Cool. I'm an old woodworker who is just getting started building a specialized CNC machine. Some great ideas here that I'll incorporate into the finished project.
Very nice looking build and it seems to work very well. I applaude your addition of the fire extinguisher to the top. However, You really should also mount one in the area where your shop vac, dust collection as well as the power strips. That area could also be an area that would be a higher instance of fire. With all the sound proofing foam, any small fire is going to grow exponentially due to all that foam. Just a thought from an old retired firefighter. :)
Very nice CNC system. My CNC is on a cart with drawers, but the enclosure so far exists only in my head, and now I'm weighing incorporating some of your ideas. Thanks.
Thank you so much for this. I'm just getting into CNC, still shopping for the machine, and this answers my worries about a home shop for, not only noise, but for dust as well. Awesome and thank you also for keeping your videos free of the buffoonery, memes, and other attempts at comedy that so many try to incorporate. Well done.
Thanks! Trust me I’m a buffoon, but I hide it most of the time 😆 yes this will take care of the noise and dust 100% also look at the quiet line of dewalt shop vac, they are orders of magnitude quieter, it’s what I use now in this unit. It is big (negative)! But does its job
Hi Sandra, I have zero complaints and have been told by much more serious cnc owners that I chose well for the price range I was looking at. This is my first cnc and I wanted something that was not bottom of the barrel but decent quality at an "affordable" price. I would get their newer larger version as it has come up many times where I just needed a little bit more room.
Great idea. I think you could sell some plans to the CNC cabinet build. Enjoying your content and the personable/ comfortable manner you have with the camera and mic.
@@BitnerBuiltI think you should patent the build...if you plan on selling the plans...don't go cheap...normally I prefer cheap plans but this would have been a huge task...you could get rich off of this build alone...you deserve it
@@fdort3971 haha thanks but I always put my stuff out there for free, I like how the 3d printing community designs stuff and then just shares it out for everyone, try to do the same in whatever I’m building
What a nice enclosure. You have thought about lots of details. Amazing! I don't have much problem with noise because I will be using the spindle and the 1.5 hp is in the closet next to the CNC router but I do want to have a see-through thick plexiglass enclosure from three sides just for safety reasons as I have kids coming sometimes. Also, I like the remote system you have installed. Thank you. I like the camera idea too.
@@BitnerBuilt I am surprised! Maybe I should delete my comment so no one knows our little secret! Ha!! One day, I like to think I will throw some videos out there. I am one of those "I will film every step of the process.," but I have ADD so I get 15 minutes of B roll, then jump to the next project, get 5 minutes there, etc. It is a vicious cycle!
Awesome video man, so many great ideas. One question though, could you go into a bit more detail on how to construct the baffles? What material is used, exact design, things of that nature. Having a hard time picturing exactly what a cross section of the baffle looks like. Keep up the great videos!
@@BitnerBuilt Dude! Thank you so much in advance! My longmill comes Wednesday so this will be great to see before I construct my table/lower compartment 👌
hi nick sorry too many videos not enough time! I actually think I will be remaking / retooling the enclosure prob January so when we do that we will open up the baffle and add some more powerful fans to the setup@@nickvestman1552
Very cool enclosure! Love the channel. A suggestion for a video is a little more background on you, how you started woodworking, why you started a channel, and what you have for businesses (you mentioned you have 3 of them, I believe)
Hello, Nice compact soundproof design you made . I agree the sawdust is going to drop every time you lift open that door, so when I make mine, I will have to change the lift open to fold down and be removable, which would also "pass thru routing as well for the ability to vacuum without covering the tool draws with saw dust. Just to clarify, you glued the grid to the at the bottom and sides, but left the top free to "flex" "not glued, which supports the final MDF layer which the router table rests upon? My understanding of tortion table is only one side is glued to the grid.
