Centering collars (3-point-steady) for smooth rods alignment? March 31, 2016 02:42PM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 1,035 |
Re: Centering collars (3-point-steady) for smooth rods alignment? March 31, 2016 09:21PM |
Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 5,797 |
Re: Centering collars (3-point-steady) for smooth rods alignment? March 31, 2016 10:02PM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 1,035 |
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the_digital_dentist
Are those parts going to be plastic or metal? If they flex when you tighten the screws you may have trouble getting the rails aligned. Whatever you make them out of, I'd bulk them up quite a lot.
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the_digital_dentist
I think that at one end, both rails should fit into a single piece with two holes and no adjustments. At the other end, a single piece with two holes and one of them with this 3 point adjustment would be good to allow the one rail to be brought into alignment with the other.
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the_digital_dentist
That should work for the x and y axes, but the Z axis (in i3 type configurations) and y axis in coreXY presents a special problem.
Re: Centering collars (3-point-steady) for smooth rods alignment? April 01, 2016 08:31AM |
Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 5,797 |
Re: Centering collars (3-point-steady) for smooth rods alignment? April 01, 2016 02:57PM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 1,035 |
Re: Centering collars (3-point-steady) for smooth rods alignment? April 01, 2016 11:04PM |
Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 5,797 |
Re: Centering collars (3-point-steady) for smooth rods alignment? April 02, 2016 07:58AM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 1,035 |
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the_digital_dentist
It is harder to align the Y axis rails when the XY mechanism isn't built on a flat plate. For the Y axis in your machine it might indeed be a good idea to use one of the three point adjusters on each rail.
Re: Centering collars (3-point-steady) for smooth rods alignment? April 02, 2016 08:11PM |
Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 5,797 |
Re: Centering collars (3-point-steady) for smooth rods alignment? April 02, 2016 10:49PM |
Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 1,049 |
Re: Centering collars (3-point-steady) for smooth rods alignment? April 03, 2016 04:37AM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 1,035 |
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the_digital_dentist
3 screws will move it anywhere in space that it needs to go. To me it seems like it's overconstrained if you use four screws. I think you could position the three screws to make the alignment easier. The other thing you could do is position the rail horizontally by mounting the rail holder on a slot in the frame for side to side motion, and then shim it for vertical. You should only have to set it up once and never touch it again, so while screws to turn are nice, they aren't completely necessary.
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cozmicray
I am confused.
What is Orange piece for? ease in removing rod?
Quick rod replacement every day?
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cozmicray
A simple way to align plates
--- place laser pointer on one plate or across rods
and shoot it across a room , -- mark spot
move laser to other plate
align to mark on wall
A little mis-align would show up as vertical inches in laser spot difference
(depending how far wall is away from rods being aligned)
The mark on wall could be reference for all other alignments.
A level line all around your work room could be used to align all axes?
Re: Centering collars (3-point-steady) for smooth rods alignment? April 03, 2016 04:13PM |
Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 1,049 |
Re: Centering collars (3-point-steady) for smooth rods alignment? April 04, 2016 04:00AM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 1,035 |
Re: Centering collars (3-point-steady) for smooth rods alignment? April 04, 2016 07:07AM |
Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 5,797 |
Re: Centering collars (3-point-steady) for smooth rods alignment? April 04, 2016 04:30PM |
Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 1,049 |
Anonymous User
Re: Centering collars (3-point-steady) for smooth rods alignment? April 07, 2016 11:37AM |
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the_digital_dentist
It is harder to align the Y axis rails when the XY mechanism isn't built on a flat plate. For the Y axis in your machine it might indeed be a good idea to use one of the three point adjusters on each rail.
Digital protractors can be found on eBay for $30-60. $60 gets one with a built in accelerometer that can measure rotation angles in addition to the usual tilting. I have one of those and find the rotation measurement not especially useful for the stuff I do. Otherwise, these devices are useful and a lot more accurate than any bubble level they might replace. They are primarily sold to woodworkers for adjusting saw blade angles.
[m.ebay.com]
[m.ebay.com]
Re: Centering collars (3-point-steady) for smooth rods alignment? April 07, 2016 10:35PM |
Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 5,797 |
Re: Centering collars (3-point-steady) for smooth rods alignment? April 07, 2016 10:57PM |
Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 5,797 |
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cozmicray
Keep it simple?
You really only need a $3 laser pointer with a nice straight round / square barrel
that gives nice small spot
[attachment 75869 Laser_align.jpg]
Length of measurement points here exaggerates the mis-alignment
Example:
My mill is in middle of room
lay laser pointer on bed pointing to right wall mark on wall
swing laser around and point toward left wall mark on wall
Put laser on mill head which is 40cm above bed
mark on L R walls 40cm above other mark
adjust mill head so laser spot is on mark
check it on other wall
Mill head is aligned with some good precision to bed
Assume Mill shaft orthogonal to head (well spec sez it's 90+-0.0001 degree)
mill cutter should be orthogonal to bed ( good enough for government work)
============
(Water level) Hey piece of clear tubing filled with water can show you level
even if tubing is 100 feet long
A weight on a string will show you plumb
Example: Laser level on eBay (nice flat bottom) $5.50
[www.ebay.com]
Re: Centering collars (3-point-steady) for smooth rods alignment? April 08, 2016 12:51PM |
Registered: 10 years ago Posts: 1,035 |
Re: Centering collars (3-point-steady) for smooth rods alignment? April 08, 2016 05:19PM |
Registered: 12 years ago Posts: 1,049 |
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the_digital_dentist
At first glance it seemed like a good way to test rail alignment, but after thinking about it, I realized it isn't.
Let's say the rails are parallel but one end of the pair is higher than the other. When you mark the spots on the wall they will not match. Then you have to decide if the rails are not parallel vertically or if the rails are parallel but not level. If the ends are at the same level and the rails are not parallel in the horizontal plane the marks on the wall will line up as if the rails are parallel. So the laser pointer trick doesn't distinguish between vertically nonparallel rails and vertically parallel but not level rails, and it can't tell you anything about whether the rails are parallel in the horizontal plane.
The technique requires further development to be useful.