Does anyone do this as a hobby?Probably not, but worth a shot.
11/17/2005 12:13:57 AM
how homebrew?I flirted with the idea of doing the research to what I would need for a machine to drill out circuit boards. I had no intentions of building it all from scratch but I suppose there probably exist some very detailed information out there to show you how to do it.Work dominates me these days and my entrepenurial spirit is dieing bit by bit.
11/17/2005 12:19:03 AM
homebrew as in removing stepper motors from heavy duty printers as to purchase as little as possiblemounting a rotozip as the cutteretc..drilling out circuit boards is def a good use for it, you're right. something im intrested in as well
11/17/2005 12:21:33 AM
guy sitting diagonal from me is building his own 4 axis mini-cnc. But it's not all scrapalot shit. He's making it so he can make precision parts for medical instruments. Fucker is a nut anyway.So far he has been machining parts since August, pretty much all day every day. So it's probably not worth the time or cost. Especially when you can buy a little 3 axis for a few hundred bucks
11/17/2005 12:51:47 AM
few hundred hmmm, must be really small
11/17/2005 1:06:20 AM
we had a little one in high school and if i remember correctly it was still around a grandcant imagine what you would get for just a few hundred
11/17/2005 1:49:24 AM
talk to ahmet, he knows a guy that built his own. basically some motors and a manual milling machine are all you need. there are a decent number of kits and instructions out there
11/17/2005 3:42:09 AM
http://www.harborfreight.com/cpi/ctaf/Displayitem.taf?itemnumber=44991http://www.harborfreight.com/cpi/ctaf/Displayitem.taf?itemnumber=47158I think they carry both in stock actually.
11/17/2005 3:43:08 AM
yeah noen see those fucking handles, thats were the computer controlled motors are neededand hence$rhode island[Edited on November 17, 2005 at 4:26 PM. Reason : .]
11/17/2005 4:26:01 PM
there is a site out there somewhere where you can upload your solidworks file and they will produce it for you at a cost.
11/17/2005 4:27:34 PM
^now we are getting somewhere, i could design the parts to build the machinethis is terminator 2 shit here
11/17/2005 4:28:42 PM
quinn,I'll ask my friend what the site is and post the address later.He's not off work yet.They wont let him use AIM from inside Langley woot just hopped onhttp://www.emachineshop.com/caution, results have been mixed. Its also not solidworks... but some homebrew thing. But since we're talking about homebrew [Edited on November 17, 2005 at 4:47 PM. Reason : .]
11/17/2005 4:40:45 PM
thanks manps: i think your car is cool
11/17/2005 4:55:54 PM
emachineshop is cool and all but part costs are fucking ridiculous. if you don't buy anything in particular bulk, you pay out the ass.
11/17/2005 4:59:08 PM
might be time to give the uncle a call, i just need to learn this cad/wtfever software before i bug him to waste his time
11/17/2005 5:01:44 PM
I just spec'd out this part:to be made out of 6061 aluminum, powdercoat finish, about 3"x1"x.5" came out to $8.79 per.
11/17/2005 5:33:25 PM
what quantity to get that price?
11/17/2005 7:47:25 PM
100
11/17/2005 8:34:18 PM
http://www.bmumford.com/xyz/xyz.htmlhttp://www.geocities.com/pfaudette/CNC_Router.htm
11/17/2005 8:53:44 PM
^^ yeah, and if you want a number closer to 1 it'll be more liek a couple hundred.
11/18/2005 12:41:57 AM
thanks cornbreadive found a multitude of websitescnczone ive been reading for a few daysi would really just like to meet with , and talk to someone in person who has built/uses one
11/18/2005 1:01:34 AM
11/18/2005 2:17:41 AM
11/18/2005 8:33:34 AM
its not the difficulty, its the fact that those cost 500$ and arnt even halfway to what i need.
11/18/2005 8:34:47 AM
^^relative to the fact that you want to build a high precision piece of metalworking equipment. If you already have in mind to make something that requires a fair bit of technical skill to do, then its not much of a leap of knowledge to actually building it.I never said building a car would be a cakewalk, but it's not all that fucking difficult technically either. It takes time and money. And it's still being worked on bitch.Also the fact that I have been watching a guy BUILD A FUCKING CNC FROM SCRATCH since August, I can comment at least a LITTLE on the cost, time and difficulty of doing so.^There is no fucking way in hell, even homemade, you are going to be able to make a full CNC for under a grand, unless you get nearly everything donated. It just isn't going to happen. Just the cost for materials alone is going to run you more than that most likely.Most of the home cnc projects you will read about are done by people who already have mills and or lathes, or work as machinists or have access to a full metal shop. And still, most of them start out with a prebuilt mill, like the cheap ones I referred you too, and retrofit them, because it saves you a TON of money over fully fabricating everything and purchasing the motors and drive components yourself.
11/18/2005 6:54:02 PM
now if all you want to do is use it to cut out paper and circuitboards (aka a dremel with a couple of stepper motors) you can build the whole thing out of legos and have what you want.but if you want something you can use to cut real material (wood, metal, acrylic etc), then cobbling something together is going to have constant problems, and will be imprecise as shit.
11/18/2005 6:56:06 PM
^im not even going to argue with you noen, lol
11/19/2005 12:14:25 PM