Stephen Benson | 13/05/2011 14:37:23 |
![]() 203 forum posts 69 photos | The balance seems to have tipped too far towards CNC in my opinion Edited By Stephen Benson on 13/05/2011 14:41:35 |
chris stephens | 13/05/2011 16:25:14 |
1049 forum posts 1 photos | Hi Stephen,
You might be right there, where are the useful articles for us luddites?
chriStephens
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Oddlegs | 13/05/2011 16:26:19 |
7 forum posts | You're quite right. CNC should have its own magazine. |
macmarch | 13/05/2011 18:11:53 |
147 forum posts 1 photos | Model Engineering Workshop Does this not mean equipment etc to produce Models and small scale? Seems as though we now have to become programmers to produce items we can make in half the time using our skills. CNC is alright if making dozens or hundreds. I make small parts in 20's and 30's just as quick or quicker manually than CNC. If the magazine continues in this vein then here's one that will not be renewing. |
NJH | 13/05/2011 18:44:24 |
![]() 2314 forum posts 139 photos | Hi Guys To me the interest in the hobby is working things out, gaining skill in operating the machines and tools, and eventually producing something of my "own". Once I've made this I don't want to do it again! I've little or no interest in CNC and, whilst there might be some (very) slight interest in viewing the machine set-ups, blocks of gobbledy-gook programme code just bring back painful memories of hours wasted in front of ZX computers and the like. Now I can grit my teeth and overlook the odd article with the feeling that others may eagerly devour such stuff but three in one issue is too much. I recall this has happened before - if we must have them please let them be spaced out better. Also in this issue is the "eagerly" awaited readership survey. I will certainly return mine and I suggest you do too. We can't guarantee that our views will be followed but at least we can make them known. Regards Norman |
Martin W | 13/05/2011 19:21:19 |
940 forum posts 30 photos | Hi All
I totally concur with the comments above re the number of CNC articles etc in the magazine generally. I like Norman want to learn and then use those skills to produce whatever I want. I don't intend to spend a lot of money on a machine and have it do the fun part of producing a 'wotsit or bobit' for me. As far as I am concerned the fun has been removed and I might as well go to the local engineering company and say make me one of these 'wotsits or bobits'.
Yes it is fun to watch a high speed machine shape a part and spit it out but only once, IMO these things belong on a production line not on a hobbyists bench.
Cheers
Martin
Call me a Luddite what the hell I too old to care. |
wolrikm | 13/05/2011 20:08:06 |
36 forum posts 1 photos | I was about to subscribe to the magazine, and in fact I would have except I couldn't find anywhere to let me state which issue to start from. I came to the forum to see if I could find out and spotted this thread. I am glad I did as I have no interest in CNC, or repairing cars come to that, as that's what my job was for the last 25 years. I'm new to model engineering and MEW, so I think I will stick to browsing it in W H Smiths and buying if there is something in it to interest me, something I should have done today before buying issue 177. |
Peter G. Shaw | 13/05/2011 20:22:25 |
![]() 1531 forum posts 44 photos | Here is another vote against CNC. For what it is worth, Norman has fairly and squarely hit the nail right on the head. Like Norman, I have done my programming years ago: I know I can do it, but I do not want to do anymore. Regards, Peter G. Shaw |
John Coates | 13/05/2011 20:32:55 |
![]() 558 forum posts 28 photos | Hmmm interesting views guys. As a newbie I am only interested in manual machining as I am trying to learn the basics. Lathe and mill work is what I'm interested in learning and right now that is about finish, depth of cut, feed, type of tool, sequence of operations, for which you guys have been most helpful in answering my many questions over the past months.
I thought I could learn things from the CNC articles but I was wrong, There is nothing in there for me so the number of pages that are relevant are reduced. And once the survey was removed it's a very thin issue this month.
I know David has a hard job to do to please such a vast readership and I wouldn't want it and he probably has to use the articles he's given. Luckily there are books to aid me and the Foundation Course book by Peter Wright I got for my subscription free gift is coming in very useful.
I agree with NJH and will be completing my survey form because if you don't vote you abdicate all rights to moan about the buggers who get in! |
DerryUK | 13/05/2011 20:47:37 |
125 forum posts | As the editor has said before he can only publish what he is given. So come on you moaners write something that you do so that the rest of us can enjoy also.
You never know you might find it more enjoyable than moaning.
Derry.
PS I generally don't read the CNC articles either but I know that in the future I will get my hands on a CNC machine and when I do I know were to go (other than the manual) for something informative to read.
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Ian Hewson | 13/05/2011 20:53:36 |
354 forum posts 33 photos | Hi, totaly agree, we have had far too many cnc articles of late, whilst I am interested in computers and am not a luddite, I will have to consider my subscription, and as was stated earlier may go back to checking WH smith before I buy. |
blowlamp | 13/05/2011 21:21:16 |
![]() 1885 forum posts 111 photos | Well here's a vote for it. The notion that CNC can or should, only be used for mass production, just shows that you've given insufficient consideration to the other opportunities that it offers. I use CNC for 1 offs all the time and find the CAD and CAM side of the job very rewarding as it just adds to the variety of things I get to do in this hobby of ours. Martin. |
Flying Fifer | 13/05/2011 22:08:59 |
180 forum posts | Hi Blowlamp, Yes I agree that the 3 links you`ve put up show what can be done with CNC but I still agree with my fellow luddites. No disrespect intended but I suppose when its finished the builder can say (with justified pride) "I programmed that" as opposed to I built that.
