Author Topic: Aciera F3, ER32 retrofit.  (Read 11025 times)

Offline NeoTech

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Aciera F3, ER32 retrofit.
« on: October 01, 2012, 12:46:31 PM »
So most of you know by now i got a new machine with some collet issues.

So i got this ER32 20mm straight shank collet chuck.. Sweet. Standard stuff. It has a 50mm long shank with a M10 drawbar thread.
I was thinking cutting this thing and put it in a 20mm collet with a 24mm runout to hold with.. BUT.. then i struck me.. Why not make a new drawbar.


So i got this idea.. Its a new drawbar that mimicks the old ones dimension but with a 10mm thread in the drawbar end instead. And a small "collet" is made
so that the ER32 can sit in the W20 spindle without causeing wobble and other troubles.

One of the big concerns i have i slotting the ER32 chuck (see different thread under how do i). But on second note i have a concern about a 10mm thread holding
that badboy in place. Of course the small adapter collet could be slotted so some gripping force could be applied there. But still the major force would sit in the
drawbar threads itself wouldnt it?!
Machinery: Optimum D320x920, Optimum BF20L, Aciera F3. -- I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work. http://www.roughedge.se/blogg/

Offline NeoTech

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Re: Aciera F3, ER32 retrofit.
« Reply #1 on: October 03, 2012, 05:35:26 PM »
So i went ahead and made this



And after everything assembled and i turn the spindle on i could see something were off.. terribly. The runout on the ER32 collet is off with a couple of 1/10mm, im taking an educated guess and would say 3-4 or so.. its a noticeable wobble.. I wonder what went wrong.

The brass on the drawbar is pressed on and machined to dimension its a slipfit with oil film in the head of the F3.
The other brass is just sitting in the end of the spindle to center the ER32 collet.. i drilled that with a 15mm drill and then took a boringbar, and took it up to the dimension of the  ER32 collet shank, it slips on and need some effort to get loose again.. BUT its not a slip fit in the spindle nose..its has about 1/100 of play, i'm thinking what if i made a compression version instead. that is oooh so slightly oversized but would be compressed in the spindle like the original schaublin collets.

Anyone wanna venture a guess?!
« Last Edit: October 03, 2012, 06:24:46 PM by NeoTech »
Machinery: Optimum D320x920, Optimum BF20L, Aciera F3. -- I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work. http://www.roughedge.se/blogg/

Offline PekkaNF

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Re: Aciera F3, ER32 retrofit.
« Reply #2 on: October 04, 2012, 01:33:59 AM »
I think I finally got it :doh:: You are trying to locate the ER-holder front end with thin cone and back (far) end with draw-bar? If this is the case, please read on and comment, otherwise ignore my ramblings:

1) I hope you are not trusting the draw bar to center end of the collet holder? :palm:
* Most likely the thread on the collet holder is off-center and skewed. If the draw bar assembly is too good fit it might bend it out of alignment.
* You want both registers on the same piece (I.E. front cone and rear "ring". You don't want to trust thread to locate anything radially or axially.
* If I got this right you have three registers: Cone, ER-holder side draw bar and upper side of the draw bar. There is no practical way you get this straight repeatedly. You must put two registers on the collet holder and allow the draw bar collet holder side have will of it's own.

Believe me on this one one. Thread is great pulling stuff together but thread itself should not generally be trusted to loacte anything if it can be avoided.


2) How true is the collet holder? If you:
* clean up the collet holder, collet and nut
* chuck a piece of ground stock
* and turn the whole assy from ground stock (I.e. center the ground stock on lathe)
DO NOT support the collet holder on the far end - I'm guessing that the trouble is there

How would the collet holder turn out to be?

I think that objective should be to locate the front end of the holder with cone and far end with a "ring". And all these on the same integral part, to keep the stuff concentric. If you make these with sliding fit they will "live" when you put them under load.

I would machine the cone into ER-holder ( I need to bash these chinese holders all the time, because mu milling machine has MT3 with dogs). Measure carefully, but normally they have enough meat  in the end. If not see if this could me made out of ER32 MT4 or MT3 holder. The reasoning is that thing "rings" are not great idea under multidirectional loads. They will shift/turn. You either need strong enough "collet" closer to nominal 16 mm ID or such that was the design of this collet type

I also would check the diameter at the end, these collet holders don't always conform standard fits. I would machine there a recess and press strong enough bushing there (either press fit or strong "stud" loctite), and then I would skim the outside of this bushing on the same setting that the cone is machined to keep then concentric.

