I did the exact same thing.buildyourown said:The first time I moved mine, I tried to do it with a pallet jack. Good thing the pallet jack was a rental.
mtnbrider said:Thats so cool. HOw does CAD work? Is it codes with numbers similiar to computers like htm,html,...
dude. duuuuuuuudeEVRAC said:I'm supervisor of a mid-sized CNC shop. Check out these puppies:
bcd said:just won it on ebay last night.
an affordable way to make all new
accurate molds.
Nice Mill and Shop. If I had a place to work out of like that, my wife would never see me. I miss the fun I had in school working on the Mills. I would stay over 2 to 4 hours after class was over just to play. Hope to see some nice work out of you soon.
How far is it sitting from the panel? If it is not to far you can just run a big rubber cord. Let me know the power requirements and i will tell you what you need to get. If you can build a bike I know you can do a little electrical work.bcd said:thanks all
there need to be some 220 3 phase ran or i might get a phase converter
if new lines cost a lot.
i have single phase 220 10' away.denjen said:How far is it sitting from the panel? If it is not to far you can just run a big rubber cord. Let me know the power requirements and i will tell you what you need to get. If you can build a bike I know you can do a little electrical work.
Dennis
Yeah, seriously.!konastab01 said:Very nice alex that must have been a struggle getting it off the pallet.
dw said:Yeah, seriously.!
How did you get it off the trailer?
Dave
I am sure you have thought of this but if you run 3 phase power in the building set another panel to cover any future ebay puchases. Sometimes the control box's on equipment like that can be rewired for 220, you may want to look into that also. If I lived any where close I would love to help you out.bcd said:i have single phase 220 10' away.
i would have to get line ran from the street for 3 phase.
I'm going to sound a little spoiled here but I'll say it any way, that first picture looks alot like the machine shop I used in college. We had an Okuma lathe with live spindle tooling, a Fadal VMC, 2 Sodick wire EDM's, a Sodick plunge EDM, a Superdrill, 2 Hurco 3 axis CNC mills a Fryer 3 Axis mill with an Anilam control and a Bridgeport easy path lathe, along with several manual mills and lathes. I spent a lot of time in the shop, looking back I wish I'd spent more money on material and spent some more time really learning the CNC equipment.EVRAC said:I'm supervisor of a mid-sized CNC shop. Check out these puppies:
Kornphlake said:One of these days my dad will buy a CNC mill, it's only a matter of time, he's been talking about it for about 10 years. He wants to make wind powered water pumps for irrigation and small wind powered generators for things like outdoor accent lighting. Of course where he lives the wind blows >20 mph every day.