Greetings;
Actually, thinking of the springs out of old 1 wide 15+ foot tape
measures.
Has anyone done this, and taken a pix of how you anchored the ends of the
spring so that there was enough pivot available so that it didn't force the
spring out of shape with potential dirt leaks as it
On Friday 11 January 2013 15:04:59 andy pugh did opine:
Message additions Copyright Friday 11 January 2013 by Gene Heskett
On 11 January 2013 17:58, Gene Heskett ghesk...@wdtv.com wrote:
Actually, thinking of the springs out of old 1 wide 15+ foot tape
measures.
I doubt that they will
On Friday 11 January 2013 15:38:36 Jon Elson did opine:
Message additions Copyright Friday 11 January 2013 by Gene Heskett
On 01/11/2013 11:58 AM, Gene Heskett wrote:
Greetings;
Actually, thinking of the springs out of old 1 wide 15+ foot tape
measures.
Has anyone done this, and
On 11 January 2013 20:20, Gene Heskett ghesk...@wdtv.com wrote:
Humm, I'm 78 Andy, even at that, probably more time than money. What few
of those covers I have seen were all well above the hundred dollar marker
on this side of the pond.
Some of the mini-lathes come with spring-guards as
On Friday 11 January 2013 19:19:01 andy pugh did opine:
Message additions Copyright Friday 11 January 2013 by Gene Heskett
On 11 January 2013 20:20, Gene Heskett ghesk...@wdtv.com wrote:
Humm, I'm 78 Andy, even at that, probably more time than money.
What few of those covers I have seen
On 12 January 2013 00:23, Gene Heskett ghesk...@wdtv.com wrote:
Unforch, it doesn't appear they want any business from my side of the pond,
no links to individual products at all, and a very limited web page, looks
like a line card from a distributer for me.
Quite likely. DQR just happened to
Unforch, it doesn't appear they want any business from my side of the
pond, no links to individual products at all, and a very limited web
page, looks like a line card from a distributer for me.
And, while those are better prices, one would need one on each side of
the nut, which puts that
If it's worth the hassle to. Reshape the spring, I can picture wrapping it
around a ceramic rod spiraling. Then using 3 propane torches. Attached to point
toward the assembly from 120 degrees apart gradually move them from one end of
the assembly to the other, slowly enough to get the metal
On 12 January 2013 00:41, Ben Potter b...@bpuk.org wrote:
The mill has a sheet of PU over the ways, which does a surprisingly
effective job, I appreciate this doesn't work on lathes
Something like this might:
Something like this might:
http://byerplastic.en.made-in-china.com/productimage/hoJQxTkwhdWV-
2f0j00uZBTiMmjkRoO/China-Collapsible-Hose-Pipe-Respirator-Hose-for-
Hospital-Equpipment.html
Darn it Andy. It's the weekend, I'm trying to not think about stuff to make
for work! I have enough
On 11 January 2013 21:19, Gene Heskett ghesk...@wdtv.com wrote:
Cheap tape measures with big enough springs can be had for
a total spring cost of 15 to 20 USD.
http://www.alibaba.com/product-gs/497219348/cnc_machine_telescopic_spring_covers.html
$10 max price, though you need to buy 10.
plus
On Friday 11 January 2013 19:57:40 andy pugh did opine:
Message additions Copyright Friday 11 January 2013 by Gene Heskett
On 12 January 2013 00:23, Gene Heskett ghesk...@wdtv.com wrote:
Unforch, it doesn't appear they want any business from my side of the
pond, no links to individual
But yeah, that could work, assuming your screw is longer than your
travel to allow for compression.
Dyson hose has rather an impressive extension ratio..
Indeed. But when I'm at the faceplate I have ~3mm of travel before hitting
the ballscrew bearings - ~550mm of travel from there - I'd
On Friday 11 January 2013 20:02:12 Ben Potter did opine:
Message additions Copyright Friday 11 January 2013 by Gene Heskett
Unforch, it doesn't appear they want any business from my side of the
pond, no links to individual products at all, and a very limited web
page, looks like a line card
On 12 January 2013 01:05, Ben Potter b...@bpuk.org wrote:
Indeed. But when I'm at the faceplate I have ~3mm of travel before hitting
the ballscrew bearings -
Same here. If I was doing the conversion again the ballscrew would be
shifted 6 towards the headstock end. The part past the tailstock
On Friday 11 January 2013 20:13:00 Cogoman did opine:
Message additions Copyright Friday 11 January 2013 by Gene Heskett
If it's worth the hassle to. Reshape the spring, I can picture wrapping
it around a ceramic rod spiraling. Then using 3 propane torches.
Attached to point toward the
On 12 January 2013 00:48, Cogoman cogo...@optimum.net wrote:
If it's worth the hassle to. Reshape the spring, I can picture wrapping it
around a ceramic rod spiraling. Then using 3 propane torches. Attached to
point toward the assembly from 120 degrees apart gradually move them from one
end
On Friday 11 January 2013 20:28:49 andy pugh did opine:
Message additions Copyright Friday 11 January 2013 by Gene Heskett
On 11 January 2013 21:19, Gene Heskett ghesk...@wdtv.com wrote:
Cheap tape measures with big enough springs can be had for
a total spring cost of 15 to 20 USD.
TL;DR summary: advice needed on a LinuxCNC-based 3D printer project.
The background...
About a year ago, high-end DIY 3D printers outstripped the capabilities
of Arduino-based controllers: the gymnastics required to stuff
acceleration control into 8 bit microcontrollers appears to be a dead
On 12 January 2013 02:25, Ed Nisley ed.08.nis...@pobox.com wrote:
I think a HAL-based extruder model that could include second- and
third-order effects should provide better control than a simple
linear/angular axis
The laser rastering work might be relevant, that requires a constant
photon
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On 1/11/2013 8:25 PM, Ed Nisley wrote:
What I need...
Guidance around my blind spots!
F'r instance, I'm sure I've missed a hardware gotcha. Are there
more practical ways to drive five stepper axes, get a bunch of
digital I/O, and read
On Friday 11 January 2013 22:48:24 Ed Nisley did opine:
Message additions Copyright Friday 11 January 2013 by Gene Heskett
TL;DR summary: advice needed on a LinuxCNC-based 3D printer project.
The background...
About a year ago, high-end DIY 3D printers outstripped the capabilities
of
Hi all,
This is really a response to the LinuxCNC for DIY 3D Printing thread
without hijacking that thread.
After seeing the success of a few other people in getting lcnc running on an
Arm / Beaglebone, I thought I would take a shot at doing the same on the
Olinuxino, with the intent of driving
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