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MotorCityMinion

eMC Learning Group
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Everything posted by MotorCityMinion

  1. Mastercam doesn't have an easy button, nor will it turn you into a machinist. Follow this link and get all the info you need on Milling to get you started. http://www.kennametal.com/en/support/techn...itories/referen celibrary/en_US/referencelibrary.xml&id=/repositories/referencelibrary/en_US/referencelibrary.xml&section=support
  2. Maybe disabling it in msconfig might work. (Avoiding IT personnel). I'd run just the minimum # of programs for a few days, then turn them back on 1 at a time, wait a few days and repeat. That might help you find the culprit then apply some tweaks. UG, MC and and explorer twice with outlook, sounds like your pushing that system.
  3. Running a duel core AMD on home now. Cruising along fine.
  4. -.- I don't consider myself sloppy, or a poor planner. I have programmed many parts from home, with a cold one in front of me. Funny how the numbers stay the same when I take the program into work, despite what some people claim here. One work offset for the entire part (rotory table), regardless of the number of faces, or number of parts. Try and set your parts at a nice round number away from the cl of rot. If you set your working suface at A0. to Z+10., X+5., it becomes X-10., Z+5. when rotated 90. deg.
  5. Version X Two problems with this surface. The first is that it wont size out when I post the g-code. The distance across the green surfaces is 1.215, and symmetrical about the Y axis. I'm using a .50 bullnose with a .125 rad. It should post with y +/- .3575, but I'm checking my extents and seeing .3486? Stock left on drive surfaces is set to zero. Max step over is set to .01, tangential line length set to .25. Corner rads are .25 and .50 in the pocket. Second issue. With depth limits set to -2.28 max, I'm seeing -2.2841 at every approach, and a bunch of x/z taper moves across the bottom. The lower left corner of the pocket starts at X3.4085, Z-2.28, and the .50 rad starts at X4.8184,Z-2.28 on the actual part. The bottom of the pocket is flat. GRRR. Here is the code I'm getting: Could the net surfaces be out of alignment with the wire frame geometry? N985 G00 Z.2443 N990 Z1. N995 X3.0326 Y0. N1000 Z-2.1841 N1005 G01 Z-2.2841 N1010 X3.2825 Z-2.28 N1015 X3.4585 Z-2.2771 N1020 X3.641 Z-2.2746 N1025 X3.8351 Z-2.2726 N1030 X4.0556 Z-2.2714 N1035 X4.3118 N1040 X4.5528 Z-2.2726 N1045 X4.7597 Z-2.2755 N1050 X4.7631 Z-2.275 N1055 X4.7817 Z-2.2714 N1060 X4.8006 Z-2.2669 N1065 X4.8195 Z-2.2614 N1070 X4.8384 Z-2.255 Close, and looks good machined, but still wrong. Any clues? Thanks for your help.
  6. The vegetable base stuff is expensive and builds up in every nook & cranny in the machine, and takes forever to clean out of the machine. Think of a can of bacon fat solidified. Ya, it does stink to high heaven if it doesn't get churned everyday. Blaser does make an awesome product though.
  7. Just curious. I work primarily with .IGS files and have not had any problems with them so I guess that what I don't know, won't hurt me. What are the benefits of X_T and step files? The parasolids actually create more work for me, as I end up stripping out 3D geometry just to clarify the views and make chaining easier. Should I be converting the .IGS to x-t or step? I'm thinking that might be redundant or even mess up the drawing accuracy. Thoughts anyone?
  8. Try the settings/parameters page at the Haas to turn features on and off. Our vf3's and vf4's read A0. no problem, even though there is no rotary axis on the machine. MPMASTER blows away the generic Haas post, but both work fine. I turn the A axis off in Mastercam.
  9. Flame suit on. What do you do when; the fixture gets reworked? MCM: re-work it properly. the job gets run on a different machine? MCM: Post to the new machine the material came in undersized but is still usable with an offset change (due date in two days)? MCM: Issue a NCR to purchasing then grab some shims. the material was cut crooked so you need to clamp 1/4" max to keep the part from "squaring" itself.? MCM: Change saw blades. Nubs. Centerline of rotation is the same on any machine, which BTW, does in fact allow a programmer to program from the pub across the street. If your operators can actually put a fixture where it belongs, it will work on any machine, just change the post. Of course I'm talking about programming real work, with multiple planes on it in increments other than 45. and 90. deg, not the rough sawn raw material that any noob could run on a Bridgeport. Did I make it through the interview? Time for a brew. Join me across the street before the center of this pub starts to rotate.
  10. Turn on the restart feature in the parameters. Cursor to the point in the program where you want to start machining. Turn it off after the tool finishes or weird moves take place when the next tool starts.
