hello friend, I'm from Ecuador, I would like to know if you sell the cnc machine? or else I can pass data from the seller because I want to buy for my projects ... no more than dicir greetings ...
This is very cool. I admire your bravery - as I have a mill, software, and pcb, but no boards machined yet. You do need to get a "z setter" gauge. These make tool changes so much easier.
Great Job, Mikey!!! Technology for the People, yeah! MicroInterprise based in home-based technology is what the future economy will be based in. I would love to print a board that controls two, 3/4 inch valves that uses two temperature sensor inputs and open/close-limit inputs that are adjustable each and can be inputed for each. That way the unit could be a flexible tool for biodigestor controls, algae cultivation and basic reflux distilation processes for many compounds and just water.
Looks great, Mikey! Congrats on getting it all up and running. Can't wait to see what new water, temp, and cheese controlling boards you roll out in no time flat!
@nbletter Thanks Nat. Lots more fun boards to come. I already found lots small issues with this first run so I can make the corrections without having to send off to a expensive PCB shop.
Nice job. What program did you use to design the PCB? Is it ready to mill directly from this program or do you need a lot of post processing before bringing it into EMC2?
@finster101 gEDA/gschem and gEDA/pcb are the two utilities I used. gschem for the schematic and pcb for the board layout. gEDA/pcb has a gcode export option and which goes directly into EMC2. I didn't do any post processing.
This is shit :|
steveblades00000 2 weeks ago
hello friend, I'm from Ecuador, I would like to know if you sell the cnc machine? or else I can pass data from the seller because I want to buy for my projects ... no more than dicir greetings ...
loquillojackson 1 month ago
@loquillojackson zentoolworks makes this CNC
sklarm 1 month ago
This is very cool. I admire your bravery - as I have a mill, software, and pcb, but no boards machined yet. You do need to get a "z setter" gauge. These make tool changes so much easier.
fly10227 6 months ago
Great stuff !! thanks a lot for this inspiring video.
How did you manage to do the vias ? Using some kind of trough-hole plating technique ?
thank you
xa4gva 7 months ago
@xa4gva I just solder a piece of wire on both sides for each via's.
sklarm 7 months ago
Comment removed
xa4gva 7 months ago
Great Job, Mikey!!! Technology for the People, yeah! MicroInterprise based in home-based technology is what the future economy will be based in. I would love to print a board that controls two, 3/4 inch valves that uses two temperature sensor inputs and open/close-limit inputs that are adjustable each and can be inputed for each. That way the unit could be a flexible tool for biodigestor controls, algae cultivation and basic reflux distilation processes for many compounds and just water.
ShambhalaVillage 7 months ago
What kind of CNC mill is that? where can I get one?
richardyoo 7 months ago
@richardyoo ZenToolWorks 7x7 they start at $300 for a kit.
sklarm 7 months ago
Looks great, Mikey! Congrats on getting it all up and running. Can't wait to see what new water, temp, and cheese controlling boards you roll out in no time flat!
nbletter 7 months ago
@nbletter Thanks Nat. Lots more fun boards to come. I already found lots small issues with this first run so I can make the corrections without having to send off to a expensive PCB shop.
sklarm 7 months ago
Nice job. What program did you use to design the PCB? Is it ready to mill directly from this program or do you need a lot of post processing before bringing it into EMC2?
finster101 7 months ago
@finster101 gEDA/gschem and gEDA/pcb are the two utilities I used. gschem for the schematic and pcb for the board layout. gEDA/pcb has a gcode export option and which goes directly into EMC2. I didn't do any post processing.
sklarm 7 months ago
first
1stontario 7 months ago