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Hack Chat Transcript, Page 3

A event log for Desktop EDM Hack Chat

Precision parts, one spark at a time

dan-maloneyDan Maloney 06/28/2023 at 21:140 Comments

Cooper1:09 PM
There are limitations to a rod-based process, but there is nothing else commercial out there that can do this at this price range. We view this as a great start and taking desktop EDM from 0 to 1.

Cooper1:10 PM
@Thomas Shaddack I believe it would work with sintered brass or copper. I would love to try it

gedm-dev1:10 PM
If it cuts 2mm steel and drills 40mm holes into steel I buy it. Is it possible?

Cooper1:10 PM
There is a company Sapphire 3D that we have been talking to

Thomas Shaddack1:10 PM
Virtual Foundry has the filaments. Or, if you want to skip the printing and go hand-moulding, metal clays or art clays, they come in copper/bronze/silver (and gold).

Cooper1:11 PM
I have not tried either of those cuts so I could not tell you one way or the other

gedm-dev1:11 PM
Do you think it is possible?

Cooper1:11 PM
Virtual foundry looked cool. I would like to check that out.

Bharbour1:12 PM
Is the metal in thermoplastic binder conductive before burning out the binder?

Thomas Shaddack1:12 PM
Would be a great thing for eg. gears. No need to stock all the billets, all the diameters we may need, and remove inly a small fraction of the material, wasting little.

Cooper1:12 PM
I think for gears you'd ideally just be doing wire EDM on those, depending on size

Thomas Shaddack1:12 PM
Nope, I assume. The percolation threshold for decent conductivity is hard to reach.

Cooper1:13 PM
Oh are you referring to the tool as a printed part?

Cooper1:13 PM
@Bharbour yes it is metal powder in a binder filament

Cooper1:13 PM
@gedm-dev probably. You'd have to try it out

gedm-dev1:14 PM
What if I told I have and found out that it just won't work?

darkomenz1:14 PM
You would likely have to fully process the part.

Cooper1:15 PM
I would say to change parameters or tool geometry and to try again. EDM is a very complex process with a lot of ways to get things right

gedm-dev1:15 PM
I'm serious about it. Don't let people think they can mount an EDM unit to a printer and cut steel. I ripped apart GRBL to the core and compared it to Marlin. The core looks similar. And no. It won't work.

Cooper1:15 PM
I generally recommend cutting aluminum with the Powercore. That's what we've had the most success with and what we've described in the Kickstarter. There is a lot of testing to be done on steel to find the limitations.

Cooper1:16 PM
If you were to use a wire tool you'd probably be doing great with steel on a 3D printer

Thomas Shaddack1:16 PM
Are the limitations hard ("impossible") or soft (just s-l-o-w)?

Cooper1:16 PM
a wire is ~8x smaller in diameter than the rods we use right now. So it will cut around 8x faster through the same material.

Dan Maloney1:17 PM
And really, there's a lot to be said for being able to mill parts on a desktop with a repurposed printer, even if it's "just" aluminum

gedm-dev1:17 PM
I know. But everyone who have ever cutted hard steels and Aluminum know that Aluminum is like cutting a paper with a chansaw. This will work more or less good. But steel is something different.

Cooper1:17 PM
@Thomas Shaddack it is not impossible. The sparks erode steel. I do not have a lot of hard data on feeds and speeds yet but there are about to be 420+ people with the means to find out.

Thomas Shaddack1:18 PM
Was thinking about a variant. A small-size high-accuracy EDM, for turning wasted pieces of carbide drill bits into taps or dies or single-point turning tools.

darkomenz1:18 PM
EDM is known to cut laterally any material that is conductive. This included hardened steels I am sure its just a matter of good process control.

Cooper1:19 PM
Yes. Like I said, the sparks to remove material. You're probably going to be running ~3x slower in any steel stock when compared to aluminum of the same thickness.

gedm-dev1:19 PM
@Cooper What is the minimum feedrate that a normal Ender can provide?

Cooper1:19 PM
The wear ratio is also worse with steel.

Cooper1:19 PM
@Dan Maloney I agree. I am excited to try out some extruder and hotend parts from aluminum when I get the free time to do so

Thomas Shaddack1:20 PM
Nozzle drilling.

