machining carbon


Author
Message
FLD
FLD
Supreme Being (3.7K reputation)Supreme Being (3.7K reputation)Supreme Being (3.7K reputation)Supreme Being (3.7K reputation)Supreme Being (3.7K reputation)Supreme Being (3.7K reputation)Supreme Being (3.7K reputation)Supreme Being (3.7K reputation)Supreme Being (3.7K reputation)
Group: Forum Members
Posts: 468, Visits: 2.7K
Thanks rob.
f1rob
f1rob
Supreme Being (2K reputation)Supreme Being (2K reputation)Supreme Being (2K reputation)Supreme Being (2K reputation)Supreme Being (2K reputation)Supreme Being (2K reputation)Supreme Being (2K reputation)Supreme Being (2K reputation)Supreme Being (2K reputation)
Group: Forum Members
Posts: 237, Visits: 4.8K
No problems machining it but you will find lots of machine shops are against it

Some on the grounds of dust extraction others don't like carbon dust on the beds of the machines and in the workings
kidpaint
kidpaint
Supreme Being (778 reputation)Supreme Being (778 reputation)Supreme Being (778 reputation)Supreme Being (778 reputation)Supreme Being (778 reputation)Supreme Being (778 reputation)Supreme Being (778 reputation)Supreme Being (778 reputation)Supreme Being (778 reputation)
Group: Forum Members
Posts: 99, Visits: 676
I was just actually getting on here to look for this same question. I was thinking about milling some future projects. Ill have to try the permagrit and see how that works out. 
ajb100
ajb100
Supreme Being (2.6K reputation)Supreme Being (2.6K reputation)Supreme Being (2.6K reputation)Supreme Being (2.6K reputation)Supreme Being (2.6K reputation)Supreme Being (2.6K reputation)Supreme Being (2.6K reputation)Supreme Being (2.6K reputation)Supreme Being (2.6K reputation)
Group: Forum Members
Posts: 346, Visits: 4.4K
I havnt tried turning any composites yet, but what I have done is CNC mill shapes using a long permagrit cutter designed for air rotaries instead of a traditional cutter. There are traditional looking tools available to cut carbon, but the price is rather high.

The only issue with the permagrit idea is due to the way they are made, they are not perfectly round, so had to do a test hole with each cutter to measure the diameter hole they cut so I knew what to program into the machine.

The only other issue was the dust. The machines are used to swarf not dust so I taped my extracter hose to the body of the mill and ran it down to the surface of the carbon parallel to the quill. It worked pretty well tbh. I considered making a shroud to cover the tool and duct the extracter more efficiently but it was a lot of work to allow it to move with the vertical motions of the quill shaft.

There's no reason you couldn't fit a permagrit tool to a lathe IMO 
FLD
FLD
Supreme Being (3.7K reputation)Supreme Being (3.7K reputation)Supreme Being (3.7K reputation)Supreme Being (3.7K reputation)Supreme Being (3.7K reputation)Supreme Being (3.7K reputation)Supreme Being (3.7K reputation)Supreme Being (3.7K reputation)Supreme Being (3.7K reputation)
Group: Forum Members
Posts: 468, Visits: 2.7K
Is it possible to machine carbon laminates in a similar fashion to metals, ie turn on a lathe?  I am considering some mouldings that need some serious accuracy with wierd shapes and I was thinking this might be another option.
GO

Merge Selected

Merge into selected topic...



Merge into merge target...



Merge into a specific topic ID...




Similar Topics

Reading This Topic

Explore
Messages
Mentions
Search