mittens87 wrote:
LOL Practical Machinist should just become part of this site. If you've ever been on there you'll know what I mean immediately.
As far as the Swiss lathes go, I've never had the opportunity to play with those. I live right near Gleason, I would love to play with their machines too. I have to become more familiar with everything going on behind the scenes in the controls before I move on to different jobs and machines. (meaning parameter editing, becoming fully proficient at writing macros, idiot proofing processes)
Oh yes, I know exactly what mean about Practical Machinist, lol. I'm the same way when it comes to learning different controls. One thing that annoys me to no end, is even though G&M is fairly standardized, it still widely varies between controllers of different manufacturers. That's why I prefer Fanuc controls.
Drehmaschine wrote:
Not yet with Swiss lathes, but they look like they would be a Braingasm.
Oh, they are! Operating and set-up of proven programs is fairly user-friendly. They have windows-based, conversational controls. The programming is very complex, and if I remember correctly, the G codes go up to G999. I had a print-out of all of the G codes to study, but lost it after I moved. One of the quirkiest things new operators always screw up, is remembering that the Z axis is opposite of conventional lathe machining, because your material is the actual Z axis.
_________________
"It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it." - Aristotle