Todays Project - What did you do today? - Printable Version +- MetalworkingFun Forum (http://www.metalworkingfun.com) +-- Forum: Machining (http://www.metalworkingfun.com/forum-5.html) +--- Forum: Projects (http://www.metalworkingfun.com/forum-7.html) +--- Thread: Todays Project - What did you do today? (/thread-727.html) Pages:
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RE: Todays Project - What did you do today? - wawoodman - 03-16-2016 Penguin, Looks to me like a DYMO labeler is in your future... http://www.officedepot.com/a/products/3504987/Dymo-LetraTag-LT100-H-Label-Maker/ RE: Todays Project - What did you do today? - the penguin - 03-16-2016 I have to go to a job in the morning, to change out 3 VFDs, to a different model/brand and control package. After that I have to drive to a job for the gov't. The existing VFDs are Allen-Bradley, inverter type 3-5 hp VFDs, to be replaced by ABB brand VFDs, with selectable, 1-5 VDC, 1-10VDC or 4-20ma, control signals and a NEMA 12 enclosure. I hoping to keep the A-B VFDs, they are selectable for 230 vac 3 phase in/230 vac 3 phase out, to run a 5 hp motor, or 240 vac single phase in/230 vac 3 phase out to run up to a 3 hp motor. Just what I need in the shop for the 2 mills and the lathe. The job for the gov't, is a boiler start up in an arsenal for the US Army. Not my idea of fun or enjoyment, but has to be up and running by 4/1/16. Wish me luck. Last week the odometer on 2013 service van rolled over 90,000 miles. I use to be a boiler service technician, who drove to the jobsite to work, now I seem to be more of a truck driver, who occasionally fixes boilers. __________________ RE: Todays Project - What did you do today? - pepi - 03-16-2016 (03-16-2016, 12:47 PM)the penguin Wrote: So far I spent the majority of the day in the shop, cleaning and sorting. I had a quick job to do, so I spent almost all of the last 3 hours looking for a 1/8" carbide end mill. I finally found them, in the first drawer I looked in and multiple times afterwards. I thought they were 1/4" carbide end mills, I either need new glasses or learn how to read......................DAMN!! Damn Jack, you keep that up you will not reconize the place. RE: Todays Project - What did you do today? - EdK - 03-17-2016 (03-16-2016, 06:50 PM)the penguin Wrote: I hoping to keep the A-B VFDs, they are selectable for 230 vac 3 phase in/230 vac 3 phase out, to run a 5 hp motor, or 240 vac single phase in/230 vac 3 phase out to run up to a 3 hp motor. Just what I need in the shop for the 2 mills and the lathe. You'd definitely earn a few s if you scored those VFDs. Ed RE: Todays Project - What did you do today? - Mayhem - 03-17-2016 (03-16-2016, 06:50 PM)the penguin Wrote: ...The job for the gov't, is a boiler start up in an arsenal for the US Army. Not my idea of fun or enjoyment, but has to be up and running by 4/1/16. Wish me luck... I'm glad to see that the government has a sense of humor when it comes to setting project deadlines RE: Todays Project - What did you do today? - 12345678910 - 03-18-2016 (03-12-2016, 02:59 PM)the penguin Wrote: I've spent the majority of the day, so far in the continuing quest to get better lighting in the shop. So far about half of the light have gone from florescent and incandescent to LED. As the shop is a black hole, where light goes to disappear, it seems to be brighter and a better quality of light. What is the fininsh on the walls and ceiling ? White paint reflects 85%. RE: Todays Project - What did you do today? - Sunset Machine - 04-01-2016 My shop walls are white and there are cobwebs with chips dangling and oil splatters making a mess. And it's still dark; there's a flashlight in my toolbox. I'd prefer the ambiance of natural wood walls and a white ceiling - white does help. To each his own as my shop is NOT lab-like at all. What a hoot that would be! <grin> Okay. I corrected my brainfarted gearbox. A half-thou off, not bad for a 100 year old mill (not the one in the picture, that's a mill/drill for photo ops). RE: Todays Project - What did you do today? - Highpower - 04-04-2016 Finally finished up installing the DRO on my lathe. As usual it was another project that didn't go exactly as planned but I survived it anyway. It began with the arrival of the package being covered in shoe prints from end to end, as