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Max — I figured you were thinking of milling a mold for casting purposes. Brass will work just fine, so that eliminates the need of a coolant system. K&S McMaster-Carr has the most reasonable prices on brass bar stock.Yes, you can do what you want regarding milling spoked hubs. But start with larger diameter end mill bits to remove the bulk of the material, then follow with smaller diameter bits for the fine detail. That saves time and materials (in the form of non-broken micro bits).Also — if this is for a one-off (or two-off, etcetera) project, use wax block instead of brass. That saves a ton of stress-wear on the mill bits, and the wax holds the detail perfectly as long as you don't leave it out in the sun on a hot day.My RPO and Diner wax molds were milled with the following bits in this order: .055 flat head, .040 flat, .020 flat, .010 flat, .005 flat, .008 round head (for rivets - dip the head ½ the diameter, raise, move, repeat).If you're going to do injection-molded plastic, then brass is the way to go for runs that aren't going to be tens-of-thousands of copies. All the American Limited core-kit tooling was milled into brass plates.
So I'm wondering exactly what kind of setup Bryan has. The Sherline seems to be pretty much what I am looking for. I don't see a need for cutting anything harder than brass or maybe aluminium once in a while. For the CNC part I'd be looking at the wax or MDF materials for molds or patterns.
Taig is the one Ive been eying up for some time. Might pull the trigger this fall.http://www.cartertools.com/
I have a Taig lathe. Everyone says Sherlines are much better, but also cost more.
Standard Sherline 2000 with the FlashCut CNC interface and a surplus Windows XP workstation. It took a while for me to get it calibrated but the Sherline and FlashCut tech support is very good. Yes, G-code. The advantage of the machineable wax molds and resin castings is that the castings are of injection-molded plastic quality.
Thanks Bryan. Do you note any flexing in the Z column when working with the harder materials?The Flashcut CNC package is highly regarded. I assume you have the stepper motor version rather than the servo? Is it noisy? Mine would go in the basement of our house.
This is a pic of the tooling for the 10-6 County series fluted car sides. The brass was cut on a Sherline. The steel mold base and injection pins/ports were cut and added by the late John Parker of San Juan Car Company back then. But this is an example of the two-part mold-cutting capability of the Sherline.
I also had bought Bob-Cad software, which converted STL files generated by SolidWorks (and other 3D modeling programs) into G-code, which then was utilized by FlashCut to operate the Sherline. I've since abandoned the Bob-Cad interface, as writing G-code is not difficult and I can write it manually more efficiently than the Bob-Cad was generating.