Home Built?
Conversions?
But aren't there a fair number of CNC-convertable mini-mills in about that price range? harborfreight has
http://www.harborfreight.com/cpi/ctaf/Displayitem.taf?itemnumber=39743 for about $400. and while the cheap chinese tools have a mixed reputation, they're probably a better starting point than scratch
Problems:
Peter Van Hoof says: "You set up your x-y table in front of the milling bit lined up exactly where you want it the bit turns as seen from above clockwise (just like an electric drill) the last adjustment to line the piece to be milled you moved it a little to the left you now move the piece forward against the bit the spinning bit excerts a force to the left on the piece being milled and because the backlash is left at the wrong side of the piece it will jump making measurments inaccurate and potentially creating a dangerous situation."
Denny Esterline says: "Hardware store rod does have a nonliniarity problem. Rods I've measured are between -10 and +30 thou per "inch" of turns. The driver board I designed stores calibration constants in eeprom and compensates every half inch. With this method I was able to achive absolute positional accuracy of less than five thou."
Also:
See also:
How about making a nice donation to him to make up for it?
http://www.crankorgan.com/order.htm
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