3d_danny
12-16-2005, 09:36 AM
I know there has been discussions about warming up Columbo spindles but now that winter is here ( northern hemisphere at least) and the temperature in the shop is rather cold(no heat), keeping the spindle warm is becoming time-consuming.
I typically leave the computer, control box, and Bot powered-up all day. Setup between jobs can be as little as 15 minutes. Since the VFD is powered, the spindle fan is running and within 10-15 minutes the spindle is stone cold again. Bringing it back up to operating temp can be as long as an additional 15-20 minutes, running at no load. My jobs typically run from 1-2 hours so say if I run 8 jobs a day, it adds an additional 2 hours to the BOT time.
I take a rag and cover the spindle fan inlet between jobs (if I happen to be standing there when the job completes) but if I am not there, it cools right back down.
I would be curious to know how this is handled in other shops. Time is precious and lost time is lost money....
On a side note, I happened to be in a Shopbot powered shop with a 5 HP Columbo a couple of weeks ago and they never warm up the spindle.
Dan...
I typically leave the computer, control box, and Bot powered-up all day. Setup between jobs can be as little as 15 minutes. Since the VFD is powered, the spindle fan is running and within 10-15 minutes the spindle is stone cold again. Bringing it back up to operating temp can be as long as an additional 15-20 minutes, running at no load. My jobs typically run from 1-2 hours so say if I run 8 jobs a day, it adds an additional 2 hours to the BOT time.
I take a rag and cover the spindle fan inlet between jobs (if I happen to be standing there when the job completes) but if I am not there, it cools right back down.
I would be curious to know how this is handled in other shops. Time is precious and lost time is lost money....
On a side note, I happened to be in a Shopbot powered shop with a 5 HP Columbo a couple of weeks ago and they never warm up the spindle.
Dan...