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Mini Mill belt drive conversion

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John Hinkley01/04/2012 15:06:41
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1545 forum posts
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Having unsuccessfully tried to search the forum for help with this subject, I've decided to start a fresh thread.

I have an Amadeal XJ12-300 mill (Sieg X2 clone-ish)and am going to make a belt drive conversion kit. I'm not going to take the easy route and get one from the USA, the postage costs are too prohibitive, so I'm going to make one to my own design, albeit based on the plans which are readily available on the internet. My main problem is sourcing suitable belt. The kits use a Gates Truflex 0130 v-belt. I've got no chance finding a supplier here in France, and, it appears, you're more likely to source rocking horse manure in the UK, too. Has anybody found a supplier in the UK? I know that there are users of the belt drive in the UK - what do they do for spares?

By the way, the plans that I've seen seem to be mostly from the USA and therefore have Imperial dimensions. Anybody know a source of metric ones?

John

P.S. Yes, I have stripped the nylon gears once already and yes, I've replaced them AND I've got a second, spare set!

JES01/04/2012 16:52:29
84 forum posts
71 photos

Try asking some of the Seig Mill suppliers in the uk about spares, or try http://www.otelo.fr who supply the seig in France (transmission-par-courroie)

Regards

John Stannard

Russell Eberhardt01/04/2012 17:02:50
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2785 forum posts
87 photos

I've seen a number of belt drive conversions using round polyurethane belting. You can buy it here http://www.mp-france.com by the metre and weld it with a hot knife. Look for COURROIE DE TOUR in their catalogue.

Russell.

John Hinkley01/04/2012 17:57:35
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1545 forum posts
484 photos

John and Russell,

Thanks for the links. I'll give them a go, although my preference is for a v-belt for simplicity.

My eldest daughter flies for Virgin Atlantic, so if all else fails, I'll have to get her to get me some! Unfortunately she's in Delhi this weekend!

John

John Hinkley01/04/2012 17:57:40
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1545 forum posts
484 photos

John and Russell,

Thanks for the links. I'll give them a go, although my preference is for a v-belt for simplicity.

My eldest daughter flies for Virgin Atlantic, so if all else fails, I'll have to get her to get me some! Unfortunately she's in Delhi this weekend!

John

Michael Cox 101/04/2012 18:09:39
555 forum posts
27 photos

Hi John,

The agent for Gates belts in the UK is Beeline Engineering (www.beelineengineering.com). I have dealt with them and they have been very helpful.

I did a belt drive conversion on my Seig X1 mill and used Gates belts, see:

http://mikesworkshop.weebly.com/mill-belt-drive-conversion.html

Mike

Peter G. Shaw01/04/2012 18:39:22
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1531 forum posts
44 photos

John,

Are you aware that Arc Euro Trade can supply metal gears which will be suitable for this machine?

Regards,

Peter G. Shaw

Clive Farrar01/04/2012 21:04:43
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125 forum posts
41 photos

I have converted mine and yes the belts are very difficult to find.

A friend on another forum got mine for me from a place in Hull.

Unfortunately that is of no use as I can not remeber who.

I'll have a bit of a dig around in my records and If I can think of anything I will post again.

It is very worth doing so good luck.

regards Clive

wotsit01/04/2012 21:09:32
188 forum posts
1 photos

John,

I have a Sieg Mill which I converted to belt drive, using the original motor - the main reason was to eliminate the risk of the plastic primary drive gear breaking (I broke two), and to reduce noise from the gear .

I found some information about making this kind of mod on an american website, but it drove directly to the main shaft, rather than the intermediate gear shaft. This also required the direction of rotation of the motor to be changed. The author claimed this gave him more than enough power. I tried this, but found it did not give me sufficent power for some purposes, but it did show that the (internal) gear reduction did not contribute a great deal of noise. The toothed pulleys and belt I used for this came from the German company Conrad, who do a fairly wide range of pulleys and belts. I was concerned about the power transmission capability, but practical experience has shown this was unfounded.

My mod was very simple, and did not require any permanent changes to the machine, which means I can restore the original configuration if necessary. The casting on top of the head which supports the motor was simply removed, and an aluminium plate supported on small spacers used instead. This plate was drilled to accept the motor, and to clear the top of the spindle. The same mounting holes were used as on the original. A small toothed pulley was bored out and fitted to the motor in place of the small primary gear, and a larger pulley fitted on the intermediate drive shaft. I selected pulleys to give me as near as possible the same ratio as the gears but still fit in the space available - there was just sufficient clearance. Some shim washers and counterboring of these pulleys were necessary to get clearances, but nothing difficult - the whole mod took less than one day to make and install. No change of motor direction is required, and the motor is retained in almost the same position as the original, and does not require offsetting to one side to allow a long belt (as I have seen since I did my mod). I also still have the slow/fast gearbox speed selection. The drive ration is not exactly as original, because there was not quite enough space to get a large enough pulley on the spindle, but is slightly higher geared - given that the mill has speed control, I still have more than enough speed range for all I have ever needed.

This has now been in steady use for about five years, and I am still on the same drive belt. (I bought two, because I was worried about it, and still have one in its packing). The machine is quite a lot quieter - I can run it for long periods without annoying myself or anyone else. ITs probably my imagination, but it aslo seems to run much more smoothly, and cuts appear to be smoother - I have't done any real testing for 'improvements' of this kind, as this was not my original concern - I can only say it is at least as good as the original configuration.

