On May 6, 10:18=A0am, Bill Waller <[email protected]> wrote:
> I finally have a budget for a CNC router. I am looking for some insight f=
rom
> owners/users of table top systems. Carvewright, CNC Shark, Shopbot, etc.
Bill, I am very pleased with my selection and it has taught me a few
things about what is important and what isn't.
Tabletops are really cool, and I wish, for many jobs, I had one. I
have looked at many over the last couple of years, and I'm in touch
with quite a few CNC owner/operators and they all concur on one issue:
Stay away from closed systems. Like Larry (C-Less) mentioned, the
Carvewright is proprietary. Don't go there.
I have no idea what kind of work you plan on, or what your budget is,
but Shopbot is an excellent choice. Support is second to none. I have
a 4 x 8 General (general.ca) and it is pretty industrial. They also
make a smaller unit.
If there is any way you can swing it, try to go for a spindle rather
than a router as NO router is designed to run 4-6 hours continuously
like some of my jobs run.
Give the ShopBot Buddy a look with a small (2HP) spindle.
On Sun, 06 May 2012 10:18:58 -0400, Bill Waller <[email protected]>
wrote:
>I finally have a budget for a CNC router. I am looking for some insight from
>owners/users of table top systems. Carvewright, CNC Shark, Shopbot, etc.
Bill, I'm about 80% done with my build of a larger CNC router. The
frame is ~5' x 6' x 34" giving me a 4-1/2' x 4-1/2' working area.
I thought it would take a couple days for my buddy and me to build it,
but we're not done ten days later. I thought it would cost about $3k,
but it's edging upward toward $3.7k daily. It's powered by four
620oz/in steppers, a Hitachi 2-1/4HP router, Gecko G540 drive, and
SmoothStepper USB to parallel adapter. Art is done with BobCAD v24
and BobARTPro via Mach3. I used linear rails and bearings for the
axes, ballscrew for the Z axis, and chain drives for the X/Y axes.
I'm learning a -lot- during the build. Glenn (my buddy) has a machine
shop, so I've been able to use his mill (life-saver for the hole
patterns in the aluminum plates for the gantry and router (Y and Z
axes) mounts. He's taught me a whole lot about precision machining,
too. (It ain't nuttin' like wood, lemme tell ya.)
I considered a tabletop unit but figured I could get larger jobs and
pay it off (to profit with it) sooner with a larger machine. But I did
the research anyway.
I looked at CarveWright (proprietary, too pricy), ShopBot (pricy but
nice), CNC Shark (pricy but nice), K2 (pricy but nice), etc.
Had I gone with a smaller tabletop unit, it probably would have been a
ShopBot. There seems to be a larger base with fewer bad comments and
many more good comments on those.
Keep doing your homework, determine the need, uses, and sizes you will
produce, then buy the machine which fits your needs the best.
There have been some negatives in my build (Chinese linear bearing
vendors, local hardware store gouging), but if I had it to do over,
I'd probably build again vs. buy.
--
With every experience, you alone are painting your
own canvas, thought by thought, choice by choice.
-- Oprah Winfrey
On May 6, 11:29=A0am, Larry Jaques <[email protected]>
wrote:
> On Sun, 06 May 2012 10:18:58 -0400, Bill Waller <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
> >I finally have a budget for a CNC router. I am looking for some insight =
from
> >owners/users of table top systems. Carvewright, CNC Shark, Shopbot, etc.
>
> Bill, I'm about 80% done with my build of a larger CNC router. The
> frame is ~5' x 6' x 34" giving me a 4-1/2' x 4-1/2' working area.
> I thought it would take a couple days for my buddy and me to build it,
> but we're not done ten days later. =A0I thought it would cost about $3k,
> but it's edging upward toward $3.7k daily. =A0It's powered by four
> 620oz/in steppers, a Hitachi 2-1/4HP router, Gecko G540 drive, and
> SmoothStepper USB to parallel adapter. =A0Art is done with BobCAD v24
> and BobARTPro via Mach3. I used linear rails and bearings for the
> axes, ballscrew for the Z axis, and chain drives for the X/Y axes.