Cooper1:20 PM
DIY high flow nozzles 😍

Thomas Shaddack1:20 PM
Braze a little piece of tungsten carbide into the standard brazz nozzle tip. EDM-drill.

Cooper1:21 PM
You could also play with orifice geometry

Cooper1:21 PM
@gedm-dev idk off the top of my head. Somewhere around 15mm/min is my guess

Cooper1:22 PM
you could ask creality

gedm-dev1:22 PM
That is way to fast for HSS.

Cooper1:22 PM
yes you'd definitely want to do a wire EDM tool for that.

Cooper1:22 PM
at least thick stuff

gedm-dev1:23 PM
If you remember the GEDM video. HSS drilled at about 1mm/min at 30v. A bit faster at 60.

Cooper1:24 PM
Higher voltages would help you. I've spoken to Ben Fleming about this and he recommends upwards of 120v for steels

Thomas Shaddack1:24 PM
With how big electrode?

Cooper1:24 PM
I think Ben uses die plunging for his EDM machines, so fairly large

Cooper1:24 PM
but he's also pulsing around 200KHz iirc

gedm-dev1:24 PM
The size was from 1 to 3mm in the video. That didn't affected the speed much. Enough power to compensate the size.

Dan Maloney1:24 PM
Seems like something you could fix with a couple of pulleys and belts. Yeah, it's a hardware change, but if you really want to cut HSS on an Ender, seems like solid investment

gedm-dev1:25 PM
That wouldn't make it a stock ender. Or?

Cooper1:25 PM
@Dan Maloney that's very true! I was just thinking the same thing. Overall John and I believe that wire will be the way to go in the future

Cooper1:26 PM
@gedm-dev think of this as the early days of RepRap. Did the extruder design stay the same over time? Perfect is not important right now. It is making solid progress and continuing to do so consistently.

Thomas Shaddack1:26 PM
Or maybe use solenoid for the z-axis, for the slow sinking. Feedback directly to the spark. Once it moves off the limits, do a move by the machine's steppers. Assuming we go primarily top-down.

Cooper1:26 PM
There is going to be a lot of learning about desktop EDM for everyone in the next few years.

Syed Shayon Khaled joined  the room.1:27 PM

Dan Maloney1:27 PM
I hope so -- the idea of home-gamer EDM is very exciting to me

gedm-dev1:27 PM
I'm just concerned that you made the people believe they can cut metal if they buy your product. But the facts clearly say that this is just not true.

Cooper1:27 PM
Simplest might just be to gear the axes like Dan said. That would be mostly printable for people

Thomas Shaddack1:27 PM
For me as well. Circling around it for years and didn't start biting yet.

Cooper1:28 PM
Yeah it's really exciting! I just wish I had more time to play with EDM instead of running things right now.

Dan Maloney1:28 PM
OK @gedm-dev, I think we get your point, thanks.

gedm-dev1:29 PM
@cooper That's again just a fix that you haven't tested for a problem you say doesn't exist. Confusing.

Thomas Shaddack1:30 PM
How much EMI does the process cause? Will it tend to cause trouble with the controllers?

Cooper1:30 PM
We have not had significant errors due to EMI yet. We have had the PSU tested at an FCC facility, but that doesn't include the electrodes.

Cooper1:31 PM
As an informal test, we are able to steam HD video on a phone right next to the spark gap during cuts.

Cooper1:31 PM
The enclosure is aluminum and is well grounded, so that helps with PSU noise. I certainly wouldn't put an antenna on the output though

Thomas Shaddack1:31 PM
Phones don't have unshielded wiring of considerable length all around.

Cooper1:32 PM
Yes that's true

Thomas Shaddack1:32 PM
I don't think the PSU itself will be a problem. The spark and the wires to the spark, more likely.

Cooper1:32 PM
Yes definitely. It is an inherently EMI heavy process

Thomas Shaddack1:33 PM
Thought. Software-defined radio for contactless process monitoring.

Cooper1:33 PM
Thomas, we have considered the exact same thing!

Thomas Shaddack1:33 PM
Heee!

Cooper1:33 PM
There's definitely potential there

Cooper1:36 PM

Cooper1:36 PM
Here's something else neat you can do with EDM.

