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CNC / Re: It's new to me
« Last post by AdeV on Today at 04:05:30 AM »
After doing a root-cause analysis of the problem, it was determined that some NUMBSKULL had forgotten to lock the fence down on the saw.

Sounds like you had the kind of day in the workshop that I always seem to experience.... Glad you saved it though!

I am watching with great interest, as I also have one of those floppy 3018 machines; I've only used it a handful of times so far, mainly because it's so loose, I thought it would make a good CNC PCB drilling machine - which it would, if only the rest of my PCB production skills were worthy of its accuracy...
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CNC / Re: It's new to me
« Last post by ddmckee54 on January 14, 2026, 10:27:44 PM »
I got a little more done today, but nothing worthy of any pictures.  I finally quit waffling about the Y axis rail length, I needed 370mm so I marked them at 370mm.  When I cut the rails, I cut on the"good" side of the line rather than the waste side.  The kerf from the spinning wheel of death, and its' clean-up, gave me about 3mm of clearance.  The 2040 rail supports I cut at 370mm on the table saw with a carbide blade,  I took it slow, wore ear protection, and it worked like a charm - or so I thought.  Except... They weren't the right length, and they weren't even the SAME length - despite the fact that the fence setting had never been changed.  After doing a root-cause analysis of the problem, it was determined that some NUMBSKULL had forgotten to lock the fence down on the saw.  Fortunately they had grown in length rather than shrinking, so they were saveable.  I set the fence back to 370mm, locked it down this time, and trimmed the pieces to length.  I tapped the ends of the extrusion M5, and replaced the existing 2020 extrusions.  I was a little off on my estimate of the gap between the new extrusions, it's actually 16.5mm.

I figured out why this particular 30mm sheet was scrapped, the rail in the foreground in the above pictures rocks back and forth.  I can hold one end down and measure about a 0.015" gap under the other end, so there's probably about a 0.008" lump in the middle.  Looks like I've got some shimming in my future.  The background rail sits flat now, but I'll probably have to shim it to level it to the front rail.
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Member Videos / Retrol EngineDIYshop SE-03 Vertical Steam Engine Plant Wood Fired!
« Last post by Jim Dobson on January 14, 2026, 09:53:38 PM »
I cut some small well seasoned Aussie eucalyptus hardwood into the correct size to get into the firebox and a small amount of spirits to get the wood alight. The smell out of the chimney was delightful.
After it all burnt down to ash, I was able to suck it out with a small car vacuum cleaner......all in all, it worked quite well!

https://youtu.be/kDhQtNsuHM0

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kDhQtNsuHM0
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This is not about Linux per se, but odd licensing. A good (or bad) example is when Winamp released its source code some time ago. But the license only allowed it to be forked/modified for private use.

And not only that - it was said that when the source code was released on Github, it was a mess - it even included other stuff like copyrighted Shoutcast and Dolby code.   

After few weeks, they deleted whole thing from Github. From what I understand, it had hundreds of forks already in that point (obviously some, if not most just making fun of the license).

Lunduke's musings on the subject (~20min): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0w9Y1FOUaNI

I guess there are at least few of us, who'd like to see Winamp ported to Linux, but it may not be that simple, as they say, it contains so much old, Windows-tied code.

To get back to Linux, when using Winamp (5.8) with Wine, there appears to be differences of how it works/behaves on desktop environments (DE), like Gnome and Mate.
With Mate, which I've tested on VM and on my laptop, surprisingly it seems to work a lot better.

Or at least I don't have to chase it around the desktop with mouse to find where it's hiding.

It may have something to do with X11, that Mate, Xfce and Cinnamon primarily use (being old school, or just plain simpler than modern DE's). Current testing setup:

DE: Mate 1.26.2
WM: Marco (X11)
WM Theme: WinMe
Theme: TraditionalOk [GTK2/3/4]
Icons: mate [GTK2/3/4]
Terminal: mate-terminal 1.26.1

As a comparison, here's what Pop Os uses, which makes Winamp behave in a very quirky way:

DE: GNOME 42.9
WM: Mutter
WM Theme: Pop
Theme: Pop [GTK2/3]
Icons: Pop [GTK2/3]
Terminal: gnome-terminal

So if one wants to use 32-bit Windows apps on Wine, X11-based DE's might be an option to consider.

Things to avoid, when using Wine:

Fractional scaling - I've used 125% on my pc, and it makes Win apps' gui buttons really small, almost unusable, no matter what dpi settings I've tried on Wine settings.

If the Win app gui uses animations, it may be worth disabling them, if such option is available.

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Announcements & Issues / Re: Pictures not expanding
« Last post by tom osselton on January 14, 2026, 04:40:29 PM »
  [ You are not allowed to view this attachment ]  
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Announcements & Issues / Re: Pictures not expanding
« Last post by Muzzerboy on January 14, 2026, 11:27:42 AM »
Yes, I noticed that yesterday. Obvs I assumed it was my fault!
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CNC / Re: It's new to me
« Last post by ddmckee54 on January 13, 2026, 07:24:13 PM »
It's picture time.  This is the top of the old cnc, or what's left of it.

That's a 12" scale in the upper LH corner for size reference.

Here's the belly of the beast.

Both the horseshoe shaped top and the base are 1 piece metal castings. I took them apart to make getting this off my workbench a little less clumsy.  I'm pretty sure the base is aluminum, but as heavy as the top section is it could be Zamak.  Then again, there IS a lot of steel bolted to the top.  That orangish blob in the center is the 2 piece carriage for the Bosch 1Hp router.  It was machined using the original convoluted belt drive system that could only handle a DOC of about 0.010" at MAYBE a 10"/minute feedrate.  I remember it seemed like it took about a thousand passes.