Thanks, on a torsion box of both sides are glued to prevent any flex and torsion. What I did in this design was make a poly glue torsion box as the base that the machine was in slid in upon onto two layers of MDF, so literally my entire machine can slide out of the enclosure if I need to, but the enclosure itself is perfectly flat to give it the proper base to sit upon
Thanks for clearing that up. Due my age, I may use1/4 thick material to reduce the weight of my torsion box, and just use one 3/4 inch MDF layer to mount my CNC router on.
Well done. I've been thinking of jumping into CNC, but hesitant. I'd appreciate more content about how you incorporate it into everyday woodworking. Despite the fact you're a damn yankee, I still subscribed.
Haha thanks Beau! I will add that to my list and get a video out on that soon great idea! One great example is I made my standing desk video two days ago and while making the video I was thinking about man I really need to make this thing cordless with the battery. And I figured a solution right after I finish the video. A few people also commented about that! I already had, a battery converter for another video that I’m gonna do so it’s being re-purposed as we speak. It has a very small little button that would be a pain in the butt to cut out with a jigsaw so the ability for me to take some calipers and measure this buttons dimension, and have the CNC exactly make a hole that will be perfectly square, and exactly the size that I need where I need is awesome. That’s a five minute process. That’s going to give me a perfect result over if I did it by hand.
Thanks! Yes definitely. That’s first month of the channel. I’ve been trying to just focus on getting a lot of content out there and see if the channel takes off which it looks like its doing well so now I’m gonna start spending some more time on getting all of the other things in place like plans for projects, website, and other social media stuff that I’m not spending as much time on at the moment! I will announce those as soon as I have them!
Nicely done. I have a project along these lines in my near future and you've given me some ideas, specifically the baffles. My build is going to have another layer or two (sonopan and drywall, mostly because I have the materials already). I'm a bit tight for space otherwise I'd do an air gap as well! Given how well yours is working I think that would be overkill. I just need the same sort of thing as you, not perfect silence. Thanks for sharing!
This is so cool and better than anything I could build. I've read that sound travels more fully through thin materials but has difficulty traveling through really dense material. So I'm wondering out loud if using maple instead of plywood would also make a difference in effectiveness. (In fact, I'm sure I'm right, so tear that dang thing apart and rebuild it! Just kidding.) Of course this idea would also involve more money, which is always an iffy proposition.
😂😂😂 5k enclosure - but I’m sure your right. I’m actually debating ripping this apart and rebuilding - I am going to duct my new dust collector to it so the whole bottom half for the shop vac won’t be needed anymore, also it’s taller in the cnc area than needed, might make it a lot more compact
MDF is cheaper, and pretty dense. Also you can get acoustic plasterboard that you could clad the outside of the cabinet with to add density. If you want to go all in you can get mass loaded vinyl sheet to put between layers. It's expensive, but probably cheaper and more effective than any hardwood
I have very good dust collection at the mill dust shroud, three years on. I haven’t had any significant dust collect on the foam, thin layer etc you can vac with a bristle brush but nothing significant
I noticed when I was cutting large projects when the vacuum brush was off to the side of the material being routed, that is when most of the dust was kicking out all over the place. Most of the youtube videos when I watch them even the powerful systems they shoot dust out the side. This was the reason for me to use the enclosure. I don't have a vac on my router. I just use a shop vac and give it a cleaning when it piles up inside the enclosure.
That cabinet is next level! You've got a lot of cool ideas going on there. I don't think I would have ever thought of fire suppression, but it makes so much sense! Thanks for sharing. How long did it take to build?
Thanks! Prob 2 days, I had it all planned out prior to building. Now I after 2 yrs with it I would say the shop vac area you want to use in line vent fans, more powerful than comp fans. I had a shop vac die because the heat in the compartment got too hot recently. The cnc area though stays max 91ish so that one’s fine!