I can't remember exact prices, but if I remember correctly, the pulleys and belt cost about 20 Euros at the time (probably more now), The ally mounting plate came from my 'odds and sods' collection, as did half a dozen allen-head bolts to mount it all.

Conrad has a large website, the search facilties are better in German, but the site can be read in English - toothed belts (zahnreimen) and pulleys (zahnschieben) are at:

http://www.conrad.de/ce/de/category/SHOP_AREA_32457/Zahnriemen-Keilriemen

Conrad have an excellent mail - order service (no connection - only a very satisfied customer for more than 30 years).

I am sure these pulleys/belts could be obtained in England - maybe HPC gears in Chesterfield

There is some info on these sites:-

http://warhammer.mcc.virginia.edu/ty/7x10/vault/Mills/G8689-MiniMill/Projects-Mods/DriveBeltMod/MillBeltMod.html

http://www.mini-lathe.com/Mini_mill/Reviews/Belt_drv/belt_drv.htm

There are links on these sites to other mill belt mods (and other mods)

 

Edited By wotsit on 01/04/2012 21:16:59

John Hinkley01/04/2012 22:41:48
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1545 forum posts
484 photos

Thanks for all the replies. I've tried the links, but they all seem to point to toothed belts, which are not what I'm after. Looks like I'm going to have to bite the bullet at source in the states.

John

Michael Cox 101/04/2012 23:17:31
555 forum posts
27 photos

Hi John,

Beeline Engineering can source any Gates belt. Their website lists many non toothed belts.

Mike

John Hinkley02/04/2012 11:25:44
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1545 forum posts
484 photos

Mike,

I've emailed beeline to see if they can help. Unfortunately, the Truflex line doesn't feature on their web site. I'll wait and see what they say. Luckily, they aren't very far away from relatives in St. Albans, where we visit from time to time, so I might even be able to pick up a couple next time I'm over.

John

mick H02/04/2012 12:14:04
795 forum posts
34 photos

Interesting thread this one. Has anyone tried a similar conversion on a Warco WM14?

Ian S C02/04/2012 12:31:39
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7468 forum posts
230 photos

If you r going to use other than a V belt, or round, a poly V belt would be much better than a toothed belt. There was a number of years ago a series in ME on the convesion of a mill to poly V belt, this allowed extra speeds to be fitted in the same space as the origional V pullies. There is also a mod for Myford lathes, also giving extra speeds. Longer belt life, and quieter, smoother running. Ian S C

Russell Eberhardt02/04/2012 15:45:43
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2785 forum posts
87 photos

You can use the round polyurethane belting with V pulleys. There is a simlple conversion shown here.

This belting is available in France from the link I posted above at only 3 to 5 euro per metre depending on diameter. I have found M & P's service to be good.

Russell (also in France)

Pat02/04/2012 16:37:01
94 forum posts
1 photos

Hi John

I found a suitable Vee belt as a sewing machine spare in a shop that specialises in the repair of domestic sewing machines. I think it was from a Toshiba sewing machine - it is vee section with polturathane covering. All I did was take a bit of paper with the correct diameter circle drawn on it and a bit of card with the correct angle. The belt is very flexible and designed for small diameter driving pulley of similar diameter as used in the design by Hoss. Not sure about the exact profile as I worked from the belt and a pulley from a dead motor. The advantage of a vee belt is that it acts as a clutch of last resort but a HTD toothed belt should also be as silent.

I have not completed mine yet as I want to get the Z axis drive for CNC sorted first. I have in mind moving the motor to the control box side so that the ball screw can drive down the centerline of the rack.

Hope this helps - Pat

wotsit02/04/2012 19:48:07
188 forum posts
1 photos

Hi, John,

As you say, most of the mods use a toothed belt - I am a little surprised at your reason for using a v-belt - why do you think a toothed belt drive would be any more complicated than a V-belt?

As you are seeing in this forum, although V-belts, round belts, etc are available, they are no easier to find than toothed belts. One point I found when I did my mod was that the primary drive pulley (in my case) was fairly small, to achieve the necessary 'gear' ratio - the matching toothed belts easily fitted round this pulley. I'm sure V-belts are available for small pulleys, but I suspect they are not so easily available at low cost, like toothed belts.

John Hinkley03/04/2012 12:34:16
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1545 forum posts
484 photos

I've had an email today from Beeline. They can't supply the belt themselves, but have quoted (a fairly reasonable) just over £20 for a belt to be sent direct from the USA. Delivery is quoted at 14 to 16 weeks!! I won't be taking them up on the offer, but I think I will try one of the many sewing machine shops in the area. Thanks for the idea, Pat.

John

Ian S C04/04/2012 12:48:24
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7468 forum posts
230 photos

The main problem with toothed belts is making the toothed pullies, other pullies are easily made on the lathe. Some sizes of V belts are available as heat joined belting same as the round stuff, heat joined flat belt is also available. Ian S C

John Hinkley04/04/2012 15:31:10
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1545 forum posts
484 photos

I've today ordered a Singer sewing machine belt from a company in the UK. It's slightly longer than the Gates one, but otherwise is identical and, having played around with pulley sizes and spacing in a CAD program, it'll do nicely.

By the way, I chose to use a vee belt over a toothed one so that, in the event of a stall, the belt will tend to act as a clutch and slip, rather than the motor being stalled and risking a burn-out. Originally, of course, the nylon gears act in a sacrificial role in these circumstances.

John

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