Ox
Diamond
- Joined
- Aug 27, 2002
- Location
- West Unity, Ohio
"Air" spindle bearings?
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Think Snow Eh!
Ox
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Think Snow Eh!
Ox
This is more the semiconductor or cmm guys world. Light loading."Air" spindle bearings?
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Think Snow Eh!
Ox
..... and according to the "excellent" tradition, the author asked a question and disappeared![]()
I hope I'm wrong.And how doo you come to that conclusion?
His profile shows that he was logged in here as recently as late yesterdee afternoon.
You're sure that he hasn't been reading all posts here?
you're wrong![]()
This is going to sound stupid. Who knows, maybe it is, but could you put a close fitting spindle liner in the subspindle and then mount an air gun to the turret. After you turn the second end on the subspindle, push it into the subspindle and then blow it clear through and out the right side.you just mean to make a tray behind the sub-spindle and let the parts fall in there? With the Haas, the sub-spindle is hollow, so that could work. But I'm afraid that the parts will be launched when it starts turning again. I don't have any way to push the part completely out of the sub-spindle, which would mean that one part would be clamped in the chuck and one or maybe two parts would be loose in the spindle, which would then turn (sounds pretty scary to me ).
@Orange Vice you are right, a robot cell is definitely the best choice. But since I started last year and already have a lease on the Haas lathe, I don't really want to get into more debt. Last summer the work stopped for a while and then the monthly lease is quite a burden.
Or ..... To make a "robot" even cheaper, 2-coordinate, using pneumatic cylinders. Yes - much less versatile, but much cheaper.You could build your own 2 or 3-axis gantry unloader for a few grand using Clearpath servos
@Orange Vise , now were talking, that would be great. Just 1 pickup point for material pickup ( magazine style ) and a conveyor belt or slide, drop point for unloading parts. Almost like the Haas APL.
Are there any kind of off the shelf gantry profiles for sale ? of should I cook something up ?
True.Or ..... To make a "robot" even cheaper, 2-coordinate, using pneumatic cylinders. Yes - much less versatile, but much cheaper.
Just got an email from Haas about exactly that, very rudimentary looking combination of servo and pneumatics to make a swing in/out, pick up/drop off "robot"
https://www.haascnc.com/machines/ve...eb01_2023&PID=0002433763&deliveryName=DM18104
I haven't looked much into running servos on Arduino, what is it specifically about the Clearpath motors that make them favorable over anything else?
I haven't looked much into running servos on Arduino, what is it specifically about the Clearpath motors that make them favorable over anything else?
@Milling man, Sorry, I couldn't resist.
To get back to my question:
@Orange Vice you are right, a robot cell is definitely the best choice. But since I started last year and already have a lease on the Haas lathe, I don't really want to get into more debt. Last summer the work stopped for a while and then the monthly lease is quite a burden.
@Ox, you just mean to make a tray behind the sub-spindle and let the parts fall in there? With the Haas, the sub-spindle is hollow, so that could work. But I'm afraid that the parts will be launched when it starts turning again. I don't have any way to push the part completely out of the sub-spindle, which would mean that one part would be clamped in the chuck and one or maybe two parts would be loose in the spindle, which would then turn (sounds pretty scary to me ).
I've been tinkering in between jobs and almost got something working on the Okuma, will upload a video tomorrow.
Cheers, Peter
You are so right to be concerned about chip management. Without that, failure is assured.View attachment 385069
The list keeps getting longer as I try to get into automation, I don't even want to think about chip management at the moment.
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