  11. Larry, there is a HUGE advantage to working this way. No reprogramming and no trig work the next time you run the job. Also, tool lengths, relative to the spindle nose and in set-up sheets remain the same if you place the part in the same location at every run. If your running multiple pallets, it gets even easier when you locate off center of rot. A lot of peeps have trouble grasping this concept if it's there 1st time around with horizontals. Heh, some never do, and others can't even rotate the part other than in 90. deg. increments.
  12. 140sfm /.0015 per tooth in mild steel. 300sfm / .003 for aluminium. This worked on a single point tool, (6 teeth on the same plane though, carbide tool from Micro 100), going 2.65 dp. Had to offset the dia. in mild steel quite a bit .
  13. I've milled .04 thick glass fabric using a sacrificial piece of stock and toe clamps. I was able to mill .02 off the top, and bury the e-mill on the profile, maintaining a .002 tolerance. Leave a tang on one end, mill as much of the profile as you can. Use can use the e-mill to punch holes as well. M00, put a clamp on the finished side, remove the other clamp from the tang, then mill off the tang. Clamps for lathe inserts work good for this if you have some lying around. Use a penny (stone or sand it so it doesn't leave marks, or a chip breaker to spread out the clamping forces. Use a stone on the part in between moving clamps to give it a brushed looking finished. You could also get creative with a small e-mill to finish the surface with swirls, curves, diagonal lines,and so on. [ 02-26-2008, 12:58 PM: Message edited by: MotorCityMinion ]
  14. Head the fire warnings. I caught a lathe bed full of mag chips on fire. Somebody used the lathe and didn't clean out the chips. It went up very, very fast. Cleared out half the shop in under 2 minutes after I let loose with the fire extinguisher. Don't play with it or "show your kids". Before you know it , they'll be trying to light every piece of metal on fire.
  15. A killer card in an older PC may also be overkill. That 3700 looks like a good choice for speed. Not knowing the prices makes the choice tough though. The Quadro's are not cheap by any means. If financial resources are limited, the retail cards for gamers might be a better option. 8800 GT perhaps?
  16. Dude, quote: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 11. Issues with your reseller should be resolved directly with your reseller and/or CNC Software. Airing out your issues using the forum will not be tolerated. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FAQ I would kindly ask you to please refrain from your issues with your reseller. MCM: Both positive and negative issues? Heh I knew that would irk somebody. Take all the training you want. All I'm saying is that, get you're feet wet first. Get up and running, make some parts and spend the profits on the reseller training when you can understand and absorb what they are teaching. You'll be able to retain and put to use more of that training in this way.
  17. I agree, don't spend money on reseller training, too much info too fast, and costly. Get some videos/books and contact someone that can come to your facility and deal with your needs in house. I do one offs all the time, so the learning process takes off fairly quickly, plus you already have one of the finest resources, this forum.
  18. I quit a job after 7 1/2 years because they were adamant that I start programming in Mazatrol instead of EIA. The company was in the process of reviewing different cam packages, everything looked Greek to them, and they're still looking for programmers/set-up people today. There's no doubt about it, when it comes to machining a lot of holes on multiple planes with different tools, Mazatrol shines. (We machined alot of engine blocks, heads, and other similar castings. Mazatrol milling, IMHO, SUX. Mazatrol is also a good system for new machinist with no g-code background. You can get up and running fairly quickly. After using Mazaks for almost 13 years, I can honestly say I don't miss em'. I would not call the transition easy though. Consider it bad medicine. In the long run, you'll be using MC on different machines and increasing your flexibility.
  19. Found this, and it also works good. Ocean Lacky Senior Member Member # 10728 posted 06-27-2007 09:51AM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- quote: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- "can not extend trimmed surface" -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Try the 'Extend Trimmed Surface Edges' function. It won't alter your original surface, but creates a new surface adjacent to the edge of the selected surface. Really handy for just this sort of thing.
  20. If that doesn't work, I'll try to figure out how / where to upload it on the fpt. You should be getting it twice, I mailed one out this morning. I work afternoons so after 3:00 I'm usually off line. Just didn't want you to think I was ignoring you.
  21. Oops. That pitch description should have read .125 of pitch. Actual full pitch is .896. The .bmp that Paint creats realy mucks up the images. .JPG was worse. What apps are you guys using for image editing that retains the image quality as seen in mastercam?

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