1 month by cncdivi

In the conclusion of my initial piece, “10 Things Beginning CNC Milling Users Need to Succeed”, I committed to a follow-up part. Though it took slightly longer than I anticipated (as things often do), with the assistance of our trusted allies at CNCZone, I now present 10 Additional Tips to aid the novice in achieving success:

1. Get a copy of Machinery’s Handbook and compare it to the information in a tooling catalog

The folks on the ‘Zone were adamant about the importance of Machinery’s Handbook.  I have one, in fact, I have 2 different editions of Machinery’s Handbook and one edition of another handbook, and I have a confession to make:  I refer to them very seldom.  I might not refer to them at all except for my work on the G-Wizard Machinist’s Calculator which includes a lot of information I cross check there.  If I were stuck on a dessert island with no Internet collection, I would insist on a Machinery’s Handbook to help me in my machine tasks.  But, as it stands, I’m a big believer in having Internet access in the shop because I find I use it constantly to look up all sorts of things.  Therefore, I am modifying this one slightly to read that you should get a copy of Machinery’s Handbook, but then grab a tooling catalog and compare the information in the two.  I suggest this for a couple of reasons.  First, you’ll learn your way around the handbook as well as a tooling catalog (they’re all pretty similar) more quickly with a task like this.  Get some endmill manufacturer’s pdf catalog, for example.  I’m not going to give you a link because you also need to know how to find stuff like that on Google.  Just be sure you pick one from one of the big brands like Sandvik or Kennametal because those catalogs have tons of valuable technical information on how to get the best performance out of the tools.

The second thing you will learn by comparing the two is that except for things that are standards, like screw thread specifications, the numbers in any one source are not sacrosanct.  There is no single source of truth for what the surface speed for a carbide endmill in 6061 aluminum should be.  Machinery’s Handbook will have one value (BTW, it’s pretty dated compared to the tooling folks!) and almost every tooling manufacturer will have their own values.  They will be reasonably close, but sometimes you’ll see things that make your jaw drop.  Check out some of the really expensive aerospace tooling and just see how much more performance they claim to get from those fancy endmills.

Being able to lay hands on information like this is critical to the machinist.  Thumbing through Tooling Catalogs or Machinery’s Handbook is a good way to learn and absorb all sorts of useful facts and trivia.  One of my motivations for creating the G-Wizard Calculator is I was coming across so many great rules of thumb (like Dapra’s information on how to know whether you should use climb or conventional milling) that I couldn’t keep up with all of them.  So I started sticking them into software so I wouldn’t have to remember so much.  You can’t put everything in software and the software won’t tell you the reason why.  You can learn a lot from tooling catalogs because they want to teach you to be as successful as possible with their tooling.

2.  Purchase and read Smid’s books on CNC Programming, including the Fanuc Macro books

These books, together with the Fanuc and Mach3 programming books practically live on my night stand I go through them so much in the course of building the G-Wizard G-Code Editor / Simulator.  To someone who has programmed in other languages, g-code seems cumbersome and overly cryptic at first.  But you soon learn it works pretty darned well.  Much better than you’d expect.  Smid’s books are the bibles on how to write g-code by hand.

3.  Read Machine Shop Trade Secrets and Metalworking Sink or Swim

More books.  Sorry, but unless you have the luxury of working with a real live experienced machinist, you don’t even know what you don’t know yet.  The art and skills of the Machinist are not trivial.  What I like about these two books is they’re filled with the kind of non-textbook stuff you could only learn from another machinist about how to do things.  Both books are excellent, but Metalworking Sink or Swim is my favorite by a small margin.

4.  Perfect your ability to “cut air”.  Practice being able to restart a program.

These two skills involve doing something g-code programs are not really designed to do.  Air cutting means setting up your part zero so the tool is well above the workpiece, table, and any vises or fixtures.  It lets you watch a program execute a bit so you can see if all looks right.  It’s a useful thing to do with a new program.  Being able to restart a program is another useful skill.  Inevitably, you’ll run a program and something will go wrong in the middle.  You’ll stop the program to fix it.  How do you get started running again after fixing the problem without restarting the whole thing from the beginning?

Mastering these things is just another aspect of mastering your controller and machine.

5.  Get serious about understanding g-code:  take our tutorial, write some g-code by hand, and get a copy of our G-Wizard Editor/Simulator

You got Smid’s books.  I know you’re not going to read them cover to cover and do all the exercises if you’re anything like me even though I said you should, LOL.  Instead you’ll skim topics and maybe zero in on a few things as needed.  You need to do something systematic to crank up your knowledge of g-code.  If it isn’t doing all Smid’s exercises, you might instead prefer to take our G-Code Tutorial.  Knock off 1 or 2 chapters a week or some such.  Take it on yourself to write a g-code program from scratch for some part you’d like to make, and make the part.  Get a copy of our G-Wizard G-Code Editor/Simulator–it’s free while it’s in beta and it’ll have a 30 day trial thereafter.  Using a g-code simulator, you can sit in your armchair and play with g-codes.  Try using it like an etch-a-sketch.  It’ll be awkward at first to make the g-code describe the part you want to make.  Stick to it.  You’ll learn a lot!