Stands by for upcoming flak
Alan |
Steve Withnell | 13/05/2011 22:31:42 |
![]() 858 forum posts 215 photos | Here's a question- can you be any good with a CNC machine until you have got a real good feel for cutting metal by hand? (ie manual lathe or mill). Alternatively, can you learn faster how to machine metal using CNC because it's a lot easier to change feeds and speeds to get to the right finish?
My delight is hands on the wheels teasing out a part to a good finish, not sure if I'd get the same pleasure from CNC as a hobby perspective.
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Charlie, | 13/05/2011 22:32:34 |
76 forum posts 1 photos | As one who likes a good winge i have had several disapointing weeks recently,The weather has been nice, The pension has gone up,I won a prize on the Premium Bonds, And
imigration to this country has fallen below two thousand a week,So you see i have had a
a very lean time,But the latest issue of m,e,w has fixed that! I can live with an artical or
two that has no interest to me,Other people have many varied interests outside of what i
like and i must be mindfull of this fact,But to find the latest issue stuffed full of cnc stuff
was very disapointing,In fact i the Product catalogue that came with it was much more
interesting,And i have to consider the latest issue as a total dud, |
Alan Worland | 13/05/2011 22:46:14 |
247 forum posts 21 photos | I agree - too much CNC! I can see some advantages for using it (profiling springs to mind) but I want to go out in the workshop and make something not spend the evening before progaramming what I am doing the following day.
Just my opinion! |
Martin W | 13/05/2011 23:01:53 |
940 forum posts 30 photos | Hi Alan (Fifer variety)
I think that, for me certainly, you have hit the nail fairly and squarely on the head. Yes CNC will produce items and produce them very well and very accurately but what it denies me is the hands on approach and the great satisfaction of looking at something I have made with the knowledge that as my skills improve the results will get better.
They will never match the repeatability nor probably the accuracy of a CNC produced part but they will be uniquely mine, warts and all. That said I will never produce an engine as describe in Blowlamp's posting but believe me I would love to, CNC or not, but what stumbles out of my workshop I have made or bodged and that for me is the pleasure.
CNC is here to stay and will probably become more popular as time passes but I feel that skills will be lost. I have spent my career in electronics, from entry level through to management, during which time I inevitably did some programming and to an extent that is what I am trying to get away from by learning another discipline post retirement; hence my reluctance in wanting to see magazines being taken over by the subject.
Yes I am a Luddite in this respect but having started out servicing military airborne electronics and early computers with fault finding to component level I have watched the industry change significantly. This has now, in industry and elsewhere, developed to board swapping controlled by diagnostic instruction with the loss of the many skills. It is of course cost effective as is CNC in the workshop but I want to learn/practice engineering and hopefully develop some skills before it goes the same way.
Rant ends for today
![]() Martin W
Edited By Martin W on 13/05/2011 23:15:48 Edited By Martin W on 13/05/2011 23:16:07 |
Martin W | 13/05/2011 23:12:18 |
940 forum posts 30 photos | Me Again
I must add that I feel for the editor as he has a difficult balancing act to perform. Too little CNC, modern stuff, and he's not progressive enough too much and the old codgers, that's me for certain, zimmer frame to the keyboard and complain
![]() All the best
Martin W |
blowlamp | 13/05/2011 23:49:15 |
![]() 1885 forum posts 111 photos | Incoming flak!
![]() I'm sure the first blokes that used a lathe of some sort got slated by their peers for missing out on the pleasure of bringing their work to the round by applying a hand-made abrasive device to its surface, whilst supporting it in the crook of a branch of an English Oak.
And what about the lazy git that first jumped on a horse to get somewhere instead of doing the decent thing of walking?
You see, I see CNC as just another tool in the arsenal. You don't have to use it for everything, but if a part needs an elliptical profile on it and you've only got a lathe and vertical milling machine, then how are you going to do it without making yet another 'never to be used again' attachment device?
Here's a part I made for someone that's about 6" in length . I think there's one straight line on it and he wanted it to have nice blends, so not much handle turning but plenty of filing, if that's what you like doing. Perhaps you could do it on a rotary table?
I take it none of you have moved on from your 78s to CD, or from your valve radios to the newfangled transitor?
![]() Anyway, everything else has been covered before and doesn't need repeating....I said it doesn't need REPEATING.
Martin.
Edited By blowlamp on 13/05/2011 23:52:02 |
NJH | 14/05/2011 00:00:22 |
![]() 2314 forum posts 139 photos | But Martin - surely repeating is just what CNC does so well? Cheers Norman |
This thread is closed.
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