How To Cut Deep Mold Cavities With Pencil Lead

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  • čas přidán 20. 07. 2022
  • Trevor shows us the entire process to create graphite electrodes using the ONA Wire EDM… He then uses it to cut deep cavities into Steel on the ONA Sinker EDM.
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Komentáře • 242

  • @TheRuobi
    @TheRuobi Před 2 lety +141

    as a machinist who has made just a couple graphite electrodes, I know how brittle it is and what a pain it is to make a good electrode without it chipping. I never thought about making an electriode with a wire EDM...genius!

    • @DawGGG85
      @DawGGG85 Před 2 lety +6

      To be honest, this is pretty easy to mill. All you need is 1 tip radius mill. Contour the part directly on 0 in small passes, leaving no stock because you can't finish this kind of part. I've done electrodes like this, even longer. It takes trial and error but they are pretty cheap. It will take less time then an EDM machine. Still cool though!

    • @williamlind2843
      @williamlind2843 Před 2 lety +1

      It's fairly quick but limited vs a 5-axis mill. I'm looking into a specific 5 axis electrode machining mill. My company is moving quickly into the magnetic component industry.

    • @FutaNoKami
      @FutaNoKami Před rokem +1

      Now it's time to convince your employer you absolutely need it hahahaha

    • @enriquecastillo1240
      @enriquecastillo1240 Před rokem +1

      I'm like whaaa....all that mess that could have been avoided

  • @tomsellout9576
    @tomsellout9576 Před 2 lety +50

    I used to work for a company that surface ground graphite blanks to a .0002 tolerance specifically for EDM electrodes and mold making. Fun fact: you can get copper infused graphite for electrodes as well

    • @joshkojk
      @joshkojk Před 2 lety +12

      I work at a mold and tool shop CNC milling electrodes to .0002 tolerance for EDM. We use Poco which to my understanding is a basic graphite and C3, which is the Copper infused graphite you mentioned. I went from milling Soft steel, to doing hard tool and now this and i think this is the most difficult.

  • @Jessie_Smith
    @Jessie_Smith Před 2 lety +37

    Absolutely love this process. EDM technology is so elegant. Great work Trevor, that burn came out amazing!

  • @tonyjohnson2256
    @tonyjohnson2256 Před 2 lety +23

    Man I miss programming and running EDM's. It was stressful but awesome at the same time to cut parts that had a tolerance of +.0001 -.0000 " all day long.

    • @thomasrogers8239
      @thomasrogers8239 Před 2 lety +4

      I apparently have much to learn, as an operator I could only dial it in to +/- .0001

    • @tonyjohnson2256
      @tonyjohnson2256 Před rokem

      @@thomasrogers8239 The place that I worked we did punch and die work to support our production line (electronic). There a couple of tricks that we found that really helped us hold those kind of tolerances. The material is huge and how we prepared it. We either used D-2 or CPM-M4. We would heat treat is, draw it back, freeze it to around -150 deg. F. We would repeat the drawing back and freezing the parts 4 times. Your material needs to be super stable. Then once the parts hit the wire EDM I would do 1 rough cut and 3 finish passes. The finish passes I would alternate the direction the I would go around the part. I wish I had the resources available to me now days to do this. I would make a video on this. Maybe Titan could fly me down to his facility so that I could demonstrate it lol.

  • @ellisontechnologies
    @ellisontechnologies Před 2 lety +4

    What a great explanation of how to handle graphite and the entire process of using die-sinking and wire-cut EDM's to make a tight slot in steel.

  • @MrMBinder
    @MrMBinder Před 2 lety +5

    At my workplace (tool manufacturer) we only use graphite electrodes for part surfaces where there's a specified roughness or a desired surface texture.
    I've made heaps of different graphite electrodes on a small 3-axis mill that isn't really suited for the task, but it gets the job done. It's a dirty mess and the coolant reservoir is covered in black sludge - but at least the graphite dust is caught by the coolant and not spread all over the shop through the ventilation system 😂
    For a smoother surface you often see on injection molded plastic parts, our sinker EDM guys use polished copper electrodes.
    Or the sinker department leaves a bit of material for a polishing operation for that mirror finish.
    Anything is possible, really.
    As Trevor says in the video; it's about the technology available and the equipment - but the knowledge and experience of the person manning the machine is just as important.

