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domino11
Mon 08 October 2007, 19:53
Gerald,
I was just wondering if I was the only one getting a little confused with all the new changes coming around lately, such as the several rail heights, capped rails, new motor mounting plates etc. Will all this be finalized in the new drawing set? Will all the new choices be apparent in the planset? I was just in the finalizing stages of getting some laser cut parts ordered and now Im not sure of what I need. Sorry just getting a little nervous. I just want to make sure I make all the right choices before I order. I can wait for the new plans, thats not a problem.

Thanks again.

PS. I think including the jr skate cutouts in the laser cut parts is great, that would save us a lot of time.

Gerald D
Tue 09 October 2007, 05:23
Heath, here is an early preview of the gantry as an example of where the drawings are heading. Again let it be said that the old, current set of drawings are adequate - the new set will be untested.

Drawings removed

Gerald D
Tue 09 October 2007, 05:51
Some other drawings fiddled with in the last few days . . . .

Drawings Removed

domino11
Tue 16 October 2007, 08:15
Gerald,
Thanks for the update. I really appreciate it. I hope I didnt seem like I was rushing you for the new drawings. I am eagerly awaiting them though. :)

Gerald D
Tue 16 October 2007, 09:08
That's okay Heath. We went away for the weekend and my mind went into neutral. Lost some momemtum though . . . . . .

Gerald D
Thu 18 October 2007, 07:40
Here is a first draft of the bulk of the drawings - proofreaders appreciated.

Set removed for update 7/11/07

Marc Shlaes
Thu 18 October 2007, 08:40
Gerald,

Going through the PDFs now. I will report any thing I see.

Can I ask you a question about your design process?

I am sure that I would not have made a good engineer because I truly struggle when I attempt to think in 3D. I have a very good friend (a designer by trade) who clearly thinks in 3D every moment of every day. He instantly sees how parts and components fit together and it takes me much longer. I have been building things all of my life and I still have to really work at 3D visualization. I believe, from your work that you are like my friend Jeff.

Now... here is the question. Do you design the MM in 3D and then produce the drawings in 2D for the package of PDFs or do you draw the whole thing in 2D and the connections and interferences and constraints are just a natural product of your brain?

This is a serious question. I realize that this represents many, many hours of work and I am in no way implying that it is easy but... I believe that you have a much easier time than I in this respect and I am curious as to how that affects your actual design process with CAD tools.

Your insight (or anyone elses) regarding 2D vs 3D design processes are very welcome.

Gerald D
Thu 18 October 2007, 10:03
I design 2D on paper and 3D in my head. Not using CAD 3D models.

smreish
Thu 18 October 2007, 11:26
Interestingly enough I draft in both 2D and 3D, but prefer 2d. I think projecting and drafting each section and elevation actually makes me a better designer. I feel I pay far better attention to details when I am forced to make choices, for example, in an orthographic projection. Just my 2 cents.
Sean

domino11
Thu 18 October 2007, 11:34
I design 2D on paper and 3D in my head. Not using CAD 3D models.

Gerald,
How do you do your backups then? :eek: Thanks for the new draft drawings. I will be looking them over this evening! :)

Marc,
I too have a hard time visualizing in 3d. 2D isn't so hard but putting all the pieces together in my head just doesnt work. :( The early shetchup model of the MM was invaluable for me to learn how all the parts fit together. :)

Gerald D
Thu 18 October 2007, 11:45
The many demo's that I have seen in Solidworks, Inventor and a couple of German packages have all made "wow" graphics but poor sheets of paper for the guys on the shop floor. My constant emphasis is on the person with a caliper in one hand and a welding torch in the other. I try to tell the welder what he needs/wants to know - no more and no less. Same for the machinist, etc. So I am constantly thinking of making the part, the processes. Will the washer lie next to the weld fillet if the weld is less than perfect? Would a standard wrench(spanner) fit in there? Will rainwater run out if the project is left outside for a month? Will the table be distorted if lifted by a forklift? And other crazy things . . . . .

