Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted
It's a Shars 4" milling vise, which I'm pretty sure is a knockoff of a Kurt. I don't have the $500 or whatever it is for a real Kurt, I think the Shars was about $100. 


Any idea if a traditional drill press can deal with ... perpendicular force ... I am not sure the proper term, against the drill arbor? I would think the answer is no?
Posted

You mean cutting horizontally, like milling? I would also guess no, as what typically holds end mills in a mill are tool holders with collets which have very specific runout tolerances. I'm not sure about putting end mills in a drill press, either (drill bits only cut axially, of course). 

Posted

I've certainly chucked an end mill in a hand drill to chop out something small when I was too lazy to dig out the dremmel. But even of the drill was OK with the side force, it is not fast enough for milling.

Posted

That's a bit of a loaded blanket statement... it depends on speeds and feeds for the material you are cutting and the end mills you are using, and how fast your drill press goes. But definitely not something I would try in general. 

Posted (edited)

I've used an end mill in a drill press to level out a heatsink surface.  I don't have a shaper......

Extreme care, innovation and fast reflexes are definitely indicated.......:lol:

Edited by wink
Posted
9 hours ago, luvdunhill said:

 


Any idea if a traditional drill press can deal with ... perpendicular force ... I am not sure the proper term, against the drill arbor? I would think the answer is no?

 

I used a vertical drill press a few years ago to mill the backside of a 10mm aluminium front panel in order to fit a 1/4 jack. I did very shallow passes of mess than 1milimiter each time (about 1/32 inch).

The chuck didn't suffer any abnormal wear.

Posted

A DAC, including an RPI as player. Input is ethernet. DAC chip is my favorite, AD1865. From the RPI it fed through an I2S buffer and reclock, than an I2S to PCM converter. That is not my design. The DAC board is my design, at the end, there is no low pass filter, the interstage transformer acts like that. Than, the triode amp and buffer circuit is designed by a friend, I built it on cnc milled plate and point to point wiring. Several modifications made, first I did not like it. It was too dry and sterile. That time the end stage was based on ECC83s. It is redesigned and made with 5687s. Now, it is pretty good. Once I "finish", I will design and get cut and bent a copper case. But now, I'm in a stage that I need a decent headphone amp, tho be able to listen to music when the kids are sleeping in the other room.

DSC08814r3.thumb.jpg.43657815ec986f04a1a936bf498c590f.jpg

  • Like 1
Posted

Milo (Al's alter ego) and I did some work on our router table/mortising machine today. It's starting to come together...

thumbnail.jpg

thumbnail (3).jpg

Milo did a huge chunk of the milling and drilling on this, and all the holes and pivot points lined up perfectly! Of course, he stacked the deck a little bit...

thumbnail (2).jpg

thumbnail (7).jpg

thumbnail (4).jpg

thumbnail (6).jpg

thumbnail (9).jpg

thumbnail (10).jpg

So upright, it's a regular router table, albeit a large one. tipped down, it's a mortising machine, or horizontal router table, useful for things like raised panels and such. We're really having fun building this and setting up shop in general. 

Still left to do... cutting the hole in the table top for the router lift, and painting/sealing.

  • Like 6
Posted
10 hours ago, Hopstretch said:

Milo looks like a bad seed. He does good work though.

Milo definitely need help with wardrobe, hair and makeup, but mostly a new director of photogphy 

  • Like 2
  • 2 weeks later...
Posted (edited)

Built this last weekend.  Peopoly Moai SLA 3D printer kit.  Build took about 4.5 hours, pretty straight forward and well thought out design. 

For those not familiar, SLA style 3d printers are quite different from regular FDM 3d printers.  Where FDM melts and extrudes plastic layer by layer to build a model, SLA uses a light source to cure a UV sensitive plastic resin layer by layer.  The resin sits in a small reservoir, a metal built plate presses down to the bottom, and the light source cures a given layer.  The reservoir then peels itself off the cured resin, the metal plate dips back into the liquid resin one step higher, and the next layer is cured from the light below.  Repeat over and over until your model is fulled 'pulled out' of the rub. 

The two typical methods of SLA printing are dubbed 'SLA' which uses a laser and galvanometers to trace each layers' design, and 'DLP' which uses a DLP or LED screen to project the stencil of an entire layer.  Advantage of SLA type is that it's a bit more precise/detailed, advantage of 'DLP' type is that it's cheaper and can cure an entire layer at once so it can be faster for larger models.  SLA resolution is limited to the size of the laser beam, DLP resolution is limited to the pixel size but is jagged in comparison.  As LED screens improve in resolution and get cheaper, I expect DLP to become more popular in the future.

SLA can be kinda messy, smelly, and is slower and considerably more costly than FDM 3d printing.  The resins right now also aren't that great mechanically - they're pretty brittle.  The advantage they have is that they're WAY more precise than FDM printers.  For this reason, they're used a lot by the dental, jewelry, and miniatures industries.  I already have an FDM printer that serves me well for rough prototyping, but this printer should be much more useful for creating production level short run molds.  I've wanted this ability for a while now but these machines are typically $4-10k+ all in, so this kit for a fraction of the price (~$1300) is a great deal.  Those interested in something similar but even cheaper (~$500) might want to check out the Wanhao D7 or Anycubic Photon, both DLP type machines, but you have to be willing to tweak things a bit more. 

 

Anyways, enough rambling.  Onto some build pics!

IMG_20180315_152400.jpg

Kit came in a big ol' box.  Very well packaged.

IMG_20180315_192124.jpg

Some of the electronics and the two galvanometers.  The laser shoots into those two little mirrors, which direct the laser up to the build area and control the X and Y positions for tracing out each layer.

IMG_20180317_102007.jpg

All put together.  Liquid resin stays in that clear vat, aluminum build plate dips into it from above to control Z position and holds the model.  Gotta keep the door closed so UV light doesn't start curing the resin.

IMG_20180316_213217.jpg

In action!  It looks really cool in person.  One thing I love is how quiet it is during operation - no problems letting this run overnight.  The laser is coming in from below.

IMG_20180317_101154.jpg

Post processing the final part.  This is just a little test ring to make sure things are working to spec and the build went as planned.  Agitate it in IPA for a while to get rid of any excess resin, agitate in water to rinse off.  Repeat a few times and then put in the sun or under a UV light for a while to fully harden.  I might get an ultrasonic cleaner later for this step since I'm inpatient. :P

Haven't printed anything terribly exciting yet, mainly just small calibration models to get dimensional accuracy locked in.  I'll post something more interesting later. :)

Edited by n3rdling
  • Like 7
  • Thanks 1
Posted
Inverse RIAA filter (have some extra PCBs, if anyone is interested)
iRIAA_MM.thumb.png.5e4b3100504cd4bdc6977da6587f9156.png

862050d15588c72a57d456bebc178d02.jpg

597e5289b5225532864247576158b385.jpg

79d738b436d829b2ceb0e306eeee2e8a.jpg

I might be interested in one of these if you have any left Marc. Or borrowing yours...
Where did you get the cute little case for this?


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Posted

I guess I'd be interested in one of the boards. PM me with details. I looked at the Muffsy website and found the hifisonix project, but didn't see a BOM. Do these come with the components?

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.