I love your cabinet. All the best!!! If you accept to share the plans, it would save me a lot of time redesign it with all measures and risks of errors. It would be really appreciated
So unfortunately, I don’t have plans on it, tried to detail as much as I could for the video I construct this before I started the TH-cam channel so it wasn’t something I was paying attention to just hit me up though if you have any specific questions
Great build...I have wanted to use one of my Macs on my Longmill 30x30 as well but am having trouble finding Mac CNC software. What Mac compatible software do you use??? I guess I could run windows on the Mac?? Just curious. Thanks David Rodwell Winston Salem, NC
There are a bunch of web based versions that work so you can run it on Mac or practically anything else. I use easel and I run it on chrome (safari has some issues)
Very cool idea. I'm brand new to CNC and I'm in research mode currently. Not sure If i'll need an enclosure like this one but good tips to know if I do someday. Thanks!
Thank you for sharing. Honest question... I am thinking the amount of air flow required by a Shop Vac would exceed the ability of the computer fans. My thought is that the computer fans are actually restricting the air flow. Your thoughts?
So the hole size I went with is 4in (fairly large) which I feel accommodates the flow enough, I would bet the fans themselves aren’t accommodating the push but the suction action itself is helping to move the air along as well. Even if the suction was overpowering the ability for the fans actions it’s still causing in and out action just due to the pressure of the confined space.
Ciao, mi potresti indicare le misure del filtro aria pulita e aria sporca?? Larghezza e profondità. che ventole hai usato, così cerco di capire le proporzioni di quello che devo realizzare.
The fans that I used are 4” computer fans, these are good for the main cnc area. For the shop vac however I have swapped out to 4in in line fans to force more circulation as that was the area that would get the hottest. I will link those below. As the fans are 4in I make the interior of the baffles 4in. I will like a video where I show an open baffle. th-cam.com/video/VR6DFcm02zA/w-d-xo.html amzn.to/3VaKVi5
Really like the video, I'm working on designing something similar (I hope) for my Onefinity Journeyman. Did you add buffer space when building to account for the foam, lights, etc you wanted to include? Or build to size, and squeeze everything in? Thanks!
Thanks! I accounted for the baffle otherwise I left a 2in gap around the perimeter. Part of me wishes is that I had left a little bit more space but at the same time, it’s a huge enclosure that takes up a large amount of space in the shop so on that note, I don’t want it any bigger 😂
Great video! Glad I found your channel. I'm in the process of planning my enclosure because I'm also in the shop late. Roughly how much money do you have in you build?
This is my something I do on the side right now but hoping to make it bigger. Can't wait to sell enough projects to justify price of building one like this.
I like you build and your channel, you got a new sub from me. I am mimicking you cabinet for my Longmill MK2 48x30. I do have a question with your electrical load, does all of your power needs on one circuit? Looking at the amp load for the shopvac, makita router, and the longmill push over 20amps at max which doesn't include computer, lights, and fans. Do you have any issues with your setup?
Cool, thanks! So I originally had it on 2x15 amp breakers but I’ve had everything on 1x20 amp breaker for about a year now and it never trips. The one thing that I did do was plug the shop vac directly into the outlet.(after the remote plug to kick it on and off) and then on a power strip, I have the computer Longmill router lights. Most power strips are only 15 A so I figured putting the shop vac on there would overload it at the power strip
One more question watching this back now that I'm actually building my enclosure! How are you grounding the wire that's wrapping the dust collection? I believe it needs to go to a ground in a wall socket but you don't just stick the wire in there right?
You can put one of the round loop attachments that crimp on the end and then I slide it on one of the outlets neutral bar that plug in in the unit. It’s unorthodox but it works
These are the ones I used and they do the job to a minimal level. amzn.to/3YdWRiL even on 7-8 hrs at a time of cnc work I did 2 weeks ago with the garage hot at 83 degrees, the enclose didn’t exceed 89 degrees which is acceptable but I have thought of using some stronger ones as hey cooler is better
@@MrBAchompBAchomp oh wow yea gotta keep the shop vac well ventilated! Since your having probs you might want to go with this instead. It’s what I use in my laser enclosure for vent and smoke removal, it’s much more powerful
@@BitnerBuilt I've watched your vid again and I didn't have my vac exhaust coming out. I put a hose on the exhaust and have it going through an MDF baffle befor it exits. No more tripping. Still way warmer than I'd like so I've got room for improvement. Thinking of adding another exhaust like yours with an inline fan or something. Thanks for quick replies. What thickness acrylic did u use?