The "graphics" and pretty pictures seem to to be over-rated in the 3D packages. The stuff I build can easily be modelled in real steel or wood, so I get lots of second chances (and some scrap). But I would hope that ships and aircraft have been properly modelled :)

Gerald D
Thu 18 October 2007, 11:50
How do you do your backups then? Remember when I said I lost momentum after a weekend away? Just start all over again! :)

Also remember, I have built 2 of these things and they are solid "models". I often come back to this forum to look at photos.

Gerald D
Fri 19 October 2007, 01:57
Here is a first draft of the rest of the drawings - proofreaders still appreciated.

Set removed for update 7/11/07

domino11
Fri 19 October 2007, 08:47
Gerald,
I noticed on the first draft set that drawings 10 40 000 and 10 40 014 are labeled both as 10 inch slide assembly. I believe the second one is the longer version? :confused:

Gerald D
Fri 19 October 2007, 12:58
Thanks. Title block needs a change.

Doug_Ford
Sun 21 October 2007, 09:31
Gerald,

I found a couple of small errors.

Drawing M1 20 210 - the top line of text says that the bolt should have a .06" plain shank. I think that should be .6" plain shank.

Drawing M5 10 160 is titled Geared Motor but the drawing shows a direct drive motor.

Gerald D
Sun 21 October 2007, 09:41
Thanks Doug

Hey, there must be plenty more mistakes! (There are a couple of drawings in there that are quite wrong, but are just holding the place in the sequence). In the last few weeks, I found some howlers with the older set of drawings that made me cringe. :o

Doug_Ford
Sun 21 October 2007, 10:34
Honestly, I'm amazed that you were able to draw up something this complicated with nothing but tiny inconsequential errors. It would be a different story if you were designing a machine for your employer but you're just doing this because you're a great guy. Right or wrong, most people wouldn't be as conscientious in their attention to detail on the free project.

If you found errors in the old drawings, I'm shocked. I put the whole machine together using them and everything fit perfectly!!!

I'm a nit picking editor when I'm asked to be but don't let me piss you off. If I start getting on your nerves, let me know and I'll back off.

Here are a few more I found:

- Drawing M2 10 110. There is a typo in the spelling of purchased.

- M2 10 124. The rack length is shown as 390 (11.4"). I believe it should be 390 (15.3").

- M1 30 222. The arrow points to part M5 10 332P but I believe the part is M1 10 332P.

- 10 10 320 and 10 10 322. The title block as a typo. Longitudnal should be spelled Longitudinal unless that's the South African spelling like colour vs. color.

Gerald D
Sun 21 October 2007, 10:45
More Doug, give me more!!!! :):)

Gerald D
Thu 01 November 2007, 00:36
I am a little surprised at the few downloads (42) and the few people giving feedback (2).

smreish
Thu 01 November 2007, 04:06
Gerald,
I had a chance to finally go over the draft set of drawings and I found a couple of things noteworthy you may want to check.
- M2 10 124 Z-axis rack
(the overall dimensions calls for 390mm, but the alternate shows 11.4" Should this be 15.35 inches?) It looks like you dimensioned actual part size after the sectioning of the detail to fit the page.
-M2 10 70 155 - nice note about amp rating for dust collection. Do you think you should duplicate the note on M10 70 130 since you have called out the contactor rating just upstream of this location?
- I like the note about phase color on the America's drawings. Some non- electrical People will appreciate that notation. L1 L2 is sometimes not so apparent in Load Centers here in the Americas.
----
I will keep looking as I build. Back to marking holes and drilling steel for the day!

Sean

Gerald D
Thu 01 November 2007, 04:12
Thanks Sean.

Doug_Ford
Thu 01 November 2007, 10:52
To Gerald:

Maybe I'm crazy but it seems like I recall you instructing someone to ensure that their stepper motors were oriented so that the wires leading into the body were on the bottom to reduce dust contamination and bearing failure. I searched and searched for the post but couldn't find it. If you did indeed made that post, then the drawings for the geared motor mounts will need to be changed. My motors can only be mounted with the wires on the side so I'm planning to put a small dab of silicon sealant on the hole.

If you never made that post then ignore this one.

