To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

CNC Router Help

Doug19

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 7, 2006
Messages
229
Location
Pittsburgh, PA
I've been searching around the Pittsburgh, PA are for someone who would be willing to cut a few pieces out of 1/4" plywood for me. I can't seem to get anyone to return my calls or emails for a quote. I'm looking to have the below gears cut out of 1/4" plywood so I can use them as a template. Anyone have any suggestions. I draw it up in SketchUp and have been sending the .DWG and .DXF over to the companies I have contacted. Is there such a demand for this that these people don't feel the need to return calls or answer emails or am I asking for something to complicated. Seems pretty simple to me.
 

Attachments

  • Gear.jpg
    Gear.jpg
    57.3 KB · Views: 104
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Jim Johnstone

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 11, 2011
Messages
1,841
Location
Brantford, Ontario
Two issues I see, first off a small order like that may not be very desirable to a busy shop with bigger jobs on the go. Secondly, gears aren't cut on a 3 axis vertical cnc. They are usually hobbed on a gear hobbing machine or cut in one by one on a conventional mill using a rotary index. Is there a reason this must be plywood? If it's just for a template perhaps a plastic like nylon or acetal would do, or aluminum. You may have better luck contacting a dedicated gear cutter and having them quote it. In my experience, very few machine shops cut their own gears anymore.
 

Jim Johnstone

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 11, 2011
Messages
1,841
Location
Brantford, Ontario
I see. Have you tried going into any machine shops in person and explaining what you want? Like I said a lot of machine shops shy away from anything resembling a gear. Some also refuse to cut wood.
 

G1K

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 10, 2005
Messages
1,073
Location
Buffalo, NY
I know that the link points to a decorative mirror and it's "art"- but the cogs won't move in that orientation. As an engineer I find that humorous.
 
OP
D

Doug19

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 7, 2006
Messages
229
Location
Pittsburgh, PA
Problem is I could use a bandsaw but I don't have a big enough on and it would take forever. I would prefer rough cutting on the bandsaw and tablesaw and then usemail the template to cleanup with a flush trim router bit.
 

jczv

Member
Joined
Dec 3, 2011
Messages
8
Post on the mechmate forum it's basically a build yourself CNC primarily for wood. There may be sombody local or somebody who'd do it and send. There's both hobbiests and businesses.
 

Zeke

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 13, 2009
Messages
17,176
Location
Long Beach CA, the sewer by the sea.
There is no reason you can't make the finish parts with a drill press with a hole saw and a jig, band or scroll saw. And you can sand the perimeter inside and around the teeth with a mounted drum sander.

You might be over thinking this. I know making a template and using a router with a guide bearing sounds like the way to go but for one-offs, I'd just get going on this w/o some fancy CNC template.

I can also think of a way to use a single tooth template and the router on a trammel.
 

paranoid56

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 18, 2008
Messages
1,596
Location
San Diego, Ca
am i looking at the pic right? largest part is 1ft? i can do that for you on my CNC if you want. figure 25 bucks shipped via usps priority mail. as long as it fits on a flat rate box.
 
OP
D

Doug19

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 7, 2006
Messages
229
Location
Pittsburgh, PA
am i looking at the pic right? largest part is 1ft? i can do that for you on my CNC if you want. figure 25 bucks shipped via usps priority mail. as long as it fits on a flat rate box.

The largest one has a diameter of 1'10". I can email you the .dwg file and if you are willing to take a look at it I'd would really appreciate it.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

wkearney99

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 10, 2012
Messages
323
Location
Bethesda, MD USA
Way the wood grain appears to me the gear teeth were constructed then adhered to round center section. Seems like it would be the simplest approach.

That would seem like a faster/easier way to make it. Bevel a long strip with the profile of the teeth and then cut it up. Use a dowel/domino in each into the 'wheel'.

How many of these are you planning on making? Seems like a jig would be overkill unless you plan on making a bunch of them.