@@MrBAchompBAchomp unfortunately I’m on vacation right now so I can’t measure but honestly it wasn’t that thick. I would bet 1/8th got it from the big box store. You can do double pane so do one and then an air gap and then another one but honestly the one did plenty good for me.
This is really awesome! How big of a difference do you think the baffles make? Wondering If I can get by without them or if they really are necessary for this level of quietness
The baffles are for quiet air ventilation. If you had holes in the top or side for air flow but no baffle your noise reduction will be a lot more negligible. Your only other option would be to have no air ventilation holes in which case you would have very good sound suppression but if you run that machine for a long time you’re going to overheat it, if you’re gonna do that, I would recommend putting the “brain” of the CNC. Outside of the enclosure, and running the wires in through a hole.
@@BitnerBuilt Thanks for the reply! Sounds like I need to take a shot at the baffles. Another question for ya - It seems like everything is plugged into the remote outlets which are then plugged into a power strip, and I'm guessing that strip is plugged into an outlet directly or an extension cord? I'm going to buy all of that and do the same setup, but not sure if I need to worry about daisy-chaining since I will need to connect the power strip in the dust-control area to an extension cord (also know nothing about electrical 😆). Any thoughts on that?
@@by.aaaaron I have one of those long power strips and then each of the remote outlets are on one of each of those. That then has an extension cord on it running to the outlet. here's a link to the strip I use and I have it inside the unit underneath where the shop vac is so it being centrally located everything can plug into it. amzn.to/3NqZzh1
Thanks, here’s a video on an easy cnc project using the longmill Basic CNC - A Beginners Guide To Their First Sign th-cam.com/video/LSYkNTJn2ow/w-d-xo.html
Thanks! That’s why I have the air vent baffles to keep it from building. It definitely does get pretty hot though in the shop vac cabinet if I’m running it for more than six hours. I had it going solid for 12 hours the other day so we opened up the back cabinet to let it cool down at one point for that back area. I’m probably going to replace the computer fan with more of a blower just so I’m forcing cooler air in there.
Cool. I'm an old woodworker who is just getting started building a specialized CNC machine. Some great ideas here that I'll incorporate into the finished project.
Awesome have fun with your build!
If you sold these, I'd be the first in line to buy one. This is amazing.
Haha thanks!
Very nice looking build and it seems to work very well. I applaude your addition of the fire extinguisher to the top. However, You really should also mount one in the area where your shop vac, dust collection as well as the power strips. That area could also be an area that would be a higher instance of fire. With all the sound proofing foam, any small fire is going to grow exponentially due to all that foam. Just a thought from an old retired firefighter. :)
Thanks for the tip! It’s good thinking
Very nice CNC system. My CNC is on a cart with drawers, but the enclosure so far exists only in my head, and now I'm weighing incorporating some of your ideas. Thanks.
awesome let me know if you come up with any cool ideas
I just ordered my onefinity July 4th. 10 weeks of waiting! But I can start this enclosure.
Haha I did the same, then built the unit on a sheet of mdf and slid it in
Great idea. I am looking at the long mill as well and need to keep it quiet. Do you have plans available?
Sorry I don’t but you will like the longmill, great machine!
Thank you so much for this. I'm just getting into CNC, still shopping for the machine, and this answers my worries about a home shop for, not only noise, but for dust as well. Awesome and thank you also for keeping your videos free of the buffoonery, memes, and other attempts at comedy that so many try to incorporate. Well done.
Thanks! Trust me I’m a buffoon, but I hide it most of the time 😆 yes this will take care of the noise and dust 100% also look at the quiet line of dewalt shop vac, they are orders of magnitude quieter, it’s what I use now in this unit. It is big (negative)! But does its job
Love the camera idea as well as the generally super useful nature of the build itself!
Thanks!
How do you like the Longmill? I’m in research mode for a CNC and this one is on my list.