To Everyone Else:

Come on guys. Pitch in. Gerald has worked his butt off helping us and has only asked for blue paint and a logo. The least we can do is respond when he asks us for something.

domino11
Thu 01 November 2007, 10:55
Doug,
Its difficult though, Gerald is so particular that finding errors is few and far between. :)

smreish
Thu 01 November 2007, 11:12
Doug,
Good point. This isn't the correct thread for this, but As I look at my 7.2 Gearsteppers on the bench, your correct about orientation, but due to the alignment and swing angle to the rack, we are subject to only that orientation. The non-geared folks can rotate their motors in 90degree clocks and maintain centerline. down is good, sideways not so bad, up..pretty bad. I will silicone my entry point as well! Sean

Gerald D
Thu 01 November 2007, 12:05
Doug & Sean, it is something like the wire entry orientation that should be on an assembly drawing. Might sound like something small, but we did seize up a motor because of that, and there were no spare motors on this continent. (Against all advice, the motor was opened, cleaned out and bearings replaced).

I didn't think that the geared motors don't have the options on wire orientation. But then I seem to recall that the lone geared motor I have seen had a reasonable seal and clamp for the wires? (Our un-geared motors are fairly open)

Gerald D
Thu 08 November 2007, 05:13
I think the attached set is complete . . . . . . . almost. The expensive stuff (laser, bending, big pieces of steel) should all be there. Some small stuff is lacking in detail (eg - proxy switch brackets), but it has always been like that and nobody complained. :p.

The zipped .dxf files for the laser supplier, also contains the relevant bending drawings now. Must still do a spreadsheet of quanties/options and thicknesses.

Question: Are all the sheets here and can this set go to the "downloads" page for the "mass public"?

Also, I think the original design must stay posted under the name "Classic", but then what do we call this newer version?

All files now on "downloads page (http://www.mechmate.com/forums/showthread.php?t=376)"

Marc Shlaes
Thu 08 November 2007, 05:50
MechMate 1.1

From my life managing large software development endeavors we would handle it as the following:

Mechmate 2.0 would indicate SIGNIFICANT changes. It is still the same machine we "know and love". We would call this an update not a version. The first number indicates version and the second indicates release. But, theoretically, you have done some updates already so something in 1.2 or 1.3 would be appropriate. As members continue to find little bugs here and there and things get fixed, it becomes 1.3.1, 1.3.2, etc.

And each version is maintained on the downloads page so that a member can actually say he has a MM 1.3.2 and can choose to upgrade or downgrade to suit his needs. (this aspect may be more work for you than it is worth but... you asked). :rolleyes:

Alan_c
Thu 08 November 2007, 08:01
Hi Gerald

Just had a quick look through the drawings - found the following "issues"

10 10 240 WA - proxy holes not indicated
10 10 200 AA & 10 10 220 AA - proxy holes shown in different positions, whereas
10 10 246 & 10 10 247 - proxy holes shown in the same position.
ditto for 10 20 200 / 10 20 220 / 10 20 246 / 10 20 247

Note on 10 20 451 BA and 10 20 452 BA refers to drilling - what drilling, is that the countersink?

10 30 450 DC - why the change to countersink "handing"

10 40 14 AA - why is the slide tube longer than the slide plate in 14" version?

Cable chain shelf 10 60 215 / 315 is not shown in the Part1 - Part5 PDFs only in the bending PDF and DXF folder. - Where do they fit on the gantry / table?

Will look more indepth tonight to see where else I can nitpick ;)

smreish
Thu 08 November 2007, 08:17
Gerald,
I'm going to print everything out in Color for a nice "coffee table" review. The profiles are off to the laser cutter for final pricing on cutting/forming and shipping FOB Tampa. I only really focused on these plates today. (I like the unified plate for the cable chain attachment far better than the b/w series drawings we exchanged earlier in the week.) That method will save $$ on the forming cost's and doesn't change the cutting cost.
Sean

Gerald D
Thu 08 November 2007, 08:36
Alan, you have a fine eye for detail - want a job? :)
All very useful comments, more will always be appreciated.