6.  Make a piece of tooling you’ll use over and over again

There’s nothing like making something useful that’ll be banging around your shop.  The first useful thing I made as a manual machinist was a tailstock die holder for threading things.  It was dead simple, not particularly beautiful, but it worked.  One other thing: draw the plans yourself.  Don’t go copy someone else’s plans.  As a machinist, you should be able to draw some plans for a simple part and make the part.  I don’t care if you sketch it or use a CAD program, but design your own tool.

What to build?  Lots of things might be useful.  It’s a touch ambitious, but a vacuum table would be sweet.  A friend recently completed one based on my blog post and it sure came out nice.  If you don’t want to do something that ambitious, consider some work holding accessory, or perhaps a measuring gizmo.  You could make your own traminator if you have any need to tram your mill.  Another one that’s ambitious, but not as hard as it looks is a powered drawbar.

7.  Try some stainless steel, alloy steel, or other “difficult” material

For the first article, I stressed the need to avoid difficult materials.  Assuming you have reached a level of proficiency with easier materials, its time you made a part out of something more difficult.  Whether or not you succeed, you will learn something about why these materials are harder to work with.  Ideally you’ll stick with it until you figure out how to deal with the material.  I’m not suggesting you get too crazy and fire up an Inconel job, but try some stainless or some sort of alloy steel.  It may surprise you.  I’ve made a fair number of parts from 4140 steel, and it machines really nicely–better than a lot of the cheaper softer steels.  That’d be a good starter, but be sure to try some stainless too.  You need to experience and overcome work hardening to understand it.

8.  Make 10 identical parts to a tolerance

I love doing this.  I first had the opportunity to make a bunch of identical parts when I joined a team build over at the HMEM forums.  I had to make 10 little connecting rods for a steam engine.  They had to be made to certain tolerances or they wouldn’t fit with the parts other people were making.  When you make one part, you fudge all over the place as a beginner.  You make a mistake, then you compensate for it, yada, yada.  It’s more art than skill and not so artsy at that.  When you make a bunch of the same thing, you have a better opportunity to learn to do it right and to do it well.  Tolerances force you to master the machine instead of changing the part.  Fixturing starts to be worth looking into and really thinking hard about the order of operations matters.  There are lots of excuses to make a bunch of identical parts.  Decide to give them away as gifts, for example.  Making 10 Turner’s Cubes all to a tolerance of 0.001″ would be an excellent learning experience and they make excellent gifts.

9.  Set up a Tool Table and do tool changes

In our first installment of 10 things, we were individually dealing with tool lengths by doing touch offs.  You can go pretty far this way, but it isn’t a very efficient way to work.  Learn how to set up your tool table so you can measure your tools in advance, put the data into the table, and then tool changes become faster and easier even without a tool changer.

10.  Learn how to work with offsets:  Work, Wear, and Geometry

Offsets are your Swiss Army Knife of tweaks you can perform on your programs.  Let’s say you’re trying to make those 10 parts to a tolerance.  You’ve gotten g-code from your CAM program, you fire it up, and low and behold some dimension is just not quite right.  In fact, it is not right by almost the same amount when you try a second part.  What to do?  Run over to the CAM software and change the g-code?  Well you could, but once you get used to it, it’s a lot quicker and easier to use your controller’s various offsets to make a change.  When you consider the effects of changing temperature on material expansion, or wear on the tooling changing the effective diameter of an endmill, not to mention endmills that aren’t very close to what they’re advertised to be (you’ll see!) and you want to be able to deal with this stuff without running back and changing the g-code every time.

Work offsets are great too because they make it easy to run the same g-code to make more than one part.  Say you’ve got two vises on your table.  Assign a work offset to each.  Now you can run the same g-code and use each work offset and you can make 2 parts without having to touch the machine.

Are there 10 more things?

To be honest, there’s way more than 10.  I could probably do an article like this every month for a year without running out of ideas for things beginners should learn or try.  The art of CNC Machining is a deep subject.  I will probably run some more articles like this, but I’m not signing up for when.  Meanwhile, you’ve got 20 things now to work on.  If you master all 20, I guarantee you’ll have learned a lot, you’ll be a lot more confident machinist, and you’ll be a lot faster and more productive.

Git ‘er done![/et_pb_text][/et_pb_column][/et_pb_row][/et_pb_section]

 

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