Ball Screw Pitch

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ed92254
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Ball Screw Pitch

Post by ed92254 »

Setting up a lathe for CNC and was wondering if ball screw pitch can be different between the Z axis (5MM) and X axis (4MM). Had to get a smaller ball screw for my X to physically make it fit and found out it was 4MM pitch.
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ctwo
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Re: Ball Screw Pitch

Post by ctwo »

I believe this would be addressed in your controller software - which one are you using?.
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ed92254
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Re: Ball Screw Pitch

Post by ed92254 »

Mach 3
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Dave_C
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Re: Ball Screw Pitch

Post by Dave_C »

Yes, Mach 3 will let you set up each axis with different leads or different motors. It is calculated in the turns per inch entry if your are using imperial setups. If you are setting up a metric setup it wants distance of travel per one turn of the motor.

So a .200" lead would be 5 tuns per inch and so on. You can use metric ball screws and still set up your machine as "inches" but you'll have to do some extra math.

Dave C.
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SteveHGraham
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Re: Ball Screw Pitch

Post by SteveHGraham »

Wow. A CNC question I could have answered.
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ed92254
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Re: Ball Screw Pitch

Post by ed92254 »

Thanks for the help guys its been a fun build so far and sorry if I ask some scary questions?? lol
dash9
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Re: Ball Screw Pitch

Post by dash9 »

Sling Mach 3 out get the Centroid Acorn.

http://www.centroidcnc.com/centroid_diy ... oller.html
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Dave_C
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Re: Ball Screw Pitch

Post by Dave_C »

I'd second that, even though I am still running a Mach 3 lathe conversion. Centroid is Funac compatible and runs a full set of G-codes while Mach 3 runs a partial set and is not compatible with anything else, as far as I'm aware. You will need a spindle encoder, a real one and not just the indexing type like mach uses, if you want to thread or do rigid tapping with the Acron/Centroid setup.

I'm in the process of reading the entire manual right now for the Centroid lathe and mill software. It is written very well, more like the way I understand tech manuals.

Dave C.
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Bill Shields
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Re: Ball Screw Pitch

Post by Bill Shields »

actually you want an encoder WITH a zero pulse index point so that you can reliably find home every time.
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Dave_C
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Re: Ball Screw Pitch

Post by Dave_C »

Ok, My poor explanation! Mach 3 uses a single slot spindle index and nothing else. So basically you make a disc with one slot in it, use an optical reader to read the slot or you can use one of those other type single pulse per rev encoders like a photo tac.

Mach 3 can't read a real 2000 line encoder for spindle positioning. Mach 3 also can't use CSS and FPR at the same time. (constant surface speed and Feed per Rev) One or the other but not both!

So no rigid tapping!

Dave C.
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ctwo
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Re: Ball Screw Pitch

Post by ctwo »

I'd have to spring for the Centroid Pro CNC. Looks like an interesting solution.
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Re: Ball Screw Pitch

Post by Marty_Escarcega »

ctwo wrote:I'd have to spring for the Centroid Pro CNC. Looks like an interesting solution.
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