Thread: cnc router for novices
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11-07-2019 #1
hi everyone, im sure this has been covered plenty of times but i cant find anything in the forum. i am complete beginner but have been eager to learn about cnc machines for a few years now,i first got a manual mill a year ago and now i have got to grips with that im now looking for a small cnc router/mini mill that is capable of cutting the odd peice of alluminium but i am now realising that a cheap and good cnc machines do not come cheap
can any one point me in the right direction of a cnc router or mini mill and possibly a company that allows you to finance them?
thanks in advance guys
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12-07-2019 #2
anyone?
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12-07-2019 #3
Why not look to convert your existing mill to CNC?
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12-07-2019 #4
I started to look into that but there is no kits for my machine and piecing one together is far behind my skill set at the moment. Maybe in the future when I get to grips with the workings of them
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12-07-2019 #5
I'm not going to labour the point and this is likely my last reply on this thread because I cannot answer your specific questions. But, if you want to learn then adapting a mill to CNC will help you learn an awful lot about how it works. Of interest what mill do you have?
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12-07-2019 #6
Thanks for your help, my mill is only a Clarke cmd300
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12-07-2019 #7
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13-07-2019 #8
Thanks for the info, do you think it would be worth buying a chinese cnc router and upgrading the spindle motor and stiffening up the frame?
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13-07-2019 #9
My first entry into this as a hobby was with a Marchant Dice router - a small affair of some 50x30 cm footprint and a bed similar to a 3016 (maybe a little less - it's been a while!). Although of English build, I'd equate it largely to a cheap Chinese router.
As part of my dabblings, and due in no small part to the original spindle motor burning out I did replace the spindle with a 800W water-cooled spindle motor.
It was next-to-useless, apart from a vehicle to learn about the weakness of the design.
My intent at the time was to do things that are intrinsically difficult - engraving, isolation routing, small aluminium cutting - not of which tolerate a sloppy frame, and all of which presented frustration rather than pleasure.
I replaced that with a Starmill, and later supplemented that with the SX2.7.
If you want to go the router-route then don't look to buy something that yourself recognises as being unsuitable with the view to redressing the design flaws - either buy a suitable machine outright or build from scratch. Having the Clarke manual mill you can do a lot of the work yourself.
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13-07-2019 #10
You have a good point there, maybe I will look into getting some plans and try figuring something out for my mill, it just seems very daunting because I'm not good at electrics and I don't really know how they work. Do plans and instructions exist on the net?
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