How to Use a Milling Machine - Kevin Caron
From
http://www.kevincaron.com -
Artist Kevin Caron explains to friends
Eddie and
Stacy how his vintage milling machine works and what he uses it for
....
Eddie and Stacy were curious about the mill, or milling machine, so
Caron fills them in.
This is an old
Bridgeport mill. It can drill holes, but it's more for cutting side to side or front to back - that's
X and Y, and Z, which is the height. Eddie turns the handle to raise the knee, which holds the table and the vise.
At the top of the machine is what is called the quill, which is a really long bolt that goes all the way down to the tapered shaft of the chuck. If you tighten the quill and put a drill in the chuck, you can use it as a drill press.
For milling, there are hundreds of types and sizes of threaded collets that fit up inside the quill to hold different styles of end mills. Caron shows a grooved roughing mill that is used to cut more quickly. He then shows some other end mills including a large roughing mill. He explains that some have multiple flutes and some only have two flutes, which are used for softer metals like aluminum - the one he is showing is for steel.
Caron shows how he'd use the roughing mill, clamping the steel pieces onto the table using the special clamps that fit into the slots on the table. Then he'd use the roughing end mill to cut away the excess metal. Then he'd switch to another end mill that smooths the rough surface. Eddie says that the roughing mill looks just like a tool he uses for hand carving wood. Caron says that his metal mill has a much bigger motor, much stronger gears, but a much slower machine than a woodworker would use.
Eddie asks how often the end mills need sharpening. As long as you use cutting fluid on them as they are running, as long as you don't try to force it through at a fast speed, they'll last a long time. Caron suggests you try not to run them into the table, which is really hard, or use the end mills with stone or anything similar. He's sharpened maybe three of them in the several years he's owned the mill.
The end mills are expensive - $25, $30, $50, $
100, $
200 each - depending upon the size. The high-speed steel ones are four to five times cheaper than solid caribide ones, which last much longer.
This machine was made in the mid
1970s, so it is entirely hand controlled except for a power feed that runs the quill up and down for drilling, but Caron uses the manual handle instead. All of the table feeds are mechanical and hand-controlled.
The newer machines are all computer controlled. They have motors, so you just punch some buttons, put some metal in it, hit the "go" button, get a cup of coffee and come back to see chips fly.
Caron bought this machine used for about $5,
000.
The new computer controlled mills cost $25,000 - $40,000 depending upon how many bells and whistles you get, but this will last his lifetime. It takes a lot of floor space and runs on three-phase power instead of single-phase. It'll run on
220, which almost every house has, or
440 - you just have to change a little wiring on the top. It has a small rotary phase converter that takes single-phase 220 and turns it into three-phase 220.
The machine requires almost no maintenance. It has two oil ports into which you put a little drop every time you use it. You try to keep it clean by wiping down its surfaces, and it has a small oil tank on the side with a hand pump that you fill with light cutting fluid or light motor oil. Every time before you use the machine, you give it one pump, which applies oil on all the sliding parts. That's pretty much it.
Stacy then asks what he uses the machine for. Caron explains it's for creating flat surfaces, channels, grooves, any kind of straight, square cut or
hole you want to make in a piece of metal. Caron uses it for making art, including MillKnot ( http://www.kevincaron.com/art_detail/millknot
.html ). He then shows an aluminum billet and how he uses them to make a sculpture. He uses the mill to whittle, as well as to make standardized pieces for sculptures. It makes his job a lot easier.
Caron explains that about 75% of the time you spend using the machine is set up, getting everything lined up, straight and clamped down. That's why the new computer controlled ones are so much better. They'll even feed in their own end mills!
Caron is ready to go back to work, so you have time to go out to http://www.kevincaron.com and see more how-to videos.
But first, you might see Eddie risk his life ....
"
Inspired sculpture for public & private places."
Artist Kevin Caron has been sculpting full time since
2006. You can see his more than
45 commissions in public and private places coast-to-coast and online at http://www.kevincaron.com.
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