Just Another Sign Guy
New Member
i have had multiple inquiries in the last month from people who are interested in building a cnc router themselves. so i thought this would be a good topic for those who are interested in exploring this and those who have gone through the process.
the first thing i will say is that i have encountered MANY more people who have started to build a router and failed to complete it than those who have completed the project.
my recommendation for your first build is to throw the ideas of building a 4' X 8' table out of your mind. start small. build a small router say 14" X 26" giving you a cutting area of 12" X 24" so that you can learn the fundamentals and control costs. there are many challenges that arise as you get into bