My CNC's dust shoe broke several times, and now that it's more epoxy than dust shoe, I decided I'd make a new one. Because I can!

This was an interesting test of TPU for brush bristles. I ended up having to take scissors to them (they were too long), but I'm pretty happy how that turned out. Suction is decent too, which is nice.

#3DPrinting #FDM #CNCMachining

@3dprinting

@koz how happy are you with that style of entry-level CNC mill? I’ve been considering getting one of these to work with plastic and aluminium, but I have a suspicion that’s going to end up being just yet another project instead of a tool for me 😅

@jaseg This one is a bit more premium, as it's an all-aluminium construction. Given that I work _primarily_ with aluminium, I can speak for that, but not plastics.

Essentially, it's ~fine~, but there are some caveats:

- Spindles are all garbage. Make sure you switch to a trim router (or a VFD if you're feeling spendy) ASAP. I haven't switched only because this design makes it needlessly hard.
- 1-flute DLC-coated carbide endmills are a critical investment.

(continued)

@jaseg - CAM will take you the longest to learn. I use FreeCAD's CAM package, but even that requires no small degree of practice and learning.
- Heck, in general, there is a truckload to learn, and it's never explained in any one place. Think FDM but _squared_.
- Don't expect to cut aluminium fast with small endmills. If you can, design parts for 6mm thicc bois, as they'll be able to chomp material _way_ quicker. That's the biggest that'll fit an ER-11, which most of these use.

(continued)

@jaseg - Feeds and speeds are difficult, because most calculators and such are designed for much more rigid machines. Shameless plug: https://cnc-doctor.retro-freedom.nz/
- GET A DUST SHOE. NO SERIOUSLY. GET. A. DUST. SHOE.
CNC Doctor: calculate feeds and speeds

A small calculator to help you estimate maximum CNC feedrate.

@jaseg For what it's worth, the only upgrades I did were a holder for the zeroing helper, a bracket to relocate the estop button to the front, and this dust shoe. Given how much stuff I've had to replace and add to my printers over the years, I'd say it's actually not that bad.