I would not trust the draw bar to locate the end of the holder. Too many variables. I actually would machine the end that comes next to ER-holder very much smaller diameter to allow the ER-holder far end to locate it's own.

Pekka

Offline NeoTech

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Re: Aciera F3, ER32 retrofit.
« Reply #3 on: October 04, 2012, 03:01:05 AM »
 Ah ok, well i just tried to replicate what the original drawbar does atm. And that was a failure.

I did turn down the ER32 shank slightly and put a drive keyway into it. I hade some hope that the brass rings would locate it mosly cause they are turned on each axle so they sit concentric to it. But the slop on the ring sitting on the er32 collet itself i guess will make it wobble like crazy atm. Or im just so off centre that its sad. :D

Gonna give this another go. The drawbar itself is not centering anything atm, it just rides the bushing on each bearing position. But im thinking that the bushing sitting on the ER collet it self, it has a 15degree angle on it. It should be done in a slight oversize and slit open so that it will compress around the axle when its drawn into the spindle cone. So if i turn that on the ER collet shank and make the outside diameter like 1/100 to big so the cone will press down onto it. shouldnt that center itself "better" then?! Or im thinking wrong here.
Machinery: Optimum D320x920, Optimum BF20L, Aciera F3. -- I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work. http://www.roughedge.se/blogg/

Offline NeoTech

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Re: Aciera F3, ER32 retrofit.
« Reply #4 on: October 04, 2012, 04:23:01 AM »
Addendum; there isnt enough material to machine the  cone into the collet holder itself. And i didnt buy a cheap chinese one. I went and bought an expensive one. (next time i buy the chinese... cause they are half he price  :doh:).

But been thinking, i could prolly tig some brass onto that shank and build up a machineable layer that could be machined to fit that cone and centrered on there.. could that be one way to go?
Machinery: Optimum D320x920, Optimum BF20L, Aciera F3. -- I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work. http://www.roughedge.se/blogg/

Offline David Jupp

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Re: Aciera F3, ER32 retrofit.
« Reply #5 on: October 04, 2012, 05:05:34 AM »
You could shrink on a collar, then machine the outside to ensure concentricity - has the advantage that it is reversible if things go badly wrong...

Offline PekkaNF

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Re: Aciera F3, ER32 retrofit.
« Reply #6 on: October 04, 2012, 05:41:21 AM »
Addendum; there isnt enough material to machine the  cone into the collet holder itself. And i didnt buy a cheap chinese one. I went and bought an expensive one. (next time i buy the chinese... cause they are half he price  :doh:).

But been thinking, i could prolly tig some brass onto that shank and build up a machineable layer that could be machined to fit that cone and centrered on there.. could that be one way to go?

Uuh...If it is expensive I probably would not modify it but would leave it for future use. Need will come.

I would not weld or metalspray it, unless there is absolutely no other way. Usually material on these are not ideal for welding (not always too bad either), but any thermal schock will bend it one way or another and probably will do it long time unless preheated, stress relieved etc.. which all will require machining everything all over. Easier to buy 20-30 £ chinese one and machine it correct fit or make one from scratch

I still don't get it. I tought that you said it has W20 collet and your ER32 holder has OD20, lenght 50 mm cylindrical shaft on it. But your drawing and pictures shows a sleeve that has cylinrical extension? To knowledge Aciera F3 was produced only for W20 and ISO30 spindles.

You do have W20 not ISO30 spindle bore? What tooling and adapters come with it? Although if you got it from a "jobber" it might come with just about any part lookking tools (one individual tried to sell me once a lathe that has a lot of junk tooling that even did.t fit into it but looked good in the picture). I have heard that some were fitted for W25 or even R8, there might be enough meat in the spindle.

Do you know where this inaccuracy comes from? This is #1 priority. The error you are getting is excessive.
* What spindle nose/taper it is. I have been assuming it most common W20, but is it?
* Is the spindle (taper) itself true? Crashes do happen and machines are sold becuse of them.
* Did you deburr the key grove?
* Does the key bear on grove bottom?

If you pursue making the taper "collet" this information might help (providing it is W20):
http://www.nann.de/tl_files/NANN/Download%20EN/STANDARD_2011_EN.pdf
page 22 shows that collet tapper should a bit obtuse (15' on this example) it also shows pretty good where collet should bear on the spindle.