Hi Sandra, I have zero complaints and have been told by much more serious cnc owners that I chose well for the price range I was looking at. This is my first cnc and I wanted something that was not bottom of the barrel but decent quality at an "affordable" price. I would get their newer larger version as it has come up many times where I just needed a little bit more room.
Great idea. I think you could sell some plans to the CNC cabinet build. Enjoying your content and the personable/ comfortable manner you have with the camera and mic.
Thanks so much Bill! Yes I have thought about selling plans, putting all my time into videos at the moment but plans are on the list👍
I definitely need such a device.
@@BitnerBuiltI think you should patent the build...if you plan on selling the plans...don't go cheap...normally I prefer cheap plans but this would have been a huge task...you could get rich off of this build alone...you deserve it
@@fdort3971 haha thanks but I always put my stuff out there for free, I like how the 3d printing community designs stuff and then just shares it out for everyone, try to do the same in whatever I’m building
Great job! Very effective soundproofing. (And Bender is a nice touch too!)
Thanks!
What a nice enclosure. You have thought about lots of details. Amazing! I don't have much problem with noise because I will be using the spindle and the 1.5 hp is in the closet next to the CNC router but I do want to have a see-through thick plexiglass enclosure from three sides just for safety reasons as I have kids coming sometimes. Also, I like the remote system you have installed. Thank you. I like the camera idea too.
Thanks! It’s big but still very happy with it!
Rush the market. I like the strategy and the videos. Keep up the good work.
First to catch that Joe! Thanks so much for the support!
@@BitnerBuilt I am surprised! Maybe I should delete my comment so no one knows our little secret! Ha!! One day, I like to think I will throw some videos out there. I am one of those "I will film every step of the process.," but I have ADD so I get 15 minutes of B roll, then jump to the next project, get 5 minutes there, etc. It is a vicious cycle!
Great job with your enclosure. I appreciate your time sharing on video.
Thanks Jason!
Great cabinet idea! Thanks for the inspiration.
thanks Jrey!
Awesome video man, so many great ideas. One question though, could you go into a bit more detail on how to construct the baffles? What material is used, exact design, things of that nature. Having a hard time picturing exactly what a cross section of the baffle looks like. Keep up the great videos!
Sure thing your not the first to ask so I will put our a video on it this week!
@@BitnerBuilt Dude! Thank you so much in advance! My longmill comes Wednesday so this will be great to see before I construct my table/lower compartment 👌
@@BitnerBuilt Looking forward to the video
@@BitnerBuiltany upgrade for buffle video?
hi nick sorry too many videos not enough time! I actually think I will be remaking / retooling the enclosure prob January so when we do that we will open up the baffle and add some more powerful fans to the setup@@nickvestman1552
That is a very nice build and well thought out. Keep the videos coming.
Thanks, will do!
Very cool enclosure!
Love the channel. A suggestion for a video is a little more background on you, how you started woodworking, why you started a channel, and what you have for businesses (you mentioned you have 3 of them, I believe)
Sure that’s a long one though 🤣 I’m a serial entrepreneur, started over 20 businesses over the years
Hello, Nice compact soundproof design you made . I agree the sawdust is going to drop every time you lift open that door, so when I make mine, I will
have to change the lift open to fold down and be removable, which would also "pass thru routing as well for the ability to vacuum without covering the tool draws with saw dust. Just to clarify, you glued the grid to the at the bottom and sides, but left the top free to "flex" "not glued, which supports the final MDF layer which the router table rests upon? My understanding of tortion table is only one side is glued to the grid.
Thanks, on a torsion box of both sides are glued to prevent any flex and torsion. What I did in this design was make a poly glue torsion box as the base that the machine was in slid in upon onto two layers of MDF, so literally my entire machine can slide out of the enclosure if I need to, but the enclosure itself is perfectly flat to give it the proper base to sit upon
Thanks for clearing that up. Due my age, I may use1/4 thick material to reduce the weight of my torsion box, and just use one 3/4 inch MDF layer to mount my CNC router on.
