Hi Guys, I started a group to get more detailed about this type of machine, but we really have not gotten a big start on discussing these. http://groups.yahoo.com/group/CNC-PCB_Design/ To get into detail, you only need enough power to move the board. so the energy needed is very light. Pretty much any steppers will work. If you took a board and screwed on a pair of runners this could be the basis of a really cheap home build. NOTE: using wood would be good for a couple boards a month, and holes on 0.1" centers. if you plan on high volume, or tight tolerances, then something more ridged is needed. Only one side needs to be the main guide. Make a plate for the top of this that has more runners set so as to be able to slide over the base. Some sort of plastic is needed to keep the wood from wearing. This could be as simple as the plastic from a soda bottle. Testing will show what wears too fast and what lasts longer. Another section that would be mounted on this first would allow an X and Y table movement. This would mean the drill would be stationary. One would need to use the typical circuit board layout program to get the Gerber files and drill files. The drill files are the key to this work. My WinQcad saves all locations in 6 digits. 2 leading and 4 decimal places. That means I can pull the drill file and turn it into a G-Code for a low cost program like TurboCNC to run. For manual holes, you just move the table to a stop, hand drill, the move again. the beauty is perfectly lined up holes. The down side it hand drilling. My T-Tech PCB machine uses a solenoid to push the drill into the part, and a foot that slides just over the part so the board does not lift up if the drill gets stuck. This section is where the real work would come in. A heavy stepper motor, or even a car door window motor could work to power the drill. since you are not in the US, let me know what type of parts are available to you. Dave --- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, "mikezcnc" <marabu@c...> wrote: > It is called a CNC drill. Then you a drill file from th eschematic > layout to control the machine. It works beautifully and your eyes > stay straight. > > www.kleinbauer.com look at Brute machine palns. > > turbocnc yahoo board > That's all you need. > > Mike > > > > > --- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, "mumin55555" <MUMIN55555@H...> > wrote: > > is it possible to built an automatic pcb drill??? > > i am using a table drill (the one with the handle) and i was > > wondering- can i connect it to my computer so it will interface > with > > the pcb software, and drill the holes by it self? if its not to > > complicated than how? > > > > thanks a lot, > > mumin
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Re: Absolutely!!! CNC driller how to...
2003-12-27 by Dave Mucha
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