CMD10 / X1 – stopping gears breaking

CMD10 / X1 – stopping gears breaking

Home Forums Hints And Tips for model engineers CMD10 / X1 – stopping gears breaking

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  • #301912
    Iain Downs
    Participant
      @iaindowns78295

      Regular readers may know that I've not always got on well with my little mill.

      In particular I seemed to keep stripping the gears – to the point where I was ordering them in quantities (admittedly small quantities, but..).

      The general concensus (and certainly mine) was that this was a combination of brutality and general cackhandedness.

      But it wasn't entirely me! I noticed quite early on that the gears were wearing unevenly, particularly on the low range gear. When I measured new gears I found them to be around 0.25 mm out of round. That's both the ones from Clarke and the ones from ARC. Oh – and before I put them in the mill not after.

      But that's not the main thing. I always thought they weren't meshing well but it's pretty hard to prove that given that they assembly is unsupported when the top plate is taken off for examination.

      One day, though I thought I'd find out why there was a slot in the support for the motor box. there are a couple of all key bolts under the motor box. You can loosen these off and twist the motor box. This appears to have the effect of bringing the gears closer or further into mesh.

      This terrible photo is the underneath of the motor box showing the bolts

      mill head gear fitting.jpg

      And this slightly better one shows what it looks inside

      mill head gear fitting 2.jpg

      I tightened this up as an experiment and thought I would see how it went. If it went well, then I would take a photo next time the gears broke and report it as a useful adjustment.

      That was about 6 months ago. The gears still haven't broken and I've done really quite a lot of milling!

      In fact, what goes is either the overload trip or the key pops out of the keyway on the motor.

      Of course this isn't definitive proof, but if you have a micro mill which goes through gears, this might be well worth a try!

      Iain

      #30620
      Iain Downs
      Participant
        @iaindowns78295
        #302044
        Chris Evans 6
        Participant
          @chrisevans6

          I do not have one of these mills, but this sort of knowledge passed around is what makes this forum so interesting.

          #302049
          John Gardener
          Participant
            @johngardener91897

            I have a CMD10 and luckily, when, in my ham fisted, inexperienced, untrained hands, I ask it to do more than it was designed to do, it blows overload fuses.

            Thankfully, as time progresses, the time gap between these 'incidents' gets longer.

            I still order another sack of fuses whenever I get down to my last five.

            Better than stripping gears I suppose?

            #302107
            Iain Downs
            Participant
              @iaindowns78295

              It may be how well it's set up in the factory.

              I've gone through 3 or 4 fuses in 2 years. but more gears until recently.

              Iain

              #302426
              mark costello 1
              Participant
                @markcostello1

                One way to set clearance on gears is to run a thin strip of paper through the gears, if it tears it's too tight.

                #302445
                Ian Skeldon 2
                Participant
                  @ianskeldon2

                  Well sorted out mate, hopefully many happy hours of milling now.

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