I always reference the fixed jaw. As good as the vices are, the moving jaw
can twist slightly if the work you are clamping is not square.
As far as which corner of the jaw you reference to, do what you are most
comfortable with, the machine will obey the command set you send it
On some parts I
Not just to be contrary I use the upper left corner of the vise.
However, I do admit the upper right is more logical. For Z my travel so
short I don't worry about reaching the bed.
Dave
On 1/12/19 9:41 AM, Stuart Stevenson wrote:
Gentlemen,
I always set up my machines with the home
Gentlemen,
I always set up my machines with the home position at the -
X positive limit (or close)
Y positive limit (or close)
Z positive limit (or close).
This gives me all negative values in the work piece offset registers.
Z up is the most important to me. If I tell it to go home
On 01/12/2019 03:43 AM, Roland Jollivet wrote:
On Sat, 12 Jan 2019 at 07:40, Jon Elson wrote:
On 01/11/2019 11:20 PM, Roland Jollivet wrote:
I have an old KTF-30 King Tun Fu drill-mill that I use a lot. But on this
machine, X0Y0 is at top right, as in rotating your graph paper 180deg on
the
On Sat, 12 Jan 2019 at 07:40, Jon Elson wrote:
> On 01/11/2019 11:20 PM, Roland Jollivet wrote:
> > I have an old KTF-30 King Tun Fu drill-mill that I use a lot. But on this
> > machine, X0Y0 is at top right, as in rotating your graph paper 180deg on
> > the table.
> >
> >
> > Since machines and
On 01/11/2019 11:20 PM, Roland Jollivet wrote:
I have an old KTF-30 King Tun Fu drill-mill that I use a lot. But on this
machine, X0Y0 is at top right, as in rotating your graph paper 180deg on
the table.
Since machines and especially CNC machines don't care about orientation of
axes, why
On a piece of paper, one might draw a graph, with X0Y0 being at the bottom
left.
And it looks like, and this is my query, most CNC machines use X0Y0 at the
front left of the table?
I have an old KTF-30 King Tun Fu drill-mill that I use a lot. But on this
machine, X0Y0 is at top right, as in