John Stevenson
Stainless
- Joined
- Apr 30, 2001
- Location
- Nottingham, England
Wowwee.
Test run last night of the Stevo Eee-lec-tronik hobber.
Managed to get the stepper driven head mounted on the horizontal mill
table in between customers calling and ringing up and generally being
a pain. Finished tidying the wiring for the driver box and connected
this to the head and the arbor driven encoder.
Found some scrap brass blanks and a decent 12 DP gear hob so I turned
three blanks up all the same. Fitted the blanks to the stepper head
and set the table over by 3 degrees 20 minutes which is the lead
angle of the hob.
Set the depth, wound clear and started this up, amazing to see it
start cutting and all the while you are expecting this to run all the
teeth off.
First one off had wavy teeth because I'd forgotten to tighten the
blank up.
I won't mention what happend to the second one After all this is
ONLY a test run, isn't it ?
Turned all three blanks down to get rid of the mistakes and restarted
using fewer teeth No problems this time.
I've put some pics on my web space, 10 in all
Just keep changing the last number from 1 thru to 10
http://homepage.ntlworld.com/stevenson.engineers/lsteve/files/hob%
20indexer1.jpg
Pics 1 and 2 are the head being built up and 3 is the driver box
rated at 67 volts and 4 amps.
Pic 4 is an overall view of the setup on the Victoria mill.
Pic 5 is a close up of a 12DP 21 tooth gear being cut.
Pic 6 is a close up of the finished driver box with plugs fitted but
before painting.
Pic 7 is similar to pic 4.
Pic 8 is a nice one. It shows three gears I cut tonight, all the same
size OD but they have 20, 21 and 22 teeth on them and they all mesh
together perfectly, only the 21T is the correct standard. These are
12 DP cut in brass.
Pic 9 is a close up of the finish obtained.
Pic 10 is a 20DP nylon gear of 52 teeth. Ironically I cut this for a
friend with a Micron hobber who's missing a 52 tooth gear and he
needs a 52 tooth to make one !!
John S.
Test run last night of the Stevo Eee-lec-tronik hobber.
Managed to get the stepper driven head mounted on the horizontal mill
table in between customers calling and ringing up and generally being
a pain. Finished tidying the wiring for the driver box and connected
this to the head and the arbor driven encoder.
Found some scrap brass blanks and a decent 12 DP gear hob so I turned
three blanks up all the same. Fitted the blanks to the stepper head
and set the table over by 3 degrees 20 minutes which is the lead
angle of the hob.
Set the depth, wound clear and started this up, amazing to see it
start cutting and all the while you are expecting this to run all the
teeth off.
First one off had wavy teeth because I'd forgotten to tighten the
blank up.
I won't mention what happend to the second one After all this is
ONLY a test run, isn't it ?
Turned all three blanks down to get rid of the mistakes and restarted
using fewer teeth No problems this time.
I've put some pics on my web space, 10 in all
Just keep changing the last number from 1 thru to 10
http://homepage.ntlworld.com/stevenson.engineers/lsteve/files/hob%
20indexer1.jpg
Pics 1 and 2 are the head being built up and 3 is the driver box
rated at 67 volts and 4 amps.
Pic 4 is an overall view of the setup on the Victoria mill.
Pic 5 is a close up of a 12DP 21 tooth gear being cut.
Pic 6 is a close up of the finished driver box with plugs fitted but
before painting.
Pic 7 is similar to pic 4.
Pic 8 is a nice one. It shows three gears I cut tonight, all the same
size OD but they have 20, 21 and 22 teeth on them and they all mesh
together perfectly, only the 21T is the correct standard. These are
12 DP cut in brass.
Pic 9 is a close up of the finish obtained.
Pic 10 is a 20DP nylon gear of 52 teeth. Ironically I cut this for a
friend with a Micron hobber who's missing a 52 tooth gear and he
needs a 52 tooth to make one !!
John S.