Hi Lebies,

Welcome to the forum. Agree with Eddy, plus a couple more views on your design:

That is a large machine to also cut aluminium. It's not so much about taking lighter cuts and going slowly to compensate for lower machine stiffness (which will be likely with a large machine), but just that you don't have the stiffness at the cutter so it will vibrate, get hot, and go blunt. To compensate you will end up beefing things up but at this size it all gets heavy and the design could run away with you. Just be realistic about what it could do at this size and don't expect too much on the aluminium cutting.

You have a very large offset from the Z axis to the Y rails - I can see that you are trying to mount them on the rear part of the gantry where the gantry is locally stiffer, but I think you will be worse off overall due to the offset. I would mount them on the front of the gantry closer to the Y rails, then if the ballscrew clearance allows push the central extrusion forward as much as possible. Then close off the open back with a simple plate of moderate thickness, say 10mm. That way you are getting back towards an overall box section.

The end plates on the gantry look very thin. I would use 12mm minimum here (aluminium), and for the ones underneath to mount to the X axis bearings.

Will you add a bed to this? The spacing of the cross members of around 600mm is quite large. Another 2 member would be my minimum. Don't underestimate the bed stiffness as this is what hold the workpiece against the cutter forces. Vibration here is just as bad as vibration on the tool - difference is it is much easier to do something about by adding more support.

X axis motors - you mention running them in opposite directions to each other? Not sure why you need to do that. They should normally run the same direction (both clockwise or both anti-clockwise) otherwise the gantry will be pulled into a serious racking problem! Perhaps you are confused about running twin ballscrews on one axis, or maybe I misunderstood your intentions there.

Looking forward to see how it progresses. I'm sure you'll get plenty of other support as you go . . .