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CNC / Re: It's new to me
« Last post by ddmckee54 on Today at 07:14:52 PM »My guess would be that it was probably used as an insulator, the stuff machines fairly easily. I poked the access holes and the counter-bores for the mounting bolts using nothing more complicated than a Forstner bit in the drill press.
The thickest slab I ever saw them press was 11" with a canvas core. At that thickness things can get a little dicey, so they are very careful about how they do it. I also saw them try pressing a slab about 8" thick only to have it spit out the side and bind up the press. The press itself was a big hydraulic cylinder in a pit, we wound up changing the seals after this incident and I'm thinking the ram was 36-42" in diameter. The 4 studs connecting the cylinder to the top-hat were 8-10" across. The only thing that dropped the press ram and the heating platens was gravity. When the laminate shifted it became wedge shaped, that cocked the ram in the seals - so it wouldn't drop. They attacked that slab with hand chisels, air chisels, sawzalls, I think they even used a chainsaw on it. That particular type of laminate was designed to laugh at most shock loads - it's used for gears that need to stand up to repeated high shock loads. They finally got enough clearance between the slab and the studs to wrap a cable around the slab. Then somebrave soul lunatic volunteered to hook a fork lift to the cable and yank the slab out of the press. (I knew him, lunatic fits.) From the tire marks we had to clean off the floor, it did not give up easily. Between getting the slab out of the press, and waiting for the new seals, that press was down for the better part of a month.
The thickest slab I ever saw them press was 11" with a canvas core. At that thickness things can get a little dicey, so they are very careful about how they do it. I also saw them try pressing a slab about 8" thick only to have it spit out the side and bind up the press. The press itself was a big hydraulic cylinder in a pit, we wound up changing the seals after this incident and I'm thinking the ram was 36-42" in diameter. The 4 studs connecting the cylinder to the top-hat were 8-10" across. The only thing that dropped the press ram and the heating platens was gravity. When the laminate shifted it became wedge shaped, that cocked the ram in the seals - so it wouldn't drop. They attacked that slab with hand chisels, air chisels, sawzalls, I think they even used a chainsaw on it. That particular type of laminate was designed to laugh at most shock loads - it's used for gears that need to stand up to repeated high shock loads. They finally got enough clearance between the slab and the studs to wrap a cable around the slab. Then some
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