>
> I'm learning a -lot- during the build. Glenn (my buddy) has a machine
> shop, so I've been able to use his mill (life-saver for the hole
> patterns in the aluminum plates for the gantry and router (Y and Z
> axes) mounts. =A0He's taught me a whole lot about precision machining,
> too. (It ain't nuttin' like wood, lemme tell ya.)
>
> I considered a tabletop unit but figured I could get larger jobs and
> pay it off (to profit with it) sooner with a larger machine. But I did
> the research anyway.
>
> I looked at CarveWright (proprietary, too pricy), ShopBot (pricy but
> nice), CNC Shark (pricy but nice), K2 (pricy but nice), etc.
>
> Had I gone with a smaller tabletop unit, it probably would have been a
> ShopBot. There seems to be a larger base with fewer bad comments and
> many more good comments on those.
>
> Keep doing your homework, determine the need, uses, and sizes you will
> produce, then buy the machine which fits your needs the best.
>
> There have been some negatives in my build (Chinese linear bearing
> vendors, local hardware store gouging), but if I had it to do over,
> I'd probably build again vs. buy.
>
> --
> With every experience, you alone are painting your
> own canvas, thought by thought, choice by choice.
> =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 =A0 -- Op=
rah Winfrey
I hope you are keeping a detailed photographic record of your build.
Like, show me some NOW!..Please.
On Mon, 7 May 2012 12:42:47 -0700 (PDT), Robatoy
<[email protected]> wrote:
>On May 6, 11:29 am, Larry Jaques <[email protected]>
>wrote:
>> On Sun, 06 May 2012 10:18:58 -0400, Bill Waller <[email protected]>
>> wrote:
>>
>> >I finally have a budget for a CNC router. I am looking for some insight from
>> >owners/users of table top systems. Carvewright, CNC Shark, Shopbot, etc.
>>
>> Bill, I'm about 80% done with my build of a larger CNC router. The
>> frame is ~5' x 6' x 34" giving me a 4-1/2' x 4-1/2' working area.
>> I thought it would take a couple days for my buddy and me to build it,
>> but we're not done ten days later. I thought it would cost about $3k,
>> but it's edging upward toward $3.7k daily. It's powered by four
>> 620oz/in steppers, a Hitachi 2-1/4HP router, Gecko G540 drive, and
>> SmoothStepper USB to parallel adapter. Art is done with BobCAD v24
>> and BobARTPro via Mach3. I used linear rails and bearings for the
>> axes, ballscrew for the Z axis, and chain drives for the X/Y axes.
>>
>> I'm learning a -lot- during the build. Glenn (my buddy) has a machine
>> shop, so I've been able to use his mill (life-saver for the hole
>> patterns in the aluminum plates for the gantry and router (Y and Z
>> axes) mounts. He's taught me a whole lot about precision machining,
>> too. (It ain't nuttin' like wood, lemme tell ya.)
>>
>> I considered a tabletop unit but figured I could get larger jobs and
>> pay it off (to profit with it) sooner with a larger machine. But I did
>> the research anyway.
>>
>> I looked at CarveWright (proprietary, too pricy), ShopBot (pricy but
>> nice), CNC Shark (pricy but nice), K2 (pricy but nice), etc.
>>
>> Had I gone with a smaller tabletop unit, it probably would have been a
>> ShopBot. There seems to be a larger base with fewer bad comments and
>> many more good comments on those.
>>
>> Keep doing your homework, determine the need, uses, and sizes you will
>> produce, then buy the machine which fits your needs the best.
>>
>> There have been some negatives in my build (Chinese linear bearing
>> vendors, local hardware store gouging), but if I had it to do over,
>> I'd probably build again vs. buy.
>>
>
>I hope you are keeping a detailed photographic record of your build.
>Like, show me some NOW!..Please.
Like, pushy, pushy! I'll see about optimizing some of the pics and
putting them on my website this week, Toy. I'll let you know.
--
Most powerful is he who has himself in his own power.
-- Seneca