Sean, after a scare about dust ingress, I think I can revise the X&Y (geared) motor plates so that the wires enter from the bottom. (I didn't bring the thumb-drive home so I don't have numbers here). I could gang some more cut/bent parts but I didn't know how the economic impact is with your supplier. (The relationship between my company and our cutter/bender is such that we pay $1.30 for a bend of any size, any thickness - it all just averages out)

Marc (and others), I am toying with leaving the "Classic" as open freeware, and charging for downloads of the "XYZ". Get it while you can. :)

Gerald D
Thu 08 November 2007, 08:53
(I didn't bring the thumb-drive home so I don't have numbers here)

But then I remembered the back-up :)

Save the attached file as a .dxf - Should be okay. Will sleep on it tonight.

smreish
Thu 08 November 2007, 09:06
Gerald,
I wouldn't spend the extra effort. The financial impact is very minimal. The cost here in Florida is about the same 1.50/bend on a similar setup. The nice feature is "less small parts" to get lost in shipping!

Got to file...thanks, updated.
Sean

Gerald D
Thu 08 November 2007, 11:22
For those looking at the .pdf's of the drawing sheets, are they automatically displaying in landscape? Do they go to the printers okay? Okay on folio paper? (We use A4)

Gerald D
Thu 08 November 2007, 11:29
10 10 240 WA - proxy holes not indicated Old mistake from earlier drawings
10 10 200 AA & 10 10 220 AA - proxy holes shown in different positions, whereas 200AA incorrect, 220AA correct (Holes moved inboard so that proxy's can miss screws of V-Cap rail)
10 10 246 & 10 10 247 - proxy holes shown in the same position.
ditto for 10 20 200 / 10 20 220 / 10 20 246 / 10 20 247 Some tidying up to do . . . .
Remember, those proxy's are still a grey area. To get proxy's to work with Mach3 and a BOB, they have to be in series - and the only way I can think of getting them in series is to add a tiny relay to each one. That discussion for another thread . . . . .

Note on 10 20 451 BA and 10 20 452 BA refers to drilling - what drilling, is that the countersink? Yes, only the countersinks. Here (http://www.mechmate.com/forums/attachment.php?attachmentid=270&d=1187355678) is someone who missed those countersinks on those 10 451/2 drawings - messed up the paint doing it with a portable drill later. (The heads of those screws would foul the rails if not countersunk) Okay that pic is of the y-car, but the same thing applies

10 30 450 DC - why the change to countersink "handing" Check the tabs on the laser cuttings - the Y-car will only assemble in one handing now, and avoid Hugo's issue of getting the cable chain on the wrong side.

10 40 14 AA - why is the slide tube longer than the slide plate in 14" version? A gas spring with 14" stroke has a longer body and needs a higher anchor point

Cable chain shelf 10 60 215 / 315 is not shown in the Part1 - Part5 PDFs only in the bending PDF and DXF folder. - Where do they fit on the gantry / table? Oops, all the 10 60 dwgs are missing from part 3/4

Alan_c
Thu 08 November 2007, 12:54
Alan, you have a fine eye for detail - want a job? :)
All very useful comments, more will always be appreciated.

Make me an offer...;)

Its always easy to find something somebody else missed, when one is so into a project it easy to miss small details, one reason I always have somebody else check my drawings as well, oh and print them out thats when the really foolish ones smack you in the face... always happy to help and give something back

smreish
Thu 08 November 2007, 13:00
Gerald,
I printed everything a few minutes ago. They display fine, but as you noted A4 is not the same as 8.5x11 letter in the US. I would add a print or readme file to the zip file to suggest folks adjust their printers to "scale to fit" on output to printer. Your drawings are not critical to print 1:1 anyway. Otherwise, the right hand border of the page is almost completely cut off. I usually stock A4 paper at the office, but not a home :) Alan great note about giving back.....That's why I will be happy to give back and happily see Gerald monetize versions of his design. Hard work deserves great reward. I can't wait to write him a check for the first MM I build for someone else!

Gerald D
Thu 08 November 2007, 13:18
You guys have PayPal to thank for getting all this for free - while they will accept money FROM us, but they refuse to pay money TO anyone on the African continent. :) Thank guys like the Nigerian scammers for that :(
Just toying with the idea.... I would even be perfectly happen to pay the guys their money back when they post finished photos. Looking at the stats, 2000 plan dowloads and less than 10 machines finished. Gee, I could pay triple back and still make a profit. :):)
Enough nonsense talk - bedtime!

