Gantry CNC

From London Hackspace Wiki
Revision as of 16:16, 18 October 2015 by Matt9 (talk | contribs)
Gantry CNC
GantryCNC.jpg
Model LHS Design
Sub-category CNC
Status Under construction
Consumables Router / Milling Cutters, material to cut
Accessories NA
Training requirement Yes
ACnode Yes
Owner LHS (spindle and VFD currently on loan) (Frame Dean)
Origin LHS Built
Location Basement,
Maintainers CNC Team, Robotics, Metalbashers,

Summary

This system can cut 2d and 3d shapes from materials such as wood, plastic, metal and composites. Useful for cutting things that can't be cut in the laser cutter. We made this CNC from the UCL donated linear slides and stages, and other things lying around the space, and some bits and pieces that members had. Any suggestions for improvements / modification are welcome.

Specs

  • Spindle 1750 to 17500rpm
  • Rapid traverse rate at 100% 2000mm/min
  • Axis travel
    • X(cross) 850mm
    • Y(longitudinal) 960mm
    • Z(vertical) 80mm (Phase 1), 200mm (Phase 2)

Technical

The system currently runs LinuxCNC on the PC built into the base.

Using the system

  • The spindle is currently fitted with an ER20 collet chuck and can take cutters up to 13mm diameter. Collets can be found on top of the Boxford CNC.
  • To start the spindle, press the green button on the VFD. Use the up and down keys to vary the speed.

Gnerating g-code from your designs

There are a lot of different options for preparing a g-code file which can be loaded onto the CNC to cut a design. Some examples of free software include;

2D Packages

3D Packages

When using Fusion 360, in order to post to the Hackspace CNC machines, the Generic EMC2 post-processor should be selected when finally saving the g-code file. LinuxCNC recognises the "ngc" file extension although any extension can be used.