Thomas Shaddack1:37 PM
I saw somewhere a sink-edm design, very rudimentary, that used a capacitor-resistor bank and regulated the electrode sink rate by voltage on the cap. Above threshold, send steps to stepper. Below second threshold, send steps upwards.

Thomas Shaddack1:37 PM
What's that?

gedm-dev1:37 PM
Ancient tech.

Cooper1:37 PM
drill holes and then tap them with an orbital path afterwards

Dan Maloney1:37 PM
Those almost look like MIG tips

Cooper1:38 PM
If you had a good way to switch out tools and keep position you could drill holes and thread afterward with EDM

Thomas Shaddack1:38 PM
Thought. Rotating copper disc as an EDM equivalent of a grinding wheel. For sharpening carbide tools.

Dan Maloney1:38 PM
How are you doing the threading?

Cooper1:39 PM
@Thomas Shaddack that's a cool idea. I think you might be better off just getting new carbide though.

Cooper1:39 PM
The finish from EDM will not mimic factory

Cooper1:40 PM
@Dan Maloney you would EDM a hole first and then switch to the threading tool. The threading tool would orbit within the already drilled hole.

gedm-dev1:40 PM
Have you done a sinker job like that?

Thomas Shaddack1:40 PM
True. But think resource-constrained areas (Mars base, some hole in the middle of Africa...), or logistical pressures (we can't wait for delivery).

Cooper1:40 PM
We have not tried tapping yet though

Cooper1:41 PM
It's an idea. I have seen people cut carbide on desktop with EDM before

Cooper1:42 PM

Cooper1:42 PM
this was someone I've been speaking to.

gedm-dev1:42 PM
Doesn't surprises me. it may not work very well. Aluminum and water in combination with a none moving sinker electrode = trouble. High material removal rate may help. But all in all Alu can be pain in combination with water.

Andy Pugh1:43 PM
I remember seeing spark-threading on the TV back in the 1980s. They were just rotating a threaded electrode at the same time as they lowered it. I am not sure threadmilling had been invented then, or maybe its just that the EDM threading inventor hadn't heard of it.

gedm-dev1:43 PM
I'm out. Keep up the good.... Hmm. Scam. :D

Cooper1:44 PM
If you're doing a sinker op you're going to want oil anyway. The threading op isn't really sinker though

Cooper1:44 PM
It is an orbital path around an already drilled hole. Water should be fine

Cooper1:45 PM
@Andy Pugh that is another way to do it.

Thomas Shaddack1:45 PM
Some photos of my circuitboard experiments. Under a big drop of kitchen-class vegetable oil under stereomicroscope. Hint, it WILL aerosolize and cleaning the lens is a pain.

Thomas Shaddack1:45 PM

https://www.improwis.com/projects/method_EDMdischargeCircuitboardEtching/

IMPROWIS

Method under development - EDM machining of circuitboards

Electrical discharge machining of circuitboards

Read this on Improwis

Cooper1:46 PM
If you use a bit more distilled water it will splash far less. Like keep the tool submerged an inch or so to prevent splash

Cooper1:46 PM
there is little enough matl to remove that water will be fine.

Thomas Shaddack1:46 PM
Yup. It was a proof of concept if it can work at all.

Cooper1:48 PM
What sort of PSU did you use?

Thomas Shaddack1:49 PM
Just a lab power supply, using resistor to limit current to a capacitor, and a handheld wire. Voltage in the ballpark of 12v, cap if I remember some tens to hundreds microfarads?

Cooper1:50 PM
I think we're around 52uF rn on the Powercore

Thomas Shaddack1:50 PM
I think the crucial thing is the spark energy delivered to the metal itself. Not enough and you just dent the copper. Too much and you get a crater with ejecta around.

Thomas Shaddack1:51 PM
The 35um of copper isn't that much to eat through, can be done on a single spark.

Cooper1:52 PM
Is overdoing it a problem? I would like to try this on the Powercore

Cooper1:52 PM
oil might be perfect for PCBs. Slow and steady to make those.

Thomas Shaddack1:53 PM
May be if you want extra-high resolution. Certainly worth trying. You may scorch the resin below, will see.

Cooper1:53 PM
Have you calculated your sparks per second?

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