Gerald D
Thu 08 November 2007, 22:04
Alan, at the office now and looking at the proxy hole drawings....
All 4 of the sheets that show where to drill the holes are correct, they show the new dimension from the edge to center as 30mm [1.25"]. So, nobody should make a mistake there. What you picked up are the views showing the rails either welded, or assembled, and on those views I hadn't yet moved the hole, or forgot them altogether. But, it shouldn't matter . . . . the hole location is correctly given on the correct drawing.

This is fairly standard drawing office practice, for people who havn't got fancy 3d modelling software to carry all draughting changes through to the final assy. Remember the old note "DO NOT SCALE"? Same applies here. My bigger priority on the rails is to do a stop-block for the alu rail bases. Very few DIY'ers can weld alu, so that will be a bolt-on system. Maybe then I will refresh those "higher-level" drawings. (even the 30mm dimension on those 4 drawings is not to scale . . . yet :))

Gerald D
Thu 08 November 2007, 22:46
Part3.pdf and Profiles.....zip have been adjusted and reloaded above

Gerald D
Fri 09 November 2007, 01:45
On the name of this version, I would like an African animal name. One of the lesser known animals. The "Ratel (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ratel)" (Afrikaans for honey badger) appeals to me as an animal - it is short legged, heavy set and tough :) but the word ratel is going to be pronounced rattle and we don't want that!! "Badger" might do, but that is not African enough. (In English, "ratel" it is accented on the first syllable, and the "a" is pronounced as in "father.")

driller
Fri 09 November 2007, 05:36
If you were into the Gods, I would think Visnu as Visnu has multiple arms and that would imply both power and speed.

I looked on Google for animal names in Africa, but alas, google is very Americanized.

Would a crocodile or alligator be good ? it represents power and the ability to take a bite out of wood ?

Dave

Gerald D
Fri 09 November 2007, 06:24
Visnu is Asian, not African - besides, those multiple arms could imply 5-axis. Let's not go there! Crocs have no finesse - they are completely unpredictable and not to be trusted. Lion is too obvious. Rhino might have worked, except it can confuse with the software. Zebra has nice geometric patterns. . . . . .

Doug_Ford
Fri 09 November 2007, 06:47
I like the idea of animal names and think they ought to be some kind of aggressive meateater with lots of teeth. That creates the impression that it will zoom through any project you throw at it.

If you start charging for downloads, business might actually pick up. A friend at work said his neighbor put an ad in the paper for free kittens but didn't get a single call. The next week she changed the ad to say $10 and got rid of all of them in a couple of days.

Gerald D
Fri 09 November 2007, 09:46
I have decided on "Mamba (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mamba)"

"Humans are actually their predators, rather than their prey" this hit a chord - don't let the machine rule you - you rule the machine.

smreish
Fri 09 November 2007, 10:15
So does that mean I can I design you a new logo for the machine to go next to the MechMate name? Like an add-on. I will offer up my design services for you Gerald - and darn happy to do it. Sean

Gerald D
Fri 09 November 2007, 10:34
Sean, we are having enough problems getting just the word MechMate put on there! But a small optional logo that adds to the original, would be great - thanks! Don't let it distract you from your builds though! :)

GregW
Fri 09 November 2007, 13:25
Gerald,

So as of right now the drawings are all up to date and ready to go?

Thanks for the hard work,
Greg

Gerald D
Fri 09 November 2007, 20:14
Greg, I believe it is a "buildable" set of drawings where are the parts will fit together. In some areas there are some small details missing (eg. list of screws to fit the cable chains). But nobody will be wasting time or money by getting started with a build on this set.

domino11
Fri 09 November 2007, 20:29
Gerald,
Everything prints fine for me. Looking over the plans tonight. :) Thanks again.