if someone had been using it for a diving board at their pool. The shipping box contained all of the component parts in their own separate boxes, that were thrown loosely into the larger shipping box. Everything looked like it was OK however. I started by locating the 5 holes needed in the back of the lathe bed to mount the backing spar that holds the Z axis scale. Drilled and tapped the first hole at the head stock end of the bed and attached the spar with a bolt. Leveled the back end of the spar (parallel to the saddle travel) and drilled and tapped the second hole at the tail stock end. Checking the full length of the spar showed that it was bowed down in the center slightly. (Remember those foot prints on the box?) I used a couple of machinist jacks in the center of the spar to get it straight again and drilled and tapped the final 3 holes in the middle. Since the side of bed casting isn't a machined surface I need to use the supplied leveling blocks behind the spar to make sure it was sitting plumb and parallel to the ways. I was slipping the leveling blocks onto each bolt when I discovered I only had 4 of them in the box - not 5. It's always something... I searched every box multiple times and didn't find one. I started looking at the paperwork that shows all the hardware that is supposed to be supplied and see FOUR blocks listed. What the ...? Digging further into the paperwork, I started looking at part numbers and discovered ENCO sent me the wrong backing spar! Instead of sending me the proper 36" spar (that has 4 holes in it) they sent me a 42" spar (with 5 holes in it) and then hack-sawed the ends off of it to make it 36" long! Seeing as I have already drilled and tapped the 5 holes in my lathe, I thought OK no big deal - I'll just call ENCO and have them send me one more leveling block. WRONG! Once again the only thing the MORONS at ENCO were willing to do, was to let me return the entire DRO package for a refund. They wouldn't pull a leveling block out of another box to send to me. They wouldn't contact the manufacturer and have them send me another block either. "You will have to do that yourself." I said that's funny because you certainly didn't have any problem pulling the wrong spar from another box and sawing it off before sending it to me!!! So "I" ended up calling Acu-rite myself and spoke to "Kevin" in the tech dept and explained my situation. He says... "Well, you'll have to contact Enco and...." I stopped him and told him I just got off of the phone with Enco, and what they wanted me to do. "Oh, HELL NO!" he says. Another leveling block arrived 2 days later - no charge. I got everything back together and was setting up the display. As I was trying it out I thought something isn't right with the X axis reading. The scales have the same resolution as the scales on my mill (.0002") and the mill has always been spot on. The Z scale on the lathe seemed to be working just fine, but I couldn't get a .0002 reading on the cross slide (X scale). It acted like it was skipping counts and would only display .0004" changes. So I was thinking great, now I've got a bad scale too. That was late last night and I decide to sleep on it. This morning I tried going through the troubleshooting section in the manual, and it basically says if you have a bad scale it has to be replaced - they don't "repair" scales. And then I had a thought. I went back to the lathe and toggled the X display from "diameter" to "radius" and BINGO! There is nothing in the manual about this, and I've never used a lathe DRO before but it kind of made sense that the resolution might double along with the "diameter" display choice. So I'm assuming all is good. [attachment=13094] RE: Todays Project - What did you do today? - Dr Stan - 04-07-2016 Finished up a cart for my new plasma cutter. Was concerned it would be too top heavy, but its quite stable. [/url][url=http://s1016.photobucket.com/user/drstan/media/DSCN1544_zps6n3aoumk.jpg.html] BTW, used dumpster tubing, old wheels probably from a lawnmower, a couple of re-purposed swivel casters, a left over piece of rebar, and some surplus nuts & bolts. RE: Todays Project - What did you do today? - Vinny - 04-07-2016 Looks good. Prolly something I need to do, but for now it's easier to just pick it up and carry it where I need it. |