LOL at the people criticizing the demo from this FREE machine. Yes, from the only CNC company that actively donates machine tools to schools. There are many "better" machines out there but your understanding of machine shop efficiency changes when YOU are the one that actually has to pay off the massive loan after buying one machine for the price of 5.
Congratulations to you and your students on the opportunity to have CNC equipment for their training... I work in a machine shop in Northern Wisconsin.. We have recently added two Haas Mills and a Haas Lathe as well to our very large machine shop..Two more Mills are on the way as well... I would just like to mention to your students that CNC training is a very valuable skill as I have seen first hand how hard it is to find skilled machinists in our area.. Stay focused :0)
Haas are good bang for buck, accuracy is acceptable, but REPEATABILITY? Nope. Thats where Mori's, Okuma's, Makino's, Matsuura's etc. come in. If your a job shop doing 100-300 parts, Haas are ok machines. But if your a productive shop that runs pallet changers and the machine dont stop 24/7, then the high end machines are needed because of their repeatabilty. Personally I love our YCM NSV's they run circles around Haas and go head to head against the high end machines for a fraction of the price!
People are so stupid. A Haas bang for your buck can not be beat. I have a Haas VF3SS. Very fast and accurate. I would put it accuracy against Mori's I have run. Haas has come a long way. Of you have to compare apples to apples.
well for me it good for the student to have an experience in a CNC lathe machine in a college/university. During my college days we have lathe machine but its not a CNC, It's a big luck for student handling a CNC lathe machine during OJT (on the job training) in my time. :)
Indeed OKUMA Corporation is FAR more reliable than HAAS etc.Okuma is established in 1893...That says it all!I worked with LB-15 series lathe and Macturn50.
btw,very high RPM(Close to 3500)Close the door DUDE!!!
For a movie I would do a decent set up. Especially if you wanna show the capabilities of the machine and programmer/operator you want to machine the part in the most efficient way.
The stick out was way too much. Machine closer to the jaws and rough it as efficient as possible:
- After the facing the starting point for the turning cycle was set wrong in X (didn't cut anything on 1st pass).
- The only reason I see to start so far away in Z is because the machine struggled to rev up fast enough.
not cool tbh...u can do that on my XYZ proturn 420....easy stuff...just basic turn down...no chamfers or conrads....or even angles......wht woulda been cool is seeing it screw cut each turn down
Yes, that's a very good point. We have the door open so that people can see what the lathe is doing and we're running it on aluminum stock, but this is not standard operating procedure. The shield should be closed when running a CNC lathe or mill.
This is just a demonstration of one piece of equipment in our shop -- our Machining graduates learn a lot more than how to cut aluminum on a CNC lathe, and they work on both computer controlled and traditional mechanical devices.
For Lathes Nakamuras are king but Mazaks are fast reliable accurate and packed with options most lathes don't come with for a very affordible price.
roketarider 1 week ago
Haas sucks and sounds also terribad :)
Feliksenin 9 months ago
Hey its captain kangaroo!
badassaz01 11 months ago
What was your max spindle speed set at? Seemed pretty blazing fast to me!
calvnio 1 year ago
LOL at the people criticizing the demo from this FREE machine. Yes, from the only CNC company that actively donates machine tools to schools. There are many "better" machines out there but your understanding of machine shop efficiency changes when YOU are the one that actually has to pay off the massive loan after buying one machine for the price of 5.
ydna2 1 year ago
Congratulations to you and your students on the opportunity to have CNC equipment for their training... I work in a machine shop in Northern Wisconsin.. We have recently added two Haas Mills and a Haas Lathe as well to our very large machine shop..Two more Mills are on the way as well... I would just like to mention to your students that CNC training is a very valuable skill as I have seen first hand how hard it is to find skilled machinists in our area.. Stay focused :0)
Mitheevil1 1 year ago
Haas are good bang for buck, accuracy is acceptable, but REPEATABILITY? Nope. Thats where Mori's, Okuma's, Makino's, Matsuura's etc. come in. If your a job shop doing 100-300 parts, Haas are ok machines. But if your a productive shop that runs pallet changers and the machine dont stop 24/7, then the high end machines are needed because of their repeatabilty. Personally I love our YCM NSV's they run circles around Haas and go head to head against the high end machines for a fraction of the price!