Gerald D
Fri 09 November 2007, 20:47
Hi Heath - see what troubles you caused when you started this thread exactly a month ago? :)

Actually, what triggerered the revision was Donald pulling out of supplying sets of lasered parts. That gave me the window to fiddle with the cable chain designs a bit. But then the capped rail also became a realistic possibility if the cars were lifted by 4mm each. And the grind skate came on top of that . . .

domino11
Fri 09 November 2007, 21:33
Gerald,
The revisions are great! :D I was just about to order the laser cut parts when you mentioned the new set. I didnt mean to start a panic for the new drawings. :)

On checking, remember its late here, I noticed the following:

10 40 432 b b is the bend drawing for the spider plate. It shows the old 4 roller version and all other drawings seem to show the right 6 roller version?

10 20 000 a b shows both capped rail and ground rail options. The capped rail option looks like it is not the same width between rail tip to rail tip. Is this an optical illusion, if not then how does the ycar handle the two widths? :confused:

Its late, more looking tomorrow.

Hope your flu is better Gerald. :)

domino11
Fri 09 November 2007, 22:08
Gerald,
Ok one more before bed. :)

M1 20 100 A A calls up M1 20 141 T but I cannot find it in any of the files. :confused: Ah, is this were the ground rail verses Vcap rail differences are made up? The thin nut does look different for the two options, but are the differences shown on M1 20 141 T?

Gerald D
Sat 10 November 2007, 00:36
Well done Heath, you spotted an error that Alan missed! (Alan, the job offer is withdrawn). :)

Yes, I had meant to make a drawing sheet for that thin nut. There were a few things I had wanted to say, but I think I ended up saying them on the forum instead - see from this post (http://www.mechmate.com/forums/showthread.php?p=159&postcount=17) onwards, regarding contact with the seal.

But, folk here havn't really discussed it, that bit behind the wheel is critical - that is where you adjust whether your machine shakes or cuts square! You should be spending a couple of hours behind the wheels to get everything just right. Who will start the new thread? :)

Gerald D
Sat 10 November 2007, 00:53
Oops Heath, I didn't see that you had double posted. Your first post . . .

The bending of the spider will not be affected by whether there are 6 or 4 holes. It wasn't essential to add that small detail to that view. Folk will find lots of these types of "errors". If I did add the detail, I would not have changed the revision level, because the description of the revision would be meaningless. Imagine what sheet 10 00 000 A would look like if all the changes are shown all the way through to the highest assembly? Solid modelling 3D CAD solves this issue to give the right visual, but no better info for the guy on the shop floor.

Handling of Y-Car widths we have touched on - the spacing behind the wheel gets it all right.

The flu is still here, which ties me to the computer more, which actually got the drawing set out! :)

tpworks
Sat 10 November 2007, 10:30
did a search for Mamba art and this is what I found.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Blackmamba.jpg
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:BlackMambaSS1.jpg

smreish
Sat 10 November 2007, 10:53
Gerald. Dwg 10 10 247 the dimensioned hole for prox is 1.83 and the noted dimension called in the notes is 1.81. Fyi if you haven't noticed it yet. Sean

Gerald D
Sat 10 November 2007, 11:45
Sean, that type of difference in dimensions shows I don't have a feel for inches and whether the second decimal is relevant when marking out drilled holes like this. I guess I should have rounded that down to 1.8", but I mostly rely on AutoCad to give the inches. Will mark it for revision, thanks.

smreish
Sat 10 November 2007, 12:22
Gerald,
Dimensionally, you will never see that in layout. Heck, that's about a scribe line thickness - your machine and adjustability is much smarter than that:) I just noticed it for continuity. Personally, I prefer mm...it's easier to get right in the shop! Explaining 1/32" of an inch or .01mm...decimal WAY easier.

Gerald D
Thu 15 November 2007, 12:01
Nils of Florida has very kindly typed all the drawing numbers, processes, rev levels and descriptions in a blank excel spreadsheet, for further use by everyone. I typically add supplier names, costs, material lists to such a spreadsheet and then sort by supplier name, or process, etc. Invaluable for determining shopping list, tools list and areas of risk.

Thanks Nils

timcooijmans
Sat 24 May 2008, 14:13
Hi, I saw this tread when I was searching for 3D drawings available. At the moment I'm busy with converting all DXF drawings into Solidworks format (Gerald, I hope you don't have problems with that) so I (and others if I'm allowed to share) can visualize the MechMate.