Well done. I've been thinking of jumping into CNC, but hesitant. I'd appreciate more content about how you incorporate it into everyday woodworking. Despite the fact you're a damn yankee, I still subscribed.
Haha thanks Beau! I will add that to my list and get a video out on that soon great idea! One great example is I made my standing desk video two days ago and while making the video I was thinking about man I really need to make this thing cordless with the battery. And I figured a solution right after I finish the video. A few people also commented about that! I already had, a battery converter for another video that I’m gonna do so it’s being re-purposed as we speak. It has a very small little button that would be a pain in the butt to cut out with a jigsaw so the ability for me to take some calipers and measure this buttons dimension, and have the CNC exactly make a hole that will be perfectly square, and exactly the size that I need where I need is awesome. That’s a five minute process. That’s going to give me a perfect result over if I did it by hand.
Great video and design. Any plans to share additional information or plans on this enclosure?
Thanks! Yes definitely. That’s first month of the channel. I’ve been trying to just focus on getting a lot of content out there and see if the channel takes off which it looks like its doing well so now I’m gonna start spending some more time on getting all of the other things in place like plans for projects, website, and other social media stuff that I’m not spending as much time on at the moment! I will announce those as soon as I have them!
@@BitnerBuilt looking forward to it. I've been enjoying your content
Nicely done. I have a project along these lines in my near future and you've given me some ideas, specifically the baffles. My build is going to have another layer or two (sonopan and drywall, mostly because I have the materials already). I'm a bit tight for space otherwise I'd do an air gap as well! Given how well yours is working I think that would be overkill. I just need the same sort of thing as you, not perfect silence. Thanks for sharing!
Yea the baffles work well and don’t have to be huge but the more turns the better
Nice job I love it.
Thanks!
This is so cool and better than anything I could build. I've read that sound travels more fully through thin materials but has difficulty traveling through really dense material. So I'm wondering out loud if using maple instead of plywood would also make a difference in effectiveness. (In fact, I'm sure I'm right, so tear that dang thing apart and rebuild it! Just kidding.) Of course this idea would also involve more money, which is always an iffy proposition.
😂😂😂 5k enclosure - but I’m sure your right. I’m actually debating ripping this apart and rebuilding - I am going to duct my new dust collector to it so the whole bottom half for the shop vac won’t be needed anymore, also it’s taller in the cnc area than needed, might make it a lot more compact
@@BitnerBuilt Perfectionism is to expensive! Good luck! I want to see your shop when in Jersey next summer.
MDF is cheaper, and pretty dense. Also you can get acoustic plasterboard that you could clad the outside of the cabinet with to add density. If you want to go all in you can get mass loaded vinyl sheet to put between layers. It's expensive, but probably cheaper and more effective than any hardwood
Thank you, very informative and helpful
Glad it was helpful!
How do you deal with all the sawdust that will keep dropping off of all the insulation on the inside
I have very good dust collection at the mill dust shroud, three years on. I haven’t had any significant dust collect on the foam, thin layer etc you can vac with a bristle brush but nothing significant
I noticed when I was cutting large projects when the vacuum brush was off to the side of the material being routed, that is when most of the dust was kicking out all over the place. Most of the youtube videos when I watch them even the powerful systems they shoot dust out the side. This was the reason for me to use the enclosure. I don't have a vac on my router. I just use a shop vac and give it a cleaning when it piles up inside the enclosure.
That cabinet is next level! You've got a lot of cool ideas going on there. I don't think I would have ever thought of fire suppression, but it makes so much sense! Thanks for sharing. How long did it take to build?
Thanks! Prob 2 days, I had it all planned out prior to building. Now I after 2 yrs with it I would say the shop vac area you want to use in line vent fans, more powerful than comp fans. I had a shop vac die because the heat in the compartment got too hot recently. The cnc area though stays max 91ish so that one’s fine!