Do you have this spindle nose/collet form factor: 349E i.e W20 with ø 19.7 x 15G/`` thread, collet length of 70 to 73 mm (69 mm from end to apex) and tail end OD pretty close 20.0 mm?

Internet will reveal whole more accurate information about this collet with 349E or 349 E (German speaking nomeclature, more exact than W20, which is very generic name, more of a "style"  where thread, length, angle and key seems to vary).

Pekka

Offline NeoTech

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Re: Aciera F3, ER32 retrofit.
« Reply #7 on: October 04, 2012, 06:05:54 AM »
yeah see my seperate thread about the machine itself under "tools".
But yes, the machine is a W20 spindle. I have some W20 collets but they are frickin expensive. So this was an attempt to work around that. Once i figured out that the inside diameter of the spindle is 20mm i figured a straight shank chuck would fit inside if with some modification. But i needed some way to center it in the  spindle so thats why i made those brass rings for it.

The original drawtube itself has a similar surface but its integrated with the tube. it has some play in the "upper part", but its not much. The lower end with the collet it self well that compresses into the spindle so it will center around the tool anyway. I figured i could mimick that..

Thats why the lower brass ring has the shape of a type-b collet (20mm collet) but  i didnt slit it i just made it slipfitted as noted.

When running the orignal drawbar and original collet, the runout is about 2/100. Measured on a piece of silversteel chucked in the 20mm holder.
When running the ER32 collet its..way off. But,  the upperpart of the drawbar isnt wobbling at all it plays about 1/100mm less than the orignal drawbar.
So i figure the play must be with the lower centering ring i made and the collet chuck itself.  I will know more this evening when i attack it again..
Machinery: Optimum D320x920, Optimum BF20L, Aciera F3. -- I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work. http://www.roughedge.se/blogg/

Offline NeoTech

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Re: Aciera F3, ER32 retrofit.
« Reply #8 on: October 06, 2012, 08:50:16 AM »
So after made 2 attempts more..

One lower collet with a compression design slots in it. Didnt work. And one version where i pressed a piece of brass onto the 10mm shaft with a 10t shop press, and then turned the collet to the spindles sizes within 2/100mm, sitting on the shaft of the collet holder - it still wobbles 0.5mm sideways.

Let us say this was a bad idea and leave it at that. ;)
Machinery: Optimum D320x920, Optimum BF20L, Aciera F3. -- I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work. http://www.roughedge.se/blogg/

Offline PekkaNF

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Re: Aciera F3, ER32 retrofit.
« Reply #9 on: October 06, 2012, 03:20:59 PM »
I didn't get excactly what you did and what you tested, but I'm sure you have reason and logic in your method.

Hmm.. :scratch:

Where does that error comes from?

1) Have you measured the spindle taper?

2) Have you measured any original tooling?

3) How does the spindle looks and feels when you put a original tooling into it?

0.5 mm is HUGE on that small parts. Sounds like your manufacturing methods are right, but the trouble is somewhere else.

Pekka

Offline NeoTech

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Re: Aciera F3, ER32 retrofit.
« Reply #10 on: October 06, 2012, 06:31:31 PM »
on the original tooling with the original drawtube and collet.. the runout is so small my i cant really see the needle move at all. I have put a 1/100 dial on it, and its less than 1.. So i know that the spindle runs fine.. and arent acting up.

The spindle taper is within 14.8degrees, its stated to 15.. so i guess its fine.. running the spindle without a collet or a drawtube, the runout is about 3/100 when put the dial on the inside of the spindle and its the wobble within the bearings.. All tigtened down with drawtube.. well look above. And with the original tooling in it you can feel some play in the upper bearing, where drawtube contacts the spindle tube.. its so small though that it can hardly be detected.

Thats why i thought, well i make a sliced up lower collet and put in. and let the new drawbar torquet into the spindle taper..
first of all it didnt compress - at all. it just sat there as it usually did i even put som weight on that thread to reaaaly get it in there.. but well that just restulted in some trouble getting the drawbar loose again.

im figuring that the ER32 collet isnt really concentric. i have put the holder in the lathe chuck and spun it, with a dial on the main body and a dial on the shaft.. in the lathe, its perfectly straight.. within 2/100s. As i said.. this is beyond what i'm capable of. :/
Machinery: Optimum D320x920, Optimum BF20L, Aciera F3. -- I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work. http://www.roughedge.se/blogg/