Looking into a used home shop model , would appreciate any advice..
Looking into a used home shop model , would appreciate any advice..
It's a no brainer.
one man home shop looking for a cnc mill small enough to get through a 38'' door. will reinforce the floor for the mill.
Second thought, let's end this with a simple answer-----NO. There are none.
Two Haas VF-2's, Haas HA5C, Haas HRT-9, Hardinge CHNC 1, Bother HS-300 Wire EDM, BobCAD V23, BobCAD V28
Like I said before, this is a no brainer. I just went and looked on the Haas site and found this: Haas OM-1A | Haas Automation, Inc. | CNC Machine Tools . Where were you looking?
any macnines i looked at would not be able to get thru our front door.. we do not have a garage.. I know the mikini mechatronics goes thru 36 inch door, and is only 2000 lbs. , which i would reinforce the floor, and ceiling underneath the machine..
I JUST HAVE HEARD ALOT OF NEGATIVE COMMENTS ON THIS SITE FROM OWNERS OF SAID MACHINE..ANY ADVICE would be appreciated
buy the machine , knock the wall down , move the machine in and put the wall back up
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A poet knows no boundary yet he is bound to the boundaries of ones own mind !! ........
Two Haas VF-2's, Haas HA5C, Haas HRT-9, Hardinge CHNC 1, Bother HS-300 Wire EDM, BobCAD V23, BobCAD V28
Yeah, I'm afraid that buying a used tool room mill, cutting a hole in the wall and replacing it after installation would be cheaper than a used Office Mill.
Aside from that: we haven't determined what he wants to do with it. The Office Mill is a high speed spindle, suited for small parts, dental work, jewelry, etc. If the OP genuinely needs to do common milling work, an Office Mill ain't gonna' do it.
Greg
Yes to all of that. In fact, if he can reenforce the floor he may own the house. In that case a shed built behind the house and an old VF-1 would be a better/less expensive choice. Or an add on garage or in the garage.
Many older early 90's VF-1s go for under $10,000. They are good machines and easy to repair and parts are available. My 91 is still running at the shop that bought me out.
A mini mill will run on single phase power, but a phase convertor is cheap and easy for a VF series mill.
Mike
Two Haas VF-2's, Haas HA5C, Haas HRT-9, Hardinge CHNC 1, Bother HS-300 Wire EDM, BobCAD V23, BobCAD V28
i would be able to spend up to 20,000. on a mill capable of milling ss parts for a robotic arm and/or robot parts.
i can't knock the wall down because of incorporated village and their over eager building inspectors, and our house is on the main road
If you are planning on making any money at all, find a very small industrial unit or even one to share and put the mill there. If like here, where I am, you have to deal with a strict code enforcement structure, it is just not worth the hassle to try to do it at home. You should, depending on where you live, be able to get a small unit for about $6,000 for a year or less.
$20,000 for a mill does not include a ton of money for tooling and tool holders. During the worst part of the recession, I bought my VF-2 for $12,000. But, I have invested another $10,000 + for tooling and such, hum maybe more and I repaired it myself.
Find a small shop like mine and you can get the parts you need made for less than the cost and learning curve that it will be for you to get a mill of your own. It is not just the cost of the machine, it is the learning curve to know how to run it and tool it, provide work holding etc. I work with inventors and such all the time.
I know it sounds inviting, but setting up a machine with all the tooling and knowledge it takes is quite a task. Sounds easy, but it is not.
PM me and I'll help you out.
Mike
Two Haas VF-2's, Haas HA5C, Haas HRT-9, Hardinge CHNC 1, Bother HS-300 Wire EDM, BobCAD V23, BobCAD V28
Buy a Tormach 770 or 1100. I moved my 770 thru a 36" door without a problem.
Wade
^^^^ This. Tormach 770.
PM-45 CNC conversion built/run/sold.
learning on my manual ,mini metal lathe and mini mill, I need a larger workspace, and yes , I DO know how difficult this is.. But its in my blood, I am thinking about building a better worship for awhile now. the tormach seems a bit small, and uses steppers
IF I KNEW i could start in my own home, I might wait 6 months and put more towards the cnc mill