How fast can you cut with your homemade CNC?
Click on your maximum cutting speed (for whatever materials you commonly cut).
less than 10 IPM (4.2mm/s)
10-50 IPM (4.2 - 21 mm/s)
50-100 IPM (21-42 mm/s)
100 - 300 IPM (42 - 127 mm/s)
300 - 600 IPM (127 - 254 mm/s
faster than 600 IPM (254 mm/s)
How fast can you cut with your homemade CNC?
Click on your maximum cutting speed (for whatever materials you commonly cut).
cutting speed is based on spindle speed, theres also rapid speed,
my old setup, I would cut aluminum up to 50ipm, now up to 20,
I seem to get pretty stable rapids up to 200ipm but have it at 120 to make sure.
Jon
I am using a 233 Mhz computer and above 120 ipm the axis sometimes pause to get additional data for the cuts.
what are your specs for that machine?
The most up to date specs look something like this:
Footprint (total area it is occupying in the room): 750 x 650mm
Table height from floor: 890mm
Y table size: 450 x 300mm
Weight of Y: 17,5kg
Working area: 310 x 270mm
Weight of X-beam: 13,7kg
Size of the X-beam (height x width): 500 x 540mm
Size of Z: 350 x 150 mm
Weight of Z: 8.5kg
Z clearance from table top: 135mm
Maximum speed: 8000mm/min
Maximum acceleration: 700mm/s/s
Stepper motor data: NEMA23 2.7V/phase, 3A, 1.6uh, 0.9 Ohm/phase
Stepper motor driver: DQ542MA
Stepper drivers PSU: 44VDC unregulated supply, based on a thoroidal transformer
Motion controller: UC300ETH from CNC Drive
Spindle motor: 400Hz, 24,000 RPM 65mm diameter air cooled 1.5kW spindle
Spindle motor power supply: Bosch Rexroth EFC 5610 VFD
Spindle control via Modbus communication
CNC software: UCCNC from CNC Drive
I think the above is pretty accurate. I am making changes all the time since it is a DIY CNC of my own design. Note that axis weights are only approximate (parts measured before installation) and the weight does not include the steppers and wiring.
It can get over 100 IPM, but is turned down. That let's me have more time to hit the e-stop if needed.
Wayne Hill
mine can cut at 75 IPM.
"When in Touble, You Call DW"
(Theme from Dark-Wing Duck)
My little Nema23 steppers running from 14 volts on resistor limited full-step drivers will max out at 9IPM but will loose steps towards the ends of the rails ... so I run at 4-6IPM to keep it happy. It's SLOW, but way faster than hand tools!
CP
It's interesting that more people are either in the 10-50and 100-300 IPM brackets than in the 50-100 bracket. Not following the usual bell-shaped curve.
I wonder, is this because people are polarizing towards two seperate goals -- either to build affordable CNC or to see how fast/powerful they can build?
Or is it perhaps some other cause -- for instance, the people who built 10-50IPM CNCs are mainly cutting fine detail, wax, and the people who built 100-300 IPM machines are mainly building CNC routers?
I think the 10-50 is due to the affordable CNC factor.
Gerry
UCCNC 2017 Screenset
http://www.thecncwoodworker.com/2017.html
Mach3 2010 Screenset
http://www.thecncwoodworker.com/2010.html
JointCAM - CNC Dovetails & Box Joints
http://www.g-forcecnc.com/jointcam.html
(Note: The opinions expressed in this post are my own and are not necessarily those of CNCzone and its management)
I have a belt driven X axis that can cut at 800IPM but it's pretty useless at that speed because my Y axis max cutting speed is 90IPM. Unless I cut a bunch of horizontal grooves I never see anywhere near 800. I leave it set ~120IPM.
Regards Terry.....
This dual Y axis machine I have does 340ipm at night, but 320 during the day due to line voltage increase at night. the x does 400ipm, and the Z 240.
But this is cut back...as above, with a Makita router spindle, real usage is about 280 to 320 ipm for simple broad cuts...much slower for intricacy.
Still building, but will be happy with 10ipm. Another poll on the same theme could be asked, "How accurate is your machine?" IMO 100+ipm don't mean didly if it is constantly .015 out of tolerence. I'm shooting for no more than+-.002. I think tight machines may be harder to build than fast machines. With little experience building (so far) I'm probably wrong and will find speed is an outgrowth of accuracy and vice versa. Don't seem likely though. Loose and slick with powerful motors can probably blaze with speed as the cut wanders all over the place.
My little router (20 X 48) can rapid @ 200 IPM and I cut balsa @ 60 IPM. Cut 1/8 plywood @ 20 IPM. Router bits are the limit on feeds. I use .050 carbide bits for cutting model airplane parts. They will break on the plywoos at speeds over 30 IPM and cutting balsa at speeds over 60 it fuzzes up and needs the fuzz sanded off.
I wanna see pictures and specs on those 600ipm and above machines.
The fastest movement we get is just over 40ips
I cut at 80ipm now jog 120ipm to be safe.
http://www.cnczone.com/forums/showthread.php?t=15139
Joe
Currently I rapid at 1200ipm it could probably go faster, for cutting i can do 600ipm but i usually cut acrylic at 400ipm
http://www.cnczone.com/forums/showthread.php?t=37267
On which machine Joe? What size motors and what type driver and lead screw.
Sanghera.
my new one model 2006, HobbyCNC Board, 200oz motors, 1/2-10 leadscrews.Originally Posted by Sanghera