- Видео 4
- Просмотров 101 104
DNA Manufacturing
Добавлен 19 ноя 2023
Hi, my name is Andrew and this is my journey through the world of CNC manufacturing at a job shop. Applying the knowledge I have acquired while continuing to expand that knowledge and sharing my experience along the way.
Full Set-up AND machining of OFF-ROAD prototype | CNC Machining
Helping my buddy prototype a new product for the off-road industry. Follow along the set-up and machining process.
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Hi, my name is Andrew and I have been in the manufacturing industry basically since I was born. With exposure coming from my dad, I naturally took an interest in manufacturing and engineering. Now 24 years old, I have a passion for CNC machining and being in the business of utilizing fixturing, tooling, programming, etc. to make parts efficient while maintaining that dead-nuts accurate “DNA” precision.
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Insta: @dnamfg
Questions: info@dnamfg.com
#jobshop #precision #aerospace #cnc #cncmachining #cncmachine #cncmanufacturing
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Hi, my name is Andrew and I have been in the manufacturing industry basically since I was born. With exposure coming from my dad, I naturally took an interest in manufacturing and engineering. Now 24 years old, I have a passion for CNC machining and being in the business of utilizing fixturing, tooling, programming, etc. to make parts efficient while maintaining that dead-nuts accurate “DNA” precision.
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Insta: @dnamfg
Questions: info@dnamfg.com
#jobshop #precision #aerospace #cnc #cncmachining #cncmachine #cncmanufacturing
Просмотров: 14 714
Видео
Winning HER over with CNC Machining | CNC Shop
Просмотров 2,2 тыс.Год назад
Chill morning in the shop making something a little more personal to win her over ;). Really cool to step back and think about how I can make anything out of a solid piece of metal! Hi, my name is Andrew and I have been in the manufacturing industry basically since I was born. With exposure coming from my dad, I naturally took an interest in manufacturing and engineering. Now 24 years old, I ha...
Making Money on a Machine that's HOW OLD?! | CNC Machining at a Job Shop
Просмотров 75 тыс.Год назад
Follow me through the basics of starting and completing a job at a CNC job shop. I go through reverse engineering with a 3D scanner to programming and machining complete parts. All on a machine that is older than me?! Hi, my name is Andrew and I have been in the manufacturing industry basically since I was born. With exposure coming from my dad, I naturally took an interest in manufacturing and...
New Journey with a BIG Machine | CNC Machining
Просмотров 9 тыс.Год назад
New beginnings can sometimes be fun, especially when it involves a new CNC machine. Follow me on the start of my journey with our new VTL. Hi, my name is Andrew and I have been in the manufacturing industry basically since I was born. With exposure coming from my dad, I naturally took an interest in manufacturing and engineering. Now 24 years old, I have a passion for CNC machining and being in...
excellent work, nice video, well done!
great work bro
One small critique: That scanner is +/- a thou at best not factoring in any volumetric error. It’s not “a few tenths from the actual part”. This amount of error would be problematic in many situations. I just want to make sure people know what is possible currently. Basically all metrology grade handheld scanners are accurate to a couple thousandths (I work in measurement). Absolutely awesome video. Not taking anything away from what you did here - it’s rad dude.
How many spindle rpms does your Moriseki have? Im looking at an Okuma v4020 with 8k spindle
have the same sweat shirt and run a horizontal mill, love the vids!!
the model you are scanning, is it a finished workpiece or a model. 3d printed / sla model ?? I have worked with scanning that small objects 10 x 15x 12 mm can tell you it was impossible to scan. the subject for hearing aids / ear plugs
Great job. are those parts for the aerospace industry, also are you familiar with 5 axis marching? Thanks!
Man love the vibe just a chill laidback machinist
Is this precision engineering or me blind?😅😅😅 Hmmmm..I have no words.
Cool video. I have a Question, what equipment do you use for the POV angle/camera?
1000 times better than ,,,titans boooom booom booom ,, this is so fake booomm
😂😂😂
nice to see some real cnc work.. keep it up
The interpolation with that end mill on that last op has a definate pucker factor clearence is clearence.
Hey. Hope you keep uploading from time to time. Love your stuff. Greetings from Germany
good old edge finder. What was your step over for your end mills when roughing? Full DOC I'm assuming for the most part?
good old sh-40 xD
Great vid. Older Moris are together and accurate. How do you know what the feature tolerances should be?
Love your Videos, would like to see something about your programming and workholding. "How to make the soft jaws" Keep up the good work :)
Ive been a welder/fabby for thirty years, I hate it. For the last year Ive been learning/training in a mill that looks the same as this one. exact same 4th axis and 20 tool changer. The one I use is bigger I think but hard to tell on screen. I forget the name but the software is FANUC
good work!
Ford I-Beam ends for prerunner front suspension, cause real men use A-arms to race in the desert lol, awesome work bud
You might already know this,but I keep the movable jaw snug not loose,it helps keep lift to a minimum
Great Work......im thinkin Housing Knuckles for a 4wd..what do they weight?
