Hi all! New to this board with quite a specific question.
I am working primarily with CNC machine to make my products. I wish to work with a new material that is not available in sheets nearly thin enough that I need. It is incredibly expensive so lots of wastage from thicknessing is out of the question.
I came up with an idea to purchase blocks for example 100x100x40mm to cut into slices of 100mm x 40mm x (varying 2-8)mm to achieve thin sheets.
I haven't tried it yet but this is not really very good to do on the CNC. You lose the thickness of the cutter with each pass, and we are talking a LOT of money with this material. I found a source for a cutter that would be able to reach half the depth at 1.5mm width. That's still a lot of $$$ lost in 1.5mm extra each slice, and it would be an incredibly slow process of careful shallow passes, not to mention I would need to do two-sided machining to achieve the full depth. The cutters cost ~$50 and I can see myself breaking plenty, especially on a not-so professional slightly wobbly machine.
Anyway, enough of that. Seems the most logical plan is to saw. I do have a cheap scrollsaw which I was using to cut shapes freehand from similar plastics which are available in the sheet thicknesses I need. I've worked up to 8mm on these plastics but with the flimsy blades etc I can tell this 40mm job would be impossible. Of course, a scroll saw is no tool to use when I want to achieve a flat surface.
So - we are looking at circular table saws and band saws with a fence I guess. I should say I really know nothing about this stuff. The material is 40mm thick Ketron PEEK HPV. An incredibly hard plastic, though for perspective it is plenty softer than most metals I think.
Would most saws be able to handle this? What kind of blades am I looking at? Is it worth contacting local lumber yards regarding this as a service? If I'm going to buy something myself, how good and expensive does it need to be?
Thanks very much for any advice you can give! I did manage to hack of a slice of this stuff on my CNC today with an absolute bodge job and 3mm wastage - It's fantastic material and I can't wait to use it - the CNC is not an option unless I get that cutter and it will take hours to do even if I don't break it.
I am working primarily with CNC machine to make my products. I wish to work with a new material that is not available in sheets nearly thin enough that I need. It is incredibly expensive so lots of wastage from thicknessing is out of the question.
I came up with an idea to purchase blocks for example 100x100x40mm to cut into slices of 100mm x 40mm x (varying 2-8)mm to achieve thin sheets.
I haven't tried it yet but this is not really very good to do on the CNC. You lose the thickness of the cutter with each pass, and we are talking a LOT of money with this material. I found a source for a cutter that would be able to reach half the depth at 1.5mm width. That's still a lot of $$$ lost in 1.5mm extra each slice, and it would be an incredibly slow process of careful shallow passes, not to mention I would need to do two-sided machining to achieve the full depth. The cutters cost ~$50 and I can see myself breaking plenty, especially on a not-so professional slightly wobbly machine.
Anyway, enough of that. Seems the most logical plan is to saw. I do have a cheap scrollsaw which I was using to cut shapes freehand from similar plastics which are available in the sheet thicknesses I need. I've worked up to 8mm on these plastics but with the flimsy blades etc I can tell this 40mm job would be impossible. Of course, a scroll saw is no tool to use when I want to achieve a flat surface.
So - we are looking at circular table saws and band saws with a fence I guess. I should say I really know nothing about this stuff. The material is 40mm thick Ketron PEEK HPV. An incredibly hard plastic, though for perspective it is plenty softer than most metals I think.
Would most saws be able to handle this? What kind of blades am I looking at? Is it worth contacting local lumber yards regarding this as a service? If I'm going to buy something myself, how good and expensive does it need to be?
Thanks very much for any advice you can give! I did manage to hack of a slice of this stuff on my CNC today with an absolute bodge job and 3mm wastage - It's fantastic material and I can't wait to use it - the CNC is not an option unless I get that cutter and it will take hours to do even if I don't break it.