- 9
- 13 242
mike_made
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 15 เม.ย. 2010
Welcome to mike_made, where 'made' is a term used very loosely! Witness the spectacle of one man's quest to turn perfectly good machinery and material into questionable contraptions. Where eagerness to learn and ambition meets a complete lack of expertise.
วีดีโอ
CNC Milling, Lasers, Golf?!
มุมมอง 162หลายเดือนก่อน
Low quality shop content for the soul. If you thought my mill work was bad wait until you see my lathe work.
Terrible mechanic attempts to machine a putter
มุมมอง 2.8K2 หลายเดือนก่อน
Here’s my attempt at machining a putter on my Tracy 440 #cnc #tormach
A beautiful fall day on the Athabasca river trying out my home made spoons! #fishing #cnc
มุมมอง 5804 หลายเดือนก่อน
New fixture for machining #sendcutsend laser cut blanks on a #tormach 440 to make fishing lures
มุมมอง 7815 หลายเดือนก่อน
Machining a pattern into some brass to turn into fishing spoons.
Homemade fishing spoons with 3d printed dies
มุมมอง 1.3K5 หลายเดือนก่อน
Welding out my #minijetboat
มุมมอง 4647 หลายเดือนก่อน
A sufficient waste of time and resources
มุมมอง 1.7Kปีที่แล้ว
You do cool stuff, #subscribed
Brilliant.
Nice! A few things to consider: Don’t face the whole stock if you’re going to be machining the faced portions away. Could probably have just done some surfacing work on the little bit that was left from the original facing. Save time, tool change, and simpler. Definitely want to do minimum retraction on a tormach since the z axis speeds and acceleration is lower. Linking tab on all the toolpaths. For adaptive definitely set it to minimum and stay down amount to most. Compare estimated machine time before and after. Also, definitely want to optimize your feed heights. Retract the bare minimum to clear the stock or to clear the model on features that are lower. Z speeds are slow, minimize those. And the week after you switch to floor coolant you’ll wonder how you did without it. It’s a pain, annoying, etc, but tool life, surface finish, machine time, they all benefit. Take the plunge. I really liked your parallel toolpaths on the different angles for each facet. Aesthetically that was great!
Thanks for the comment I appreciate the feedback. One of my favourite things about TH-cam is the ability to reach people who all have something different to offer! Comments like this are the main reason I started making videos.
@ It’s amazing, isn’t it? I’m glad you’re making videos and hope to see many more! I’ve only been doing cnc since 2019 and it’s been a whirlwind. Always fun to see the paths people take. Merry Christmas!
I like how the endmill hyped itself up at 1:43 haha
What laser do you have?
@@ItzWheeler it’s a commarker b4 20w fiber laser, I think I’m going to have to manually calibrate it
What software are you using?
@@TheLucastrindade fusion 360
You can use "flow" for ball nose tool, nice strategy
Thanks! i'll give it a go next time.
For a beginner you did a great job. I have zero experience in cam so I hope I can learn from the comments. Great machine for a beginner btw. Subcribed!
Thanks for watching!
First of all, you have a +1 sub :), Second we want to see more machining, Third we want to see your car :)
Thanks for the sub! Definitely more to come
you can set "keep tool down" in the linking tab for the 3d adaptive
Thanks for the tip. I’m still very new to this!
Nice love your vids
Thanks!