That and what about only making a sectional jig? Use a board with registration pins of some sort. Only cut a few teeth, reposition, cut more, repeat until done. Seems like a smaller jig like that would be a lot easier to make with a jig/bandsaw. Tiled pages printed from a 8.5x11 printer would work to make the pattern. What Zeke said:

I can also think of a way to use a single tooth template and the router on a trammel.
 

paranoid56

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 18, 2008
Messages
1,596
Location
San Diego, Ca
going to take me a bit as there is a whole bunch of extra **** in this file lol.
6OrPu6g4R45H2rJ-GUJN1xezDYjntiwszqAO1HfOZaN-AFK5P8Q1Md3Y_tNXc_vzRExJqa9PekSVTgvcwnlrn1J6jC6sx39I5a1QG8Q4qLC8h1Sp272WouzpHzYLLrXCnexQEK5LMWPSyS8rW7iMSIa-UGS8Rvhp0H3Y775gFA56fMnDotxmm5VYUr_Hb0n-mSdIZpLIKaCO7h0PlCVkOdFdrQK-1ZdaCCr45Fdd3lQ7befTHecx-ff3FTbX3C1mTUxgmdP5OqXMCnuiGeJMKeMrD1vL2yTCFcDMH1eZtusg0MuMHLPz-GVocIGL9a5qJj_xxnDpGNdcuuWgne0ZGDgsFW4HScY4rMFVscBr5iLhbeHXcUFlZ5vCI3apOHC2SSv2QqTD6YvhVK6Usm1p7JZFjH9Ko_vJwgzsGa_Jon1JPi0B4OY3dZx_WAK8dgOjpW3nZ-nmqsvjLX7uxP51ItXLgIm9HoGOv_tNE0_sd47FvYizz_gt4fsXThcN23NZikiuW0BRO1jK6KUGQYuSj-C2V6QwyJ9ze6J_ESEDMqCGzXIQ3E6uI90rmvTdqvLUWCrxUpNnEIupIEg2aa-tPY05dZc=w970-h731-no
 

bullnerd

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 17, 2012
Messages
5,690
Location
Jersey
Have him draw one tooth of each gear(if they are different), and you sweep/copy/rotate it with your software?
 

gazza

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 24, 2009
Messages
364
Location
Melbourne Aust
Hi guys, i cant help with cutting this file for you, only because I'm on the other side of the world but I may be able to help with converting the file.
On my sign program I can export in 3 formats of dxf files and lots of other formats, the laser cutters I use can only open one format of dxf which from memory is "lines and poly arcs".
I you get stuck let me know and I'm happy to try and reformat the file to open it easily.
cheers
 

manwithtools

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Aug 24, 2015
Messages
13,702
Location
Lebanon, TN
Are you thinking you will use a router and a flush trim bit to follow the template? A router and pattern/ flush bit can't make those teeth profiles, the inside corners are square.

Did you notice the unit you reference is 4" deep - do you need that depth on the finished product? If more than a inch of depth is desired, the only way I can envision making it is by gluing the teeth to the cylinder of wood.

If you look at the picture you posted the teeth are glued on individually for the reason I state above. Making a gear that large of glued up solid stock is not trivial.

If you "have" to have a template, I'd find someone with a laser engraver / cutter and have them cut it out of polycarbonate or hardboard. 1/4" plywood is a poor choice for this application.
 
Last edited:

speed bump

Well-known member
Joined
May 28, 2008
Messages
6,317
Location
Butte Montana
I would probably find someone to cut it with a laser in 1/4" plywood.

Otherwise you could a build jig to cut it easily: a circle routing jig and a circle with pinning holes. The gears won't look real but I don't think that matters for your application.
 

Gamble

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 12, 2011
Messages
410
Location
CHITOWN
I can cnc plasma them for you too :)
I can try to cut them on my cnc router but I'm still a novice with it
 

RPH

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 17, 2006
Messages
4,190
Location
Michigan Thumb
Look at this guys site. He make wood gears. Sell the program dirt cheap. Band saw is what he recommends. Guy here used it here to make rack and pinion gears for his trailer. I got it but have not had the chance to use it.
https://woodgears.ca/gear/
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom