Driss Titanium Gravel
Driss's GRX Ti gravel bike is built up and ready-2-roll.
Le gravel GRX titane de Driss est prêt-à-rouler.
Titanium week: Duccio & Driss
This week we melted some Titanium. Duccio came from Florence to do a Titanium framebuilding class while I was busy building Driss's Ti gravel frame.
Cette semaine on a fait fondre du titane à l'atelier. Duccio est venu de Florence pour faire un stage de fabrication Titane, de mon coté j'ai pu avancer sur le cadre de Driss.
CNC Notcher: BikeCAD GCode Export
Brent is releasing version 21 of BikeCAD with the GCode Miter Export function that we collaborated on while I was building the CNC Tube Notcher. This allows you to export GCode in just a few clicks directly from BikeCAD. The time it now takes to go from a BikeCAD drawing to the actual mitered tubes is significantly reduced. I find this particularly useful for down tubes that connect to tapered headtubes or that require a lot of water bottle holes. In a couple of minutes you get a fully mitered downtube with a perfect fit at both ends and the holes drilled in all the right places and inline.
Some curious minds out there have asked me for some more details on the actual machine so here is a list of the main components I used and a video of the latest setup:
- The X and Z axis is provided by the Gantry of a CNC router made by Rat Rig in Portugal (StrongHold Pro)
- The gantry is coupled with a lathe like bench made of Alu profiles sourced from Alu Profil in Austria
- The Y axis is a made of two rotary chucks sourced from Vevor
- The Spindle and the Variable Frequency Drive inverter is also from Vevor
- To control the 4 step motors I used OpenBuilds BlackBox Motion Control System X32
- To send the GCode to the controller I used OpenBuilds Control Software
- To hold the tube on one end and keep the step motor coupled to the tube after the 1st cut, I mofified a Pipe/Tube Expander with an extended arbor
- To hold the tube in place on the other end during the 2nd cut, I modified a Pipe Cutter (replaced the cutter with a bearing: see video/pic below)
The main benefit of this setup is that it uses a carbide bit instead of say a laser or plasma and it let's you cut alu, steel, stainless and titanium without heating/altering the tube. The main limitation is that you can only cut straight and round tubes.
PS: Other pictures and videos of the setup are available here: https://www.otmbikes.com/wpblog/?s=cnc