  • @ronniestanley75
    @ronniestanley75 Před rokem +12

    I wonder a few things. One, how long was the time lapse for the pocket cut? And two, how many times can the graphite cutter accurately cut through that hardened stainless?

  • @whatthehell2592
    @whatthehell2592 Před 2 lety +1

    The first time I seen and learned about EDM was in 89' when building a tool and die shop for a customer. Was awesome back then and now it blows my mind seeing it on Utube.

  • @NelvinCagas
    @NelvinCagas Před 2 lety +4

    This is what I do everyday in my Job. Make electrode copper tungsten to wire EDM and use it for Sinker EDM. I'm working this for almost 9years as CNC machinist. Graphite is good more cheaper than copper tungsten but I think it is better use for roughing in Heat treated materials but I don't think if it can be good in carbide materials. Graphite is easy to wear than copper tungsten. But still can make good products.

  • @mattSOLIDWORKS
    @mattSOLIDWORKS Před 2 lety +8

    Underwater shots make this next-level. Awesome video!

    • @trevorgoforth8963
      @trevorgoforth8963 Před 2 lety +2

      Thanks Matthew! Our film crew are a talented bunch indeed!

  • @mohammedalbattal77
    @mohammedalbattal77 Před 2 lety +5

    You are the king of molds and additive machines man ... I was amazed by this video, man. I loved your work and your back ground music very much... I liked your clear tone of speech, Mr. Trevor... I am looking forward to the next video and I am also waiting to know more about this new quick chuck and more about how to make one by myself
    BOOM .

  • @shaniegust1225
    @shaniegust1225 Před 2 lety +1

    So cool! This is new to me, and I just LOVE it! Thank you Trevor 👍

  • @travisjarrett2355
    @travisjarrett2355 Před 2 lety +8

    Super cool process. Super good editing. Well done all around!

  • @ronnydowdy7432
    @ronnydowdy7432 Před 2 lety +2

    As a former die maker, this is impressive. It would not be impossible to make this part using the old manual machines but I would have had to mask the two halves, to get the finished size and that smother finish, soda blast it. It would have been almost hit or miss and it would take days to complete.
    The parts would be scrap.
    So I wish I could have had this technology back in the day.
    The machines you're using probably cost more than our whole building and the machines in it lol.
    Enjoyed watching this show it's amazing how much CNC can do.

    • @abcdefghijk6704
      @abcdefghijk6704 Před 2 lety +2

      "Die maker" when, in the 1930's? EDM is not new, come on...

    • @ronnydowdy7432
      @ronnydowdy7432 Před 2 lety +1

      @@abcdefghijk6704 we had edm and used it but never to make a die or mold part. We just had the simple one like to remove broken tap or make a hole in some super hard heat treatment tool steels.

    • @mackk123
      @mackk123 Před 2 lety

      @@abcdefghijk6704 haha you still use EDM? how archaic lmao

  • @stanb1543
    @stanb1543 Před rokem

    Why do I get so excited watching these videos?? So crisp!

  • @abcdefghijk6704
    @abcdefghijk6704 Před 2 lety +15

    Now, someone has to polish it (or you do very slow finishing burn), otherwise plastic will never go out of such mold (common issue, ribs breaking off). And imagine this is not an insert split in two halves, but one solid part.

    • @matiaspetersen2644
      @matiaspetersen2644 Před 2 lety

      It is possible with some release angle on the sides and an ejector pin in the bottom

    • @mulletjocks
      @mulletjocks Před 2 lety +1

      Also polishing the electrodes. Multiple finish electrodes at multiple polish grades. Make the electrodes smaller to compensate and add flushing and orbital path. =happy mould polising team.

    • @trevorgoforth8963
      @trevorgoforth8963 Před 2 lety

      @@mulletjocks This program did have a square orbital cycle.

    • @tlgibson97
      @tlgibson97 Před 2 lety +2

      Many years ago I used to be the guy polishing those ribs for plastic injection molding. It was always amazing the detail they could get with EDM but polishing it was a bitch. It was a trick having or making the right tools to get all the way down into a small slot like that. Had to keep from widening the slot and the EDM process case hardened the steel making it take even longer to polish out.

