Tim Wescott
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- Jun 3, 2018
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Not a model engine question, but for work:
I need to make some little (about 1/2 inch in diameter) "chicklet" prisms that fit into cone-shaped holes, don't stick out much, and have nice flat, sloped faces on the outside.
I'm planning on machining a sloped flat on the end of a rod, then cutting a conical end with the rod in a fixture that holds it at the proper slope. Then I need to cut the nascent prism off the rod, and finish the big end. At this point, all my workholding ideas end up filling my imagination with splintered, melted, or otherwise destroyed polycarbonate parts, or with polycarbonate parts flying all over my shop from insufficient application of force. I'm left with hand-sanding them one-by-one, and sanding off my fingertips in the process.
Any suggestions? If these were aluminum chicklets I'd consider making cone-shaped holes in a piece of aluminum and gluing them in with superglue or epoxy, doing my machining, and then knocking them out (if superglue) or baking them out (if epoxy).
Should I do my cone-shaped hole thing with a plenum behind it and learn how to vacuum clamp? The area I have to work with is very small, so the clamping force, wouldn't get above two or three pound -- it may work for gang-sanding those faces flat, but I don't think the clamping would survive contact with an ordinary cutting tool.
I need to make some little (about 1/2 inch in diameter) "chicklet" prisms that fit into cone-shaped holes, don't stick out much, and have nice flat, sloped faces on the outside.
I'm planning on machining a sloped flat on the end of a rod, then cutting a conical end with the rod in a fixture that holds it at the proper slope. Then I need to cut the nascent prism off the rod, and finish the big end. At this point, all my workholding ideas end up filling my imagination with splintered, melted, or otherwise destroyed polycarbonate parts, or with polycarbonate parts flying all over my shop from insufficient application of force. I'm left with hand-sanding them one-by-one, and sanding off my fingertips in the process.
Any suggestions? If these were aluminum chicklets I'd consider making cone-shaped holes in a piece of aluminum and gluing them in with superglue or epoxy, doing my machining, and then knocking them out (if superglue) or baking them out (if epoxy).
Should I do my cone-shaped hole thing with a plenum behind it and learn how to vacuum clamp? The area I have to work with is very small, so the clamping force, wouldn't get above two or three pound -- it may work for gang-sanding those faces flat, but I don't think the clamping would survive contact with an ordinary cutting tool.