OK, this is the new toy, it's sitting on its' base but nothing is bolted down yet.

The Sherline is visible sitting in the corner, that corner is where the old cnc sat for at least 15 years.

This next shot shows dumb luck in action.

In the background you see one of the new X axis 12mm rails with its' bearing blocks, just in front of it is the existing 10mm rail that's 450mm long and only supported by an M5 bolt at each end.  The new 12mm rails are bolted to a solid aluminum extrusion that will be bolted to the base by a pair of M5 bolts every 100mm.  The rails will be shimmed as required to make sure they stay flat.  In the foreground is the 1/4" x 2" aluminum bar that the bearings will be bolted to.  As you can see, that bar JUST fits under the work table.  Like I said, this is dumb luck in action - not prior planning.  Right in front of that is one of the 2040 extrusions that are the major support of the machine, and the just hang off 2 M5 bolts at each end.  There's about a 4.5mm gap between the extrusion and the surface.  It's no wonder that people complain about the lack of rigidity in these things, there's just so many places built into them where things can flex.  I intend to make spacers and bolt through the 2040 extrusion and the spacer into my 30mm base.

This is the spindle, in all its' glory whatever.

This assembly is 60mm at it's widest, and it uses every mm of the existing rails to get its' 300mm of spindle travel.  The problem is that the new bearing blocks are 40mm long, and there's 2 per rail for stability.  That's 80mm, and if you figure in a generous clearance Clarence - you're up to 85mm.  So any way you slice it, with the existing gantry set-up I'm going to lose 25mm of work area.  For now, I can live with a 4027 instead of a 4030.  Especially when you consider that my old cnc was a 3020.  You can also see that they didn't use any more plastic in those moldings than they absolutely had to, it's not just the rails that flex.

This shows where the new Y axis rails will sit in relation to the existing rails.  The camera really messes with things, the old 10mm rails look bigger than the new 12mm rails, but it just ain't so - I checked to be sure. 


I just got the 2040 extrusions to replace the existing 2020's.  If I did the arithmetic right, I should have about a 15-16mm between the new extrusions when they're installed.  I intend to make solid spacer blocks to fit between the 2040 extrusions and effectively turn them into a truss.  At that point, the weak link in the gantry will probably be the 15mm phenolic side plates.  If that's the case, I can try bolting on a stiffening rib, or just making some new side plates out of my 30mm stock.

The major renson I went with an ESP32 based controller is that the MKS DLC32 has the horsepower, and the programming, to function as a stand-alone controller if desired - no drip feed from GRBL required.  Just load your g-code onto a thumbdrive, plug that into the controller, and run the file.

That's enough yapping for today, I have to go make myself some supper.

Don
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Announcements & Issues / Pictures not expanding
« Last post by BillTodd on January 13, 2026, 02:31:39 PM »
Has there been some change in policy or settings. On the older forum the pictures used to expand to something visible, now they just expect to be downloaded.

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I've had a lot of people reach out to me in different media forms to ask me what I think the SE-03 would run like on gas. So I made a gas ceramic burner and removed the spirit burner from the base of the SE-03 and slipped in the gas burner and connected it up to a small BIX gas container.
It's been able to pour in a lot of heat into the vertical boiler and I have had a number of impressive and long runs from a boiler topped right to the top with water. Hopefully all those who asked gain something from this video, just be mindful of what I mention in the video about running the boiler dry if you choose to do this mod also.

https://youtu.be/Nxj8XNIX8go
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CNC / Re: It's new to me
« Last post by ddmckee54 on January 12, 2026, 04:31:45 PM »
"Interesting upgrade project", yes indeedy.

I got the 400 x 600 x 30mm base cut to size, and all the sharp edges taken off.  There's a lot stuff that needs to be bolted to the base, I'm thinking drilling & tapping will be best.  I'll just use longer screws for more thread engagement in the plastic.  It's HARD plastic, but it IS plastic.  I knew there was a good reason that I bought that push-pull power tapping attachment.

My 12mm rails arrived a couple days ago.  I first ordered the rails about 3 weeks ago, when they showed up I lifted the box I thought "My God, this is an awful heavy box for 12mm rails."  Turned out they were 20mm rails, I checked my order and sure enough that's exactly what I ordered.  When I contacted the seller about returning the rails, he made a counter offer.  He offered a 40% refund and I just keep the rails, saves both of us the hassle of returning them.  So now I have a pair of 20mm diameter, fully supported linear rails that are 1m long for some future project - with 2 sets of bearings.

I got the X axis 12mm rails cut to length yesterday.  I needed 450mm of rail for an exact fit, I cut them to 430mm so I could move them around a bit if needed.  The rails are hardened so I had to use the spinning wheel of death in an angle grinder to deal with them - I don't want to have to cut them more than once.  When I started mocking things up I discovered that by some happy coincidence the bottom of the bed is exactly 1/4' above the top of the bearings - talk about dumb luck!  And I just happen to have a couple of short chunks of 1/4" x 2" aluminum flat stock laying around. The bed will be in the original location, so no mucking about with the X axis leadscrew.  I think I can keep the Y axis leadscrew in the same spot, but when I print the replacement Y axis carriage I'll most likely need to move the lead nut location.  The new 2040 extrusions for the Y axis rails should be here in the next day or so, then I'll have a better idea what things could/will look like on the gantry.
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