Quote:
"What I'd love to see, and I don't understand why machine tool manufacturers don't do it, is to have a 'desktop' version of my CNC machines. Many of them run on windows, so why can't I have the same code on my PC so I can play with a virtual version and not tie up a shop floor machine just to try things out?"
knobhead,
I was thinking that was a program that will run on a PC for Mazatrol programing. I used to work at a place that had a dozen Masaks and they used to program them in the office, not at the machine, using some kind of software that wrote in the Mazak Mazatrol language.
I currently have my own shop with 2 Milltronics cnc's that we program 100% with Surfcam software. Much easier and faster than standing at the machine. I've also used Mastercam in the past, both are excellent programs. Ten years ago I was wasting hours imputing code at the machine before I saw the light and purchased my Surfcam. Now I can write 1,000 lines of code with a click of the mouse while the machine is doing what it was designed to do, cut metal. Mazatrol was nice when I used it 10 years ago but was limited like you said, and totally worthless for molds. A properly set up CAM program is 100 times more efficient.
With the efficiency of today CAM programs I wonder if all that is needed in a controller is the ability to read imported files and forget the conversational stuff.
Most controllers today a very fast, much faster than machines can cut safely. The biggest stumbling block seems to be the spindle speeds of the average machining center. What's the point in having a machine that can accurately cut full 3D at 300 inches per minute if the spindle tops out at 8,000 rpm? It would be nice if they would, but not very practical, offer two spindles for each machine. One for heavy machining and another for high speed applications. I've seen auxiliary spindles that you can buy that are about the size of a tool holder that run on air that would work but I'm not sure about the durability if these.