From one machinist to another, files are a one way tool. They dull faster when drug backwards. Carbide doesn't like 2 things, mechanical shock and thermal shock. Make your first pass conventional when dealing with flame cut. (.060" into the work is hardened from the flame) Having the cutting edge enter the soft material first then exit the harder material will increase tool life (Both HSS and Carbide.) I know that turning off coolant makes for an excellent shot, it's when the coolant is turned back on that the carbide gets micro cracks from thermal shock, thus reducing tool life. In creating the soft jaws or any fixturing where you locate on radii or an angle terminating into a radius, eliminate the radius in the fixture or the area where the X or Y axis changes direction. Without the G187 P3 E.005 on the finish pass (Haas only) the axis will start and stop aprox. .025" from the actual transition point, therefore the male and female radii will not match and cause the part to rock. My rule of thumb was to eliminate that feature in the fixture up to .050" from the transition points to avoid this. @ 14:16, make the radius on the solid jaw either larger or just a flat leaving space that way you avoid the mismatch and locate exactly each time. You're making some good looking parts tho! A testament to your teacher.
Good thing he's using his own file and not yours.
I’m not a machinist, but I can tell that the 3d scanner was a game changer when it comes to reproducing existing parts. Cool video.
It depends on accurasy ,generally laser scanners are not enough for high accuracy requirements.
@@blabla-kk8bl0.02mm is pretty accurate. I have a CR Raptor and can use the scan data without needing to measure the part. Good 3D scanners now are affordable and highly accurate. But you still need a good software like Geomagic design X for reverse engineering.
Horizontals have one major advantage in my eyes and that is chip evacuation. I'm working on 2 vertical spindle machines (Haas VF2 SSYT 2020 machine, Dahlih MCV 720 idk which year that is, but all I can say is that it is quite a bit older) (in my company we have only 2 mills and it's enough to do all the work necessary for company needs - we're making parts for ourselves if you could say that) Edit: I would love to make parts of that size, that would be really cool and fun to machine.
Wow ❤❤😂
It looked like you had the ground surface facing up, you then machined it true to the machine, can you explain what was the point of the grinding?
Jack Support your vice overhangs and internal profiles when machining ops 3&4
Would love to hear more detail right from the get go about what tools you’re using, materials, speeds and feeds, depth of cut, step over, maybe showing the cad and cam, etc. I know it takes a lot more work but it would make the watch much more worth while so i feel like I’ve gained knowledge by seeing your perspective on things and what’s going on in your head while programming or setting up. Love the video quality tho and getting to see it from start to finish! Keep it up! See you in the next video!
Your a real good machinist mate! I have my own shop with 2 vmc and i see myself in your video! You're a logical guy keep it up!
Appreciate that! Thanks for the support 🤝
Good job! Cheers from Belgium
Nice Video, how long did it take to make these parts?
Thanks, it took 2 days total!
Nice job on those parts, very impressive. Now I got to get a couple rakes for my mills.
Great video format! It would be great to see more of your Fusion programming (feeds/speeds/cut sizes). Looking forward to the next. 🇬🇧
Thanks.. Programming and manufacturing stages. A video showing all the stages, including CAM making, would be great.
Thanks.. Please enable the subtitle feature in videos.
Bro this is a good video, saludos desde argentina🙌🏼
Which material is it?
A36 steel
@@dnamfg thanks!
Nice work! ❤
Where did you get the soft jaws prepackaged? I was super confused when I saw you ripping them open. Great video, always cool to see prototyping!
monsterjaws.com When time is fleeting in the day and things need to get done it’s super useful to be able to get some. And for me they’re local so I can pick up
Companies that make vice jaws and lathe jaws are able to sell them for so cheap that sometimes it's hard to justify setting up to do that yourself.
its very nice videos keep going man😎✌️
Non machinist here. Why do you file the peace before putting it in the machine and why do you smack it with a mallet?
Both things you mentioned have to do with making sure the work piece is clamped properly. The file is for removing high spots left on the edges. Tapping it down is bc the movable jaw in the vise will lift the work ever so slightly, and tapping it sets it back into place
awesome video man!!! should do some programming videos!
Thinking maybe for the next video 🤔
What kind of steel was that?
A36 just for prototyping the welded assembly, the final material will probably be 4130
badass video! I just now realized I load my tools in a weird way. It looked like you loaded all the tools for the job into the mill and then probed the tool length. I usually put a tool in and measure the tool length before loading the next tool (that's how the haas tech showed me how to load tools for a job).
Just find it easier that way, but it’s all about what works for you!
I came from machining as a hobby so I'm sure I'm not following best practices a lot! Thanks for showing us how you set everything up! I love learning via youtube.@@dnamfg
hell yeah
sweet beam ends, I appreciate your attention to detail, with quality like that the business will always come
Thanks man!
Bro wtf was that a rake 😂 dude thats a $80k machine 😂
I always have a little broom on top of mine just for chips
That's a premium Hass chip removal tool. Available with annual subscription
We use rakes in $800,000 machines. If it works it works
@@brendanmmannno dude 😭, get a broom only for the machine , it scrapes the f outa the paint
Nice work man 👍