I love your cabinet. All the best!!! If you accept to share the plans, it would save me a lot of time redesign it with all measures and risks of errors. It would be really appreciated
So unfortunately, I don’t have plans on it, tried to detail as much as I could for the video I construct this before I started the TH-cam channel so it wasn’t something I was paying attention to just hit me up though if you have any specific questions
Great build...I have wanted to use one of my Macs on my Longmill 30x30 as well but am having trouble finding Mac CNC software. What Mac compatible software do you use??? I guess I could run windows on the Mac??
Just curious.
Thanks
David Rodwell
Winston Salem, NC
There are a bunch of web based versions that work so you can run it on Mac or practically anything else. I use easel and I run it on chrome (safari has some issues)
Very cool idea. I'm brand new to CNC and I'm in research mode currently. Not sure If i'll need an enclosure like this one but good tips to know if I do someday. Thanks!
Thanks Jason, let me know if you come up with some cool new designs to share
@@BitnerBuilt will do!
Thank you for sharing. Honest question... I am thinking the amount of air flow required by a Shop Vac would exceed the ability of the computer fans. My thought is that the computer fans are actually restricting the air flow. Your thoughts?
So the hole size I went with is 4in (fairly large) which I feel accommodates the flow enough, I would bet the fans themselves aren’t accommodating the push but the suction action itself is helping to move the air along as well. Even if the suction was overpowering the ability for the fans actions it’s still causing in and out action just due to the pressure of the confined space.
Ciao, mi potresti indicare le misure del filtro aria pulita e aria sporca?? Larghezza e profondità. che ventole hai usato, così cerco di capire le proporzioni di quello che devo realizzare.
The fans that I used are 4” computer fans, these are good for the main cnc area. For the shop vac however I have swapped out to 4in in line fans to force more circulation as that was the area that would get the hottest. I will link those below. As the fans are 4in I make the interior of the baffles 4in. I will like a video where I show an open baffle. th-cam.com/video/VR6DFcm02zA/w-d-xo.html amzn.to/3VaKVi5
I need this too!
👍✌️
Really like the video, I'm working on designing something similar (I hope) for my Onefinity Journeyman. Did you add buffer space when building to account for the foam, lights, etc you wanted to include? Or build to size, and squeeze everything in?
Thanks!
Thanks! I accounted for the baffle otherwise I left a 2in gap around the perimeter. Part of me wishes is that I had left a little bit more space but at the same time, it’s a huge enclosure that takes up a large amount of space in the shop so on that note, I don’t want it any bigger 😂
..I suppose you could always put dynamat with the foam on top for sound deadening..
Oh that’s an interesting product, hadn’t ever thought of that of car noise insulation before, cool tip
Great video! Glad I found your channel. I'm in the process of planning my enclosure because I'm also in the shop late. Roughly how much money do you have in you build?
Thanks! I would guess around 700-800 for the enclosure lights remote foam blankets castors, drawer slides monitor arm, cables and pistons
This is my something I do on the side right now but hoping to make it bigger. Can't wait to sell enough projects to justify price of building one like this.
This is great!
Thanks!
I like you build and your channel, you got a new sub from me. I am mimicking you cabinet for my Longmill MK2 48x30. I do have a question with your electrical load, does all of your power needs on one circuit? Looking at the amp load for the shopvac, makita router, and the longmill push over 20amps at max which doesn't include computer, lights, and fans. Do you have any issues with your setup?
Cool, thanks! So I originally had it on 2x15 amp breakers but I’ve had everything on 1x20 amp breaker for about a year now and it never trips. The one thing that I did do was plug the shop vac directly into the outlet.(after the remote plug to kick it on and off) and then on a power strip, I have the computer Longmill router lights. Most power strips are only 15 A so I figured putting the shop vac on there would overload it at the power strip
One more question watching this back now that I'm actually building my enclosure! How are you grounding the wire that's wrapping the dust collection? I believe it needs to go to a ground in a wall socket but you don't just stick the wire in there right?
You can put one of the round loop attachments that crimp on the end and then I slide it on one of the outlets neutral bar that plug in in the unit. It’s unorthodox but it works
Do you have a link for the fans you used?