jtjoser 1 year ago
People are so stupid. A Haas bang for your buck can not be beat. I have a Haas VF3SS. Very fast and accurate. I would put it accuracy against Mori's I have run. Haas has come a long way. Of you have to compare apples to apples.
mgunning52375 1 year ago
DAMN IT i wanted to see the part where the bit at the end came off :'( but the camera pointed away :'(((
pashaahsj 1 year ago
well for me it good for the student to have an experience in a CNC lathe machine in a college/university. During my college days we have lathe machine but its not a CNC, It's a big luck for student handling a CNC lathe machine during OJT (on the job training) in my time. :)
gecker 1 year ago
nakamura wt 150 is twise faster then that ass!! lol
davidb25 1 year ago
nakamura wt 150 is twice faster then that shit. lol ass!!
davidb25 1 year ago
a very bad cnc lathe. I think The best cnc lathes are the INDEX G200 and Star lathes. I work with the Star and they are really excellent.
erdisongjocaj 1 year ago
cool stuff?? you can lern alot more workin in a machine shop, that thing took 4ever!!
anithing is better than haas...
EC4201 1 year ago
how about 316 stainless?? LOL I can even do that if not even faster with my manual lathe.
CUBITO71 1 year ago
a haas that works??...
olifooks 1 year ago
@hotlude91
Indeed OKUMA Corporation is FAR more reliable than HAAS etc.Okuma is established in 1893...That says it all!I worked with LB-15 series lathe and Macturn50.
btw,very high RPM(Close to 3500)Close the door DUDE!!!
@22j77
MAN you re right!!!
tubosolinas 2 years ago
YOU SHOULD HAVE THE DOOR CLOSE!!!
PHIL5750 2 years ago
total rubish
4s4m4d 2 years ago
haas is so far behind okuma there machines are junky and clunky and there intuitive programming is jurassic,stick to okuma if u want quality parts.
hotlude91 2 years ago
For a movie I would do a decent set up. Especially if you wanna show the capabilities of the machine and programmer/operator you want to machine the part in the most efficient way.
The stick out was way too much. Machine closer to the jaws and rough it as efficient as possible:
- After the facing the starting point for the turning cycle was set wrong in X (didn't cut anything on 1st pass).
- The only reason I see to start so far away in Z is because the machine struggled to rev up fast enough.
22j77 2 years ago
off centre
VirtRampage 2 years ago
Those tools are sticking out way to far. Bit its a nice machine. Its like the TL but in a full automated SL platform.
JayandJenn07 2 years ago
It cuts diameters so fast, lol.
immcj 2 years ago
not cool tbh...u can do that on my XYZ proturn 420....easy stuff...just basic turn down...no chamfers or conrads....or even angles......wht woulda been cool is seeing it screw cut each turn down
rick371 2 years ago
Cool Stuff?????
haascnc08 2 years ago
nice machine.. and simple to setup.... but next time close the door before you have a flying part.... good video
nepheuzero3 2 years ago
Yes, that's a very good point. We have the door open so that people can see what the lathe is doing and we're running it on aluminum stock, but this is not standard operating procedure. The shield should be closed when running a CNC lathe or mill.
DunwoodyCollege 2 years ago
how long did it take to program the machine to run that process
1977rvbrooksville 2 years ago
About two minutes.
DunwoodyCollege 2 years ago
hey, cool!
wccti 2 years ago
o real complex program any first day button jockey can cut aluminum
carrieimel85 2 years ago
This is just a demonstration of one piece of equipment in our shop -- our Machining graduates learn a lot more than how to cut aluminum on a CNC lathe, and they work on both computer controlled and traditional mechanical devices.
DunwoodyCollege 2 years ago
what rpm is that cutting at
sentinal2000 2 years ago
cool stuff!! I'll be working on those machines in the fall. fun!
nipmucwarrior 2 years ago
Cool stuff!
eightproductions 2 years ago