Thread: Gear reducing kit recommendation
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24-12-2020 #1
Thank you for your reply!
I appreciate your efforts on forum and have been reading a lot of your posts lately. I have also seen vertical cnc machine you have put together, really nice work. I was surprised that that long screws worked that well, until then I thought that screws on machine that big are ridiculous, but you managed it with high pitch screws to avoid whip.
I have also seen design for rotating ball nut made by forum member Jonathan. Those seem really well made and simple. I have sent him the PM if he is willing to sell me 3 of those. But he has not been on forum for about 6 months, so I don't know if that will happen.
You are probably right about those Chinese gear reduction units. They are one piece units, yes, which is bad. And even if I get a high quality rack, there is no sense in getting a low quality gearbox.
My thoughts about servos are the same as yours. They have their place, but for my purposes they are overkill and added complexity (and cost). With proper steppers I should get if not same then very close results. If my steppers are missing stepps while carving or routing, then something else is wrong. And high rapids are not so important to me.
I like the idea of using ball screws with rotating nut, but have trouble finding them. But what is high precision in this case?
I was looking at a C7 grade 2525 ballscrew with machined ends. Price with delivery for 2 of those (3m) is 800 Euro (C7 grade, accuracy 0.05mm/300mm). From here:
https://www.tuli-shop.com/ball-screw-shaft ).
Will this be precise enough for 3d carving? This site does not offer more precise ballscrews with that high pitch. 3232 ballscrews would be about 100 Eur more (C7).
Another option I was looking for were racks. Was looking for Q6 or Q7 racks. Found Q6 racks here (with predrilled holes which is bonus), mod2
https://www.damencnc.com/en/straight...2010-6mm/a2687
They would cost me about 180 Euro/m
I was thinking about using their anti backlash worm gearbox with double pinions (ratio 5:1). But they are quite expensive (360 Euro per piece for gearbox + mounting plates for nema34).
https://www.damencnc.com/en/r-p-driv...15t/a554?c=364
Whole setup with a straight rack from this shop would cost me about 2300 euros for the x and y axis.
I have not looked into helical racks, if you know where to find suitable ones, please let me know. But I see that they are pretty rare in DIY router versions. And so is rotating ball nut.
At the moment, because I am unable to find rotating ballnut, my option is rack and pinion.
I will also look into 3 phase Closed loop steppers with 220Vac you mentioned.
What do you think about rack and pinion setup I mentioned here?
Im stuck here for weeks now :D
Thank you for helping.
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24-12-2020 #2
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25-12-2020 #3
Those screws where 2525 with 2:1 ratio using 8Nm 3phase closed loop motors and mains drives. They also had fixed ends at both ends of the screws and where preloaded slightly to tension the screws.
I don't think Jonathan does much with DIY CNC anymore as he's working now he's left university. I bought the last 6 sets he made. These are what I used on the 10 x 5 Router.
No probably about it, I'm 100% sure because I've worked on them, only last week I converted a router which used them and it was sloppy as hell. Just about every Chinese router I've worked on uses them.
Exactly, I've built quite a few large machines now that use 3 phase closed motors with mains drives and never had any issues with reliabilty or setting up with more than enough power and speed for even large machines, they are pretty much plug n play fit and forget.
I also have 600w Chinese servos fitted to my plasma machine which are way more powerful than required and nothing but a pain regards tuning.
If I was fitting servos to a router that used Rack n pinion then I'd only fit higher quality servos like, yuskawa, Mitsibishi or panasonic which provide tuning software to help with setting them up, esp with dual axis motors.
In terms of precision then yes 0.05mm will be more than enough for 3D work in woods. If all you are cutting is mostly woods, plastics etc then I wouldn't get bogged down with chasing high precision because it's pointless in materials that can't hold it anyway.
I would pay the extra 100eur and go for 32mm, it will be worth it and lower the chances of whip if your rotating the screw.
I would avoid these, I have worked on a machine that used those anti-backlash untis and was not impressed at all. They where difficult to setup and where constantly needing adjustment. They also caused premature wear on the rack/pinion. The Rack was low quality and wore out within 1 year and as been replaced with helical rack I believe.
They are rare in DIY because they are not cheap but most good engineering suppliers will be able to supply them.
Rotating ballnuts are not so common and might require you have your own made. This is the only other place I have seen rotating ballnuts. Use google translate.
https://team-haase-shop.de/maschinenelemente.html-use common sense, if you lack it, there is no software to help that.
Email: [email protected]
Web site: www.jazzcnc.co.uk
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25-12-2020 #4
Very elegant setup. Just now I noticed that it is rotating nut driven as you mentioned.
I have found those before, but max nut size is 20mm, while I should look for 32mm as you suggested. So I will try make it locally. I guess 20mm is too low.
I think you are 100% right then. Thank you for saving me money.
Thank you for saving me money, again.
Could you let me know where can I get motors you used?
And thank you again for helping.
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25-12-2020 #5
Look again because now they have 25 and 32 versions.
These are what I use. They are not the cheapest and for not much more money you can get servos, but like I say they are simple and reliable without any of the hassles servos introduce. I've fit dozens of sets so far and never had a single issue.
https://www.aliexpress.com/item/3279...7c1f6f37fvbQyT-use common sense, if you lack it, there is no software to help that.
Email: [email protected]
Web site: www.jazzcnc.co.uk
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27-12-2020 #6
Found it and sent them email. Thanks.
These are what I use. They are not the cheapest and for not much more money you can get servos, but like I say they are simple and reliable without any of the hassles servos introduce. I've fit dozens of sets so far and never had a single issue.
Those got very high inductance. 18 mH. Is this issue? They operate on high voltage to compensate i guess and three phases. These do not need power supply, right?
On the other forum I was reading that most important is low inductance, because it enables torque at higher rpm. I am not able to find toque curve for these.
Previously I was looking at these. 2 mH, 5 Nm
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Free-Ship-4.../274560683235?
But can't find torque curves for either of them.
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27-12-2020 #7
It's all relative to the Voltage, these run on 220Vac so higher inductance isn't an issue. Like I say I've fit dozens of sets and I now stock these motors/drives and fit them to all the larger machines I build. They spin fast and have plenty of torque.
For instance, the vertical 10 x 5 router I recently built uses a single 10Nm motor on the gantry (X-Axis) with a rotating ball nut that lifts the Z-axis which carriers a heavy ATC spindle and all the pneumatics, etc. That motor lifted my friend who weighs 120Kg and the spindle etc clean off the floor at 15mtr/min so I wouldn't be too worried about high inductance or lack of torque.
No, they don't need PSU they run directly from the mains supply.
I wouldn't trust that datasheet, I've never seen any Nema 34 motor with 2Mh inductance, most 3-4Nm Nema 23/4 have an higher inductance than that.-use common sense, if you lack it, there is no software to help that.
Email: [email protected]
Web site: www.jazzcnc.co.uk
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