These are the ones I used and they do the job to a minimal level. amzn.to/3YdWRiL even on 7-8 hrs at a time of cnc work I did 2 weeks ago with the garage hot at 83 degrees, the enclose didn’t exceed 89 degrees which is acceptable but I have thought of using some stronger ones as hey cooler is better
@@BitnerBuilt thanks! I ran my shop vac today in a new enclosure and the power strip started piling around 20 min
@@MrBAchompBAchomp oh wow yea gotta keep the shop vac well ventilated! Since your having probs you might want to go with this instead. It’s what I use in my laser enclosure for vent and smoke removal, it’s much more powerful
@@BitnerBuilt I've watched your vid again and I didn't have my vac exhaust coming out. I put a hose on the exhaust and have it going through an MDF baffle befor it exits. No more tripping. Still way warmer than I'd like so I've got room for improvement. Thinking of adding another exhaust like yours with an inline fan or something. Thanks for quick replies.
What thickness acrylic did u use?
@@MrBAchompBAchomp unfortunately I’m on vacation right now so I can’t measure but honestly it wasn’t that thick. I would bet 1/8th got it from the big box store. You can do double pane so do one and then an air gap and then another one but honestly the one did plenty good for me.
How did u get gsender to open on the Mac mini mine won’t open
I use easel on chrome, works flawlessly, never really tried gsender
This is really awesome! How big of a difference do you think the baffles make? Wondering If I can get by without them or if they really are necessary for this level of quietness
The baffles are for quiet air ventilation. If you had holes in the top or side for air flow but no baffle your noise reduction will be a lot more negligible. Your only other option would be to have no air ventilation holes in which case you would have very good sound suppression but if you run that machine for a long time you’re going to overheat it, if you’re gonna do that, I would recommend putting the “brain” of the CNC. Outside of the enclosure, and running the wires in through a hole.
@@BitnerBuilt Thanks for the reply! Sounds like I need to take a shot at the baffles. Another question for ya - It seems like everything is plugged into the remote outlets which are then plugged into a power strip, and I'm guessing that strip is plugged into an outlet directly or an extension cord? I'm going to buy all of that and do the same setup, but not sure if I need to worry about daisy-chaining since I will need to connect the power strip in the dust-control area to an extension cord (also know nothing about electrical 😆). Any thoughts on that?
@@by.aaaaron I have one of those long power strips and then each of the remote outlets are on one of each of those. That then has an extension cord on it running to the outlet. here's a link to the strip I use and I have it inside the unit underneath where the shop vac is so it being centrally located everything can plug into it. amzn.to/3NqZzh1
95c or 95 freedom units?
95 Fahrenheit
@@BitnerBuilt Thank you!
Hmm... Every Mac mini has at least one fan. Nice job on the enclosure.
Huh wouldn’t have know it runs so quiet and gets so freaking hot lol well in any case it’s vent would be pointed down
Legal amigo, mas voce poderia mostrar sua maquina fucionando mas ta valendo
Thanks, here’s a video on an easy cnc project using the longmill Basic CNC - A Beginners Guide To Their First Sign
th-cam.com/video/LSYkNTJn2ow/w-d-xo.html
Have you experienced an additional heat build up with this enclosure? Nice informative video.
Sorry, didn't wait for the video to show the ventilation.
Thanks! That’s why I have the air vent baffles to keep it from building. It definitely does get pretty hot though in the shop vac cabinet if I’m running it for more than six hours. I had it going solid for 12 hours the other day so we opened up the back cabinet to let it cool down at one point for that back area. I’m probably going to replace the computer fan with more of a blower just so I’m forcing cooler air in there.
I like the bender cartoon character lol
Haha thanks I can’t take credit for it there’s a woodworker who I saw do it but my boys and I love bender so had to copy!
So no demo of how much sound the enclosure blocks?
***Pro tip: Lead sheeting would block the most sound and take up the least amount of space.
Demo at 13:40 - this was one of my very first videos on the channel, so didn’t have my measuring equipment yet etc, so apologies there
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