GENMITSU 3030 PROVer MAX Desktop CNC, 300x300x78mm working area, 300W spindle, cutting aluminum
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- čas přidán 7. 06. 2024
- 00:00 Intro
02:02 Setup
03:17 Engraving and cutting soft materials: Red oak wood, acrylic
07:21 Cutting aluminum with 300W spindle and 1.25HP Makita wood router
17:56 4-axis 3D engraving
19:51 Pros and cons
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GENMITSU 3030 PRO CNC:
shrsl.com/49430
Mini CNC vise:
amzn.to/3QIiLZ3
Makita 1.25HP router:
amzn.to/3UWu7ev
Speed tiger solid Carbide 1/8"Diameter 1/4" Shank (can be used with Makita router without additional adapter)
amzn.to/3ww7p3x
SpeTool 2-flute Tungsten Carbide 1/8 inch Aluminum End Mills(5 pcs)
amzn.to/3wz6Yp3 - Věda a technologie
This side of the industry sorely needs someone like Bambu to just come in and do a lot of common sense things and more. This pace of yearly improvements is embarrassing.
Yet another end-to-end solid review! Can't say it enough: I love your matter-of-fact, straight-to-the-point, no-BS-just-good-content style 👍
I watch to hear her say "today....."
its "Tuhday"
@@warmfreeze 😆
Same, i enjoy the intro more than the actual full reviews...😂
There is a V2 of this out. It has a number of improvements.
i been running this machine for a while, overall an excellent well built machine with a decent price tag, however the biggest downside is the weak 300w spindle. For wood they are absoletly fine but for a machine that is this ridge and advertised to cut soft metals it need something alot more. I personally upgraded the spindle to a 1.5kw spindle now can run metal jobs like it nothing even can cut titanium plates at okay ish speed. and it give me the opportunity to run 10mm end mills too with an er16 collet. Overall very happy with the machine very well build just wish it give you an option to buy a better spindle out of the box rather than wasting money on the 300w spindle
Hey I have the same machine what spindle did you upgrade to?
@@DavidHernandez-pp3jy i upgraded to a gpenny 1.5kw vfd spindle that come with a er16 collet rather than er11. It aircooled but they do have a water cooled version aswell i jsut cant be bother to setup the water cooling bit so went with air cool. Overall very happy with it can machine metal properly at decent speed
I never knew I needed something like this...but here we are.
Nice video. Here's a few tips. You would get better results if the materials are mounted directly on to a solid surface. This will result in less chatter.
Next time try the same cuts with a single flute up cut bit and set the milling to a convenientional cut.
I would really like to see a review of the Genmitsu 710W trim router with ER11 chuck vs. the Makita router on this machine.
Nice video. I'm impressed by the improvements they made to this type of CNC.
Thank you for the best Review of the PROVer3030 i have seen.😍
I've learned so much from your tech channel, thanks for your in depth reviews ☺👍🏻
another great review.
Thank you.
love the cnc videos. thank you
you wont believe how clutch this is. i just got mine in and set it up but dont have much of an idea of how to use it. im sure this will be helpful. you really helped me how to use my 3d printer.
Great review as usual 👍
It will probably take an extraordinary amount of time to do this but... are you guys planning on putting together a Milo V1.5? I'd be curious how a DIY bridgeport CNC mill compares to these kit gantry CNCs.
Hey there, with the Makita running at 4.5 the RPM is 25.000, so you roughly double the speed with the same gCode. More power, double speed, of course the gCode makes it easy, but it only shows the obvious evidence. To be fair and allow people to see the real difference between the 300w spindle and the wood router, you should have double the feed and speed of the gCode for the Makita (or divided by two the feed and speed of the Spindle's gCode or set the speed of the Makita to position 2) making parameters somehow equivalent.
For your information, the optimal parameters for your 1/8"carbide bit in 6061 amuminium should be something like:
_ 0.2in (5mm) depth of cut, so the bit should allow you to cut into you 0.125in (3.125mm) plate in one easy pass considering the 1.5hp of the router.
_ 6370 RPM (Makita's speed 1 is 10.000rpm, not suitable for cutting aluminium)
_ 15.3in.mn (388mm.mn) - BUT should be raised with the Makita to 23in.mn (610mm.mn) because of the 10.000 RPM.
Can the machine stands it ? If yes, what about the cut quality ?
YEEEEE! Thank you for the review
Great review.
Pro tip, you can use hot glue to help secure some of your materials down. Then use ipa to release it.
Always knew that nasty beer had a second use.
Kidding, but not really.
It could also be the 300w spindle with the collet has too much runout under load, Makita router is probably much better built to handle sideloading.
My cheap machine with a similar 500w motor could not do profiling cuts at 0.3mm DOC in aluminium when I got it, now it can do 1-2mm easily as its only driving a separate spindle through a belt drive, same or less power but a more rigid spindle. It even handles milling steel now to a point.
good videos as always.
a small thing regarding operation and execution of milling of workpiece. using air assist or adding liquid (alcohol) when milling helps.
another thing is when you have to mill, you use a scrubber mill for all the rough and finish milling at the end with a slower feed and you mill clockwise as white as possible so the endmill has to do the job.
another thing I saw was when you milled in wood that it does not move in the same constant movement around the object but constantly changes speed, can it be selected differently or is it in the software. ????
Excellent review, as usual. I particularly appreciated you recent review on the Sovol SV08. Will you be doing one on the Peopoly Magneto X?
I don't have any plans for that machine yet as my review schedule is fully booked until September, but let's see.
@@AuroraTech Ahh, that's a pity. I am interested in what you would make of it's linear motors and it's 3 micron X-Y accuracy. However, I look forward to what you show us between now and then. Many thanks!
Another great review by Aurora Tech. You did not mention the RPM of the Makita router, do you know what it was? Thanks again.
1=10,000
2=12,000
3=17,000
4=22,000
5=27,000
6=30,000
So, I guess 4.5 is something around 25k. Some users actually measured it:
discuss.inventables.com/t/makita-rt0700c-variable-speed-chart/30922/2
Hello! Tell me please! full PETG printing settings.On the Advenchurer 5M Pro printer
Great review as always. Sad though to see no shipping to Canada. 😥
Looks like Amazon Canada has it. 😊
👍🏻👍🏻
so, im confused. how do i take a g code from a software, and tell the machine where to start, using the offline controller? and , is the offline controller capable of doing multiple finishes with different bits?
i notice aurora growing faster ....she's getting much cuter day after day 😍 ALSO the quality of the videos and reviews getting more and more better 😍🥰 so proud of u 🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
Great review. In my opinion, these desktop CNC machines will never become mills unless their frame is made with steel instead of aluminum extrusions. I would call them soft metal engravers at most but not milling machines. The good thing is that they are not advertised as mills but i just wanted to clarify that.
how would one upgrade the motor to nema 23 with an adapter plate ? how to change stepper current ?
The drivers for the steppers probably would not support the current for the bigger motors, so you would have to change those too.
If they are integrated or it doesnt have outputs for signals for an external driver you might have to buy new drivers or a controller too
Can this plug directly into a PC and run with Candle? Or is the offline controller the only option?
Yes, you can connect it to your company to use candle or ugs if you prefer.
@@AuroraTech
Thank you for taking the time to respond! I'm thinking of buying one.
Are any desktop machines capable of machining mild steel?
I tried on the Carvera Air at 0.05mm step down, it worked but super slow. But that machine is even more rigid.
czcams.com/video/vAV5WsRQpy4/video.html
I love your videos, but please, at least you say it correctly... ALUMINIUM !!! please...
Aluminium Or Aluminum: Is There A Correct Choice?
www.dictionary.com/e/aluminum-or-aluminium/#
@@AuroraTech it is Aluminium :)
Aluminum is a made up American word :)
It used to be pronounced Aluminum in the UK which we took the the US then we changed to come in line with other metals.