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24-11-2018 #2
Hi folks!
I have not designed anything yet as I still struggle to decide which design route to take. Your help here will be really appreciated!
What I want:
- a machine capable of milling aluminium with a decent speed and surface finish
- a cutting area of about 600 x 900 mm
- to be lightweight, with a small footprint. To be able to move through a 80 cm door (partly disassembled).
I was starting from Jonathan and Routercnc designs. Then I tried to find ways to add damping and gantry stiffness without adding a lot of weight.
The easiest and fastest design to build is Jonathan's framewith Routercnc's gantry
, all welded RHS steel and epoxy levelled. But those RHS left empty look so... 'not professional'. The stiffness isn't great and they ring like a bell.
For the frame, filling it with sand (after moving/assembling) looks like a good idea.
The gantry needs to remain lightweight. What could be used to fill the RHS to add damping, stiffness without adding to much weight?
This aluminium foam looks so sexy.. But how is it produced? How complicated/expensive? I couldn't find an answer yet.
And here's an article about it: Vibration Damping Analysis of Lightweight Structures in Machine Tools
Another idea is filling them with foam concrete.
But in both cases the filler will shrink by cooling/curing and maybe detach from the steel walls.
There are other damping techniques/materials but do we have access to them? http://www.aspe.net/publications/Ann...IS/BAMBERG.PDF
Then I compared the stiffness of rectangular hollow section steel vs. aluminium t-slot profile.
Adding a 500N force in the middle in a supported two ends configuration, 160 x 80 x 5 mm x 1 meter RHS steel (18 kg) will deflect 0.1 mm and the 160 x 80 mm x 1 meter aluminium t-slot profile (13.5 kg) is deflecting only 0.012 mm. I have no idea which of the two is better at vibration damping. The only advantage that I see for using steel for the gantry is the price, 5-6x cheaper than aluminium extrusion.
Most of the 'real' metal cutting machines are using grey cast iron which has 20x or more vibration damping capacity than steel. And it won't bend but break.
Iron casting with lost foam technique isn't that complicated/expensive. But how strong should a 1 meter gantry be? How heavy will it be? I couldn't find any information on cast iron gantry design...
I am just wondering what material is Datron using for the gantry of their M8Cube CNC?
Here is another way to add damping but the cost is far beyond the budget of a DIY cnc. https://www.machinedesign.com/bearin...on-linear-axes
What do you think? Any comments are welcomed as I'm lost in so much technical information/alternatives!
Paul
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