and practice are why I don΄t share pics.
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