  • @ivanfouche5060
    @ivanfouche5060 Před 2 lety

    Amazing. No words. Welldone titans team.

  • @alexvech4121
    @alexvech4121 Před 2 lety +1

    My dad used graphite from batteries to weld copper wires back in the day. It was interesting to watch him do that

  • @EROWALTD
    @EROWALTD Před rokem +2

    Super nice video and good explained 🔥💪🏻
    Best scene: making the electrode with wire EDM 😍
    We are honored you used the EROWA system

    • @trevorgoforth8963
      @trevorgoforth8963 Před rokem +2

      Thank you! We love your tools, they are top notch and I am glad we can share how nice they are with the world!

  • @adrielburned6924
    @adrielburned6924 Před 2 lety +1

    I remember when The Oregon Trail game and laser printers were all the rage. Then was blown away with pagers. Then these strange space age 3D printers. Now you guys! Freaking Amazing!

  • @robertmonroe9728
    @robertmonroe9728 Před rokem

    Amazing expert, amazing technology. Pure hi-tech.

  • @sprescav
    @sprescav Před rokem

    Results are stunning.

  • @milspecfpv
    @milspecfpv Před 2 lety

    The Tron-esque music during the time lapse cut was a nice touch.

  • @CL-yp1bs
    @CL-yp1bs Před rokem

    this is beautiful! wow i am impressed!

  • @yannickwalter1
    @yannickwalter1 Před 2 lety +3

    "not bad for a monday" - when the cnc mill crashed before lunch XD

  • @nathanthomas8184
    @nathanthomas8184 Před 2 lety

    Keep on knocking it OUT of the park
    Titan exhilarating Times for anything is possible! BOOM !

  • @barrysetzer
    @barrysetzer Před 2 lety +13

    Thats a pretty impressive slot right there! I wouldnt be able to machine that with comventional methods. Nice work Trev!

    • @trevorgoforth8963
      @trevorgoforth8963 Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks dude!

    • @abcdefghijk6704
      @abcdefghijk6704 Před 2 lety +4

      Yeah, but this is a standard way to do such things in mouldmaking for last 50 years or more.

    • @joshuasusanto4258
      @joshuasusanto4258 Před 2 lety +1

      probably gotta machine two parts then weld them both together at best?

  • @williamtellify
    @williamtellify Před rokem

    fanstasic . thanks for the update on new procedures. power on

  • @nuggs9820
    @nuggs9820 Před 2 lety +2

    That's a regular for where I work. We make our graphite electrodes our selfs from rectangular stock then sink them into hardened aircraft certified 416 R stainless.

  • @MrWetnutz
    @MrWetnutz Před rokem +1

    All done using Electronic Dance Music. Amazing!

  • @ColKorn1965
    @ColKorn1965 Před 2 lety +5

    Pencil leads are graphite mixed with clay. EDM electrodes are pure graphite.😀

    • @trevorgoforth8963
      @trevorgoforth8963 Před 2 lety

      We were trying to find something that non EDM folks can use to get an idea of the type of material we are cutting and why it is difficult to cut it long narrow features.

    • @abcdefghijk6704
      @abcdefghijk6704 Před 2 lety +2

      There are different grades/types of graphite. Most are mixed, NOT pure graphite (chemically pure carbon).

    • @mackk123
      @mackk123 Před 2 lety +1

      maybe your pencils

    • @ColKorn1965
      @ColKorn1965 Před 2 lety +2

      @@mackk123 my pencil is huge

    • @mackk123
      @mackk123 Před 2 lety +1

      @@ColKorn1965 huge, for you

  • @esahg5421
    @esahg5421 Před rokem

    This is amazing!

  • @giteshtandel7604
    @giteshtandel7604 Před 2 lety +1

    Excellent; how long it took to go 2" Depth on sinking? Rough n finish

  • @Pillowcase
    @Pillowcase Před 2 lety

    Damn thats a nice result.

  • @jgom4674
    @jgom4674 Před 11 měsíci

    Really cool. Thank you.

  • @patgauthier866
    @patgauthier866 Před 2 lety

    That's awesome, that you did the burn with only 1 finisher. I was taught 1 rougher 3 finishers. And no flushing, the sodicks I use to run I always had to flush deep burns, they didn't like it too much.

    • @trevorgoforth8963
      @trevorgoforth8963 Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah 1 rough 4 finish trodes is pretty standard for graphite electrodes which is why we wanted to attempt this burn with only two trodes and no flushing! Very impressed with how it performed! Thanks for watching!

  • @ronjlwhite8058
    @ronjlwhite8058 Před 2 lety

    that was EPIC!!!

  • @byfordbarnard2264
    @byfordbarnard2264 Před 2 lety

    I ran both wire and Ram edm for years. Miss those days

  • @mikemarley2389
    @mikemarley2389 Před rokem

    Incredable !

  • @justerpro
    @justerpro Před 2 lety +1

    how exactly did you indicate it in within a .0001 using a .0005" indicator?

  • @derrickanderson2783
    @derrickanderson2783 Před rokem

    @7:57 So a piece of stainless getting an underwater tattoo...cool haha

  • @christophervillalpando5865

    Very Nice Trevor!

  • @blackbeton3923
    @blackbeton3923 Před rokem

    Edm is absolutely amazing

  • @vinchinno
    @vinchinno Před rokem +1

    I worked in a mold shop and we had a Makino cnc machine specially for graphite. It was sealed and had a vacuum to gather all the dust. I was a cnc programmer and I don't recall ever using diamond coated tool, it was standard carbide tools. Now something important for new machine shop worker. SAFETY FIRST!! Never work with any jewelry on fingers and wrist. Never!! This guy might lose his finger someday.

    • @trevorgoforth8963
      @trevorgoforth8963 Před rokem

      There are certainly machines designed for cutting graphite that have vacuum systems that do a pretty good job. Graphite is extremely abrasive and a standard uncoated end mill will wear quickly. Most shops that cut graphite regularly, are not using standard carbide end mills.

  • @noahc6544
    @noahc6544 Před rokem

    Do you need to worry about hazardous material build up in the swarf from cutting stainless? I know it can have some nastier to handle metals in stainless alloys

  • @J-ur7rk
    @J-ur7rk Před 5 měsíci

    What’s the cycle time for the 2 inch deep cut in the EDM sinker?

  • @johnnybegoodgovbebad8426

    Amazing machines and such pro's

  • @SR-ml4dn
    @SR-ml4dn Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the hypnotizing EDM video and your Booom imitation sound love that. Have you ever experimented with coating the sides on the electrode so only the end surface do the job ?

  • @JB-he1jt
    @JB-he1jt Před rokem

    Copper is your best friend when burning deep ribs or bosses into mold inserts! Very nice wire wire machine, Iran a Mitsubishi FX10K wire edm almost 15 yrs ago! 👍

  • @MatthewMelson
    @MatthewMelson Před 2 lety +2

    Poco EDM3 has copper i do believe, so slightly different than pencil lead. But good video on EDM. Those Erowa holders have a centering attachment (you used the alignment attachment) that is ground to length also so you can just type your x, y, and z numbers to your EDM electrode offset page. Love Erowa stuff, its expensive but worth it. System 3R has really nice Wire EDM tooling, leveling heads especially.

    • @EDMDoc
      @EDMDoc Před 2 lety +2

      There is no copper in Poco3. The difference between pencil graphite and fine edm grade is the fact that grades such as Poco3 are isotropic whilst pencil graphite is not. I was a manufacturing engineer/ tooling designer for Pratt & Whitney Canada and designed every electrode for all blade, vanes for their engines for 12 years. Got my own shop. I'm a Charmilles guy and a big fan of Errowa tooling.

  • @funnylife7454
    @funnylife7454 Před 2 lety +1

    that is crazy 🤯

  • @jesseweaver_fuyt
    @jesseweaver_fuyt Před 2 lety

    Please start a EDM academy. I love to learn more about this machine and how far you can push it before it pushes back

  • @EDMDoc
    @EDMDoc Před 2 lety +2

    Just jumping in on a comment about Poco3 having copper. Poco c3 etc does and is more expensive than strait poco3
    .There is no copper in Poco3. The difference between pencil graphite and fine edm grade is the fact that grades such as Poco3 are isotropic whilst pencil graphite is not. I was a manufacturing engineer/ tooling designer for Pratt & Whitney Canada and designed every electrode for all blade, vanes for their engines for 12 years. Got my own shop. I'm a Charmilles guy and a big fan of Errowa tooling.

    • @fredsanford1437
      @fredsanford1437 Před 2 lety

      I ran wire for years but zero experience with a sinker.
      Why don’t you guys use a nozzle to help flush? 🤷‍♂️

    • @EDMDoc
      @EDMDoc Před rokem +1

      @@fredsanford1437 I do use nozzles as well as vacuum flushing.

  • @oceanic8424
    @oceanic8424 Před 2 lety +1

    [08/08/22] If that was a mold, wouldn't it require a draft angle for proper molded piece release?

    • @trevorgoforth8963
      @trevorgoforth8963 Před 2 lety +3

      Good question, you are correct! This electrode has 1 degree of draft on every side resulting in 1 degree of draft on the walls of my finished workpiece 👍🏻

  • @user-mm3go7wn9q
    @user-mm3go7wn9q Před rokem

    Why do you have to do it with plunge-EDM a deep pocket with the mold halves assembled? Why the two halves of the mold couldn't have been milled separately?

  • @nhuttsakk9317
    @nhuttsakk9317 Před 2 lety +1

    This technology has been around for decades. In the 80s the tool and die shop had edm burners both graphite and wire

    • @aftaev
      @aftaev Před 7 měsíci

      Electrical discharge machining was invented in the 194x year. This is not such a new technology.

  • @atlkhd4487
    @atlkhd4487 Před 2 lety

    I’ve Machined graphite on an EDM before and its crazy how brittle the material is. It was a pain to prevent it from chipping when holding the workpiece.

  • @jbrownson
    @jbrownson Před 2 lety

    EDM is so neat

  • @vor6126
    @vor6126 Před rokem

    what is the edm music used in the video?

  • @XYoukaiX
    @XYoukaiX Před rokem

    Really cool .... I learned to operate CNC Milling Mashines using Heidenhain controlls some years ago and it was kinda cool but our mashines were all old and crappy so I had to let them run much slower then the books said to also my former Boss was kinda stupid ruining the company because he was shipping broken parts as well thinking the customers wouldn't notice.
    I guess working with such nice mashines would have been awesome, still kinda happy I don't work in the industry anymore though.

  • @platin2148
    @platin2148 Před 2 lety +1

    Does it take longer on the wire edm todo roughing vs finisher?

    • @hunterb108
      @hunterb108 Před 2 lety

      I'm curious about that too lol I'm a plunge programmer so I'm not totally familiar with timing for wiring graphite but from what I understand it takes a while.

    • @fredsanford1437
      @fredsanford1437 Před 2 lety +1

      @@hunterb108 lol I have many years experience on wire but zero with sinker.
      I imagine it’s the same, rough pass is always the longest and finishing passes are super quick
      Hope that helps ✌️

  • @alan.macrae
    @alan.macrae Před 2 lety +1

    Mesmerizing work. Thank you for providing these videos.

  • @5mil-tolerance433
    @5mil-tolerance433 Před 2 lety

    I gave it a thumbs up just because you said boom

  • @enriquecastillo1240
    @enriquecastillo1240 Před rokem

    Does the graphite dirty the wire machine?

  • @anbubharathi2489
    @anbubharathi2489 Před 2 lety +1

    Hi Titans of CNC!
    I am a student
    I have a doubt
    GO G90 G55 X0 Y0;
    G43 Z2.0 H2;
    #501=1;
    WHILE [#500LE23]DO1;
    G91 Z-0.7863 F480;
    G04 P100;
    #501=#501+1;
    END1;
    THIS set of codes was used for roughing 22 mm drill
    What is difference between using G81 cycle vs G01 z 17.3 F 480 Vs WHILE LOOP WITH Incremental like above mentioned code ,is there any difference between this codes?

    • @soto4621
      @soto4621 Před 2 lety

      In that while loop the G04 makes a pause of 100 miliseg every incement(0.78). And G81 is a straight drill with no pauses. And using G81 you only need XY postion repeat to do another drill. Sorry about my bad English, hope this answered your quesiton.

    • @anbubharathi2489
      @anbubharathi2489 Před 2 lety

      @@soto4621 thank u bro

  • @BrilliantDesignOnline
    @BrilliantDesignOnline Před 2 lety +3

    Incredible how sharp the internal corners are.

  • @hothiajay1078
    @hothiajay1078 Před 2 lety +1

    How much rough electroad wear out per said and total height wear out

    • @fredsanford1437
      @fredsanford1437 Před 2 lety

      Good question, I know wire EDM loses a lot of diameter and is visibly deteriorated after doing rough passes.
      Sinkers appear to be consumed a lot slower.

  • @beachboardfan9544
    @beachboardfan9544 Před 2 lety +1

    How do you know how many electrodes its going to take to accomplish the burn?

    • @mattlander9119
      @mattlander9119 Před 2 lety

      Putting a lot of power through the electrode to rough would wear it down a bit so a finisher does the last little bit.

    • @abcdefghijk6704
      @abcdefghijk6704 Před 2 lety +2

      Experience. It may take 1 to 4 electrodes to do the job (depends on size, shape, materials, finish).

  • @Robisquick
    @Robisquick Před rokem

    Can anyone help me understand why they are using graphite to punch into steel? What does this accomplish? How does it work? I’m so confused.

  • @jackflash6377
    @jackflash6377 Před 2 lety

    Every once in a while you guys throw out a gem like this one.
    Keep it up!!!
    Mesmerized during the entire video.

    • @abcdefghijk6704
      @abcdefghijk6704 Před 2 lety +1

      Come on, what "gem". EDM is pretty old tech, molds are build like that for last 50+ years...

    • @jackflash6377
      @jackflash6377 Před 2 lety

      @@abcdefghijk6704 Well for one, there wasn't any "I'm the greatest ever lived" talk in it. Explanation was clear and concise, the footage was to the point and not bouncing around like the editor has ADD and the fact that it shows the entire process from start to finish.. that's a gem in my book.

  • @tdg911
    @tdg911 Před 2 lety +1

    Amazing tech. Powerhouse of knowledge and experience

  • @rakasa462
    @rakasa462 Před 2 lety

    I tried edm wire on graphite it did not work. Switched to wafer saw

  • @robertlafnear9115
    @robertlafnear9115 Před 2 lety +1

    4 A.M. and I'm watching T of CNC, .......... let the chips fly !🤗

    • @trevorgoforth8963
      @trevorgoforth8963 Před 2 lety

      Any time is a good time to watch machining videos! Thanks for watching Robert!

  • @Rowrowthegravyboat
    @Rowrowthegravyboat Před rokem +1

    I’m not a machinist, and I prefer to think I’m not a stupid man… and while that was cool and amazingly precise. I am familiar with this type of machining, but some of the technical jargon sailed over my head so high and so fast I would have never been able to catch it.

  • @thomasbarlow4223
    @thomasbarlow4223 Před 2 lety +1

    It's funny how to the untrained eye this looks so unimpressive but if you know what's required to do this it really is a piece of art

  • @RidinWithMyLocsOn
    @RidinWithMyLocsOn Před rokem

    Could these electrodes cut rock/stone? Like, limestone, granite?

    • @MrNerdHair
      @MrNerdHair Před rokem

      Nope; EDM requires that the workpiece be a conductive material.

  • @preciousplasticph
    @preciousplasticph Před rokem

    you should check out 3D printed dies and ECM machining.

  • @CraigConnors
    @CraigConnors Před rokem

    Could you make a graphite part and use it to make a mold in metal by this process? Or Would machining it be the better way to go? Always fun to watch things being created with new techniques. I had the opportunity to work for a company using an EDI system, but chose the other job, Automobile mechanic, should have stuck with the machining.

    • @aftaev
      @aftaev Před 7 měsíci

      Electrical discharge machining was invented in the 194x. This is not such a new technology.

  • @kubol2011
    @kubol2011 Před 2 měsíci

    It was very nicely done. But it's nothing new, we did such things 20 years ago. Two machines, Agie Classic V2/Challenge V2 and Agie Hyperspark. Of course, Erowa, Bedra wire and POCO graphite.
    Greetings from Poland👍

  • @alib8396
    @alib8396 Před rokem

    What is the difference between the rougher and the finishing electrode?

    • @aftaev
      @aftaev Před 7 měsíci

      Rough work means more current, more clearance, more roughness.
      Finishing work less clearance, better roughness

  • @user-le1ui7zb5x
    @user-le1ui7zb5x Před 2 lety

    WoW EDM

  • @boltonky
    @boltonky Před 2 lety

    To only have access to this type of kit, and totally not what i thought when i started video lol

  • @blaschowtiz6119
    @blaschowtiz6119 Před 2 lety

    what is this process called, i never seen a way to cut material like this

  • @nenadjanjic8070
    @nenadjanjic8070 Před 2 lety

    Good job mate, can you make a vidio whit angle sink (X&Z or Y&Z) that would be fun for the ppl to see. And why bro didnt you just use 4th axis EDM, i know you have one. You can do loads of difrent sinking shapes whit it.

    • @trevorgoforth8963
      @trevorgoforth8963 Před 2 lety

      Absolutely we will be doing both of those things in the future! The ONA Iris 6 makes angled burns very easy. Can’t wait to showcase it!

  • @oceanic8424
    @oceanic8424 Před 2 lety

    [08/08/22] I don't quite understand all of it yet, but it's a learning process.

  • @BASANT.73
    @BASANT.73 Před 2 lety

    Make a video on how document flow in machine shop please

  • @madmartigan4948
    @madmartigan4948 Před rokem

    I envy the guys in that department in my machine shop that in the laser cutter all I'm stuck grinding away on my CNC lathe

  • @spacejihadist4246
    @spacejihadist4246 Před rokem

    Please share the soundtracks used in the video.

  • @radar88ster
    @radar88ster Před rokem

    It would be greatly appreciated to know the machine time of the different processes.

  • @YEAHKINDA
    @YEAHKINDA Před rokem

    Just get one of those insane pencil lead sculpters to do it and they'll be able to exceed any machine.

  • @vadmalski
    @vadmalski Před 2 lety

    wow

  • @timopesonen2047
    @timopesonen2047 Před 2 lety

    I have to comment; it is very easy to make that electrode by milling if you know what you are doing. It is not even very thin. Done that even thinner and longer;)

  • @willvanderhorst9072
    @willvanderhorst9072 Před 2 lety +1

    Very nice but not much has really changed with edm for the last 20 years

  • @JohnSmith-pn2vl
    @JohnSmith-pn2vl Před 2 lety

    never seen this before, mindblowing!

    • @abcdefghijk6704
      @abcdefghijk6704 Před 2 lety +1

      This is very old process, nothing new. This shows how little general public knows about machining.

    • @trevorgoforth8963
      @trevorgoforth8963 Před 2 lety +1

      @@abcdefghijk6704 Don't worry, we are actually taking action to change that every single day.

  • @mealex303
    @mealex303 Před 2 lety

    if your off a tenth then have something sticking out 4 inches that tenth will be nearly a thow at end of the stick out surely

  • @NoStyle11
    @NoStyle11 Před rokem

    This feels like black magic to me

  • @michaelwni
    @michaelwni Před rokem

  • @cyber2526
    @cyber2526 Před 2 lety

    i imagine EDM being much more relaxing then milling or turning. just no big fast moving parts that you can crash haha

    • @Hi_Doctor_Nick
      @Hi_Doctor_Nick Před 2 lety

      These machines monitor current flow. I forgot to put a Z retract to the right height to clear a clamp between pockets while on a die sinker. The electrode bumped into the clamp and alarmed out. Just pressed reset, highlighted the line to start from and off it went. Not a mark on the electrode or clamp. If I done that on a mill I would of been picking up pieces.

    • @cyber2526
      @cyber2526 Před 2 lety

      @@Hi_Doctor_Nick exactly good luck making an edm explode haha

    • @Hi_Doctor_Nick
      @Hi_Doctor_Nick Před 2 lety

      @@cyber2526 that was my worst crash I've ever had on a sinker. if you can call it a crash, more of a inconvenience lol

  • @the_chomper
    @the_chomper Před rokem

    you were so preoccupied with whether you could, you didnt stop to think whether you should.

  • @rrss7579
    @rrss7579 Před 2 lety

    More creativity my hero