- Joined
- Jan 7, 2016
- Messages
- 3,380
I found this video the other day and was rather intrigued by it. The guy in the video cut a hole in the side of his knee and installed a servo motor and cogged belt driving a ball screw. He had replaced the ACME screw with a ground ball screw and nut. Cutting into the knee would concern me only from an aesthetic standpoint and not a structural standpoint because I feel that there is enough cast iron that the hole would not matter.
He (Owen) utilizes gas struts to offset the weight of the knee. Utilizing the knee for the Z-axis movement eliminates all of the clutter associated with a quill Z-axis conversion and also maintains all of the manual controls.
The one downside I see to this is the possible wear on the knee ways, although as a pure hobby machinist, the mill will probably outlast me in that role.
He (Owen) utilizes gas struts to offset the weight of the knee. Utilizing the knee for the Z-axis movement eliminates all of the clutter associated with a quill Z-axis conversion and also maintains all of the manual controls.
The one downside I see to this is the possible wear on the knee ways, although as a pure hobby machinist, the mill will probably outlast me in that role.