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Choosing a Milling machine 1

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Anderson Oliveira

Mechanical
Aug 23, 2016
5
Hi! guys!

I have a mission to buy a milling machine, but this is completely new for me.

The milling machine is to simply applications in a maintenance department in an industry. The task will be to fabricate simple parts like key, keyway, keyseat, undercuts, gears, ...

What should I observe to buy it? What is relevant? What should I consider in a comparative with my options?

Tks,

Anderson Oliveira
Mechanical Engineer
Brazil
 
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How big are the parts?
How many do you need to make?
How full is your wallet?
 
I think first you need to find the machinist who has experience using a milling machine and will be responsible for operating this one. If that person is you, find a place to take a course on using a milling machine before buying one. You would need to learn anyway and it will allow for a better selection. Otherwise it is like saying you want to have a farm, and asking what kind should it be.
 
Useful rule of thumb for buying machinery:
To select from a group of similar machines, buy the heaviest one.

Useful rule of thumb for buying used machinery:
In general, you don't want the one that's extraordinarily clean, because it likely suffered from a large number of service calls. ... which suggests that it broke a lot, and maybe never ever ran right.
You want the one with layers of factory grime (as opposed to rust), suggeting that it lived a productive life and didn't demand a lot of attention.

For milling machines especially, inspect the table. If there are worn, scarred areas on the surface that's supposed to be flat, that suggests that wrenches were dropped on the table thousands of times, by people who didn't know how to care for the machine, or didn't care to know how.

In any case, take along someone who knows how to run the machine, and demonstrate that all the functions work and all the needed parts are present.


Mike Halloran
Pembroke Pines, FL, USA
 
Going new or used? Most people will start out with a manual mill but you might want to look at a CNC mill - so much easier to cut non-straight lines and multiple features and do it in fewer setups.
 
If you are going with a manual mill, try to find one with a good digital reader , whilst it is an added luxury, and a good machinist can work without one. It does take a lot of hassle out counting turns on the handles, and compensating for backlash on the screws.
As has been said before here, take the guy who is going to use it with you to look at the machine.
B.E.

You are judged not by what you know, but by what you can do.
 
While I wait the answer from here, I started some researches.

The milling machine will be an Iso 30 or 40 ( I don't know the better option about it yet)

We will use just to fabricate parts eventually to maintenance actives. Like one or two parts a day.

How essential is a digital painel.

The machine will be new.

Here in Brazil,we have only chineses options:

Eurostec, Pinnacle, Wess, Tornitec

 
A digital read out (DRO) is extremely useful. It greatly increased productivity and accuracy of a manual machine.
 
You really need to find a reputable dealer to help you in your search. Try to find some shops who have this equipment in your area and ask them what they think of the dealer and the associated service. A reputable dealer will help steer you in the right direction once you show what you are trying to accomplish.

The size and specifications of a machine are very dependent upon what you are doing. 'Milling machines' encompass a very broad range of equipment.

Gears are not simple things to manufacture on a mill. You need a lot of tooling and generally gears are manufactured on specialized equipment.

If you are looking just to do key ways and the like you are probably looking for a standard knee mill - a 'Bridgeport' clone. Provided you have an experienced machinist to run it, I would simply go with a manual Bridgeport clone with an R8 spindle and digital read out (DRO), if the parts will fit into it. Don't count on making gearing with such a machine unless you have very motivated and creative machinists on staff, in which case I would let them pick out the machine.



 
You still haven't answered the earlier question:
How big are the parts?
How thick is your wallet (= budget)

Right now we don't know if you need an oil field mill, or a watchmakers.

Benta.
 
How critically dimensioned are the parts?
How capable is the machinist who is going to be cutting them?

You will pay tens of thousands to get 1/10000 accuracy for nothing if you only really are going to need +/- 0.002 or 0.001 that will be cut by by semi-skilled machinist only accurate to 0.010 or 0.008 accuracy in HIS measuring and aligning!

If the parts can be "crude" at 0.010 or 0.005 accuracy, or if the machinist is not very good at reading dials and micrometers of offset gages - which is why digital readouts are better in today's terrible schools - the expense of a very good, very heavy, very accurate machine will be somewhat wasted.
 
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