TorontoBuilder
Ultra Member
I thought I was a company that was parting out a darbert... lemme look and get back to you
So the mill is in the garage now. It is one of those garages that a somewhat less that a 1 car garage. I had it delivered as the company I bought it from had the resources to load it on their truck and deliver it. I rented a forklift on my end to offload it. First time driving a forklift, which was kind of fun.
Open to any wisdom out there. Thanks
I like this as an idea.I wonder if you could replace the guts of the head and make your own EVS setup. I have one and its awesome. I can shoot you a few pics tomorrow if you'd like. Its very simple. Two timing gears and a belt is all there is. No backgear, no variable sheaves, no brake (has a locking pin). Being that you need to source a motor anyways and are missing parts, it might be simple enough to do. HH Roberts sells evs heads and might have diagrams. Pretty sure my head came from them.
If I'm not mistaken @jcdammeyer runs a servo motor on his mill.I like this as an idea.
It was only in really REALLY recent times that VFD's escaped the "you can't afford that!" range of prices.
Another option is to look in to a Servo Motor as a power source. Same sort of deal as using a VFD, just a different means to get control of the speed it runs at, from what I sorta understand...
But if you went with a two pulley set-up, made one a little under driven for low speed use, and one a little over driven (bigger pulley on motor than on spindle) for high speed use, I think you would have a heck of a machine, capable of almost anything you might want, be it running a wee cutter fast, or a large cutter relatively slowly. Belt changes only when REALLY needed!
Yep! And he is a WAY better guy to ask than I, as he is, in reality, the guy I look to, as a source on the like!If I'm not mistaken @jcdammeyer runs a servo motor on his mill.
Thank you. Yes. When I priced out 3 Phase 2HP and higher end VFD plus shipping than the Bergerda AC Servo c/w encoder. And I was ordering another AC servo set for the XY so shipping wasn't as bad amortized over all the motors.Yep! And he is a WAY better guy to ask than I, as he is, in reality, the guy I look to, as a source on the like!
Here's the original. See how tall that motor is. And I have a low ceiling. It's why a Bridgeport Clone never found its way into this shop. It's a 2HP single phase 1725 RPM with an intermediate 3 step pulley. Range of speeds was 270 to 2950.Well mimicry is the highest for of flattery, they say. I think my long term plan is to convert to CNC so a servo motor might be a good way to go. I have a cnc that cuts aluminum just fine which might help with the parts. John, if I could see some pictures and maybe get the model of servo I would appreciate it. Thanks everyone for the suggestions.
The Bergerda Servo Driver was selected by Donald Chen (my contact there) and is the SDD20NK9D.What servo drive do you have it mated to John?
Note that on this mill the motor shaft isn't really longer than any other motor shaft. What they did is make the pulley really long.I'm gonna look at the innards of the head and see if there is a good way to adapt. The variable speed head may need a bit of thinkating as to how to adapt it to a motor that doesn't have a long shaft.
I guess we have to remember that a German Lathe is more expensive compared to a Chinese reworked one from Grizzly Tools. Some of it may well be German labour costs but some of it has to be quality.
I agree. The difference is rarely will you see the Germans sell junk. When I attended the CANopen Conference in Germany a number of years ago the Hotel where I stayed had a dinner room isolated from the kitchen area by a sliding glass door.I have been told that the Chinese are quite capable, of making and providing excellent quality machine tools, the problem, is that they will also cost as much as excellent quality machine tools from anywhere else.
Good castings cost. Good bearings cost. Skilled labor costs. Can't really get away from that anywhere...
I have been told that the Chinese are quite capable, of making and providing excellent quality machine tools, the problem, is that they will also cost as much as excellent quality machine tools from anywhere else.
Good castings cost. Good bearings cost. Skilled labor costs. Can't really get away from that anywhere...
Well they do but most aren't willing to even pay they high end prices so it's the cheap stuff that sells and what people want.I don't 100% agree with that. Chinese manufacturers pay less for skilled labour, less for energy, less for materials and much less for unskilled labour than we do. They also pay much lower taxes. Theoretically, they ought to be able to produce MUCH BETTER machines than we can for the same cost or even much less.
the chinese burn massive amounts of low quality coal to generate electricity and used in steel. I'm prevented from talking about their labour practices, and other business practices including raw materials extraction... I'm with the hairy guy. The chinese should be able to make lower cost premium products.I don't 100% agree with that. Chinese manufacturers pay less for skilled labour, less for energy, less for materials and much less for unskilled labour than we do. They also pay much lower taxes. Theoretically, they ought to be able to produce MUCH BETTER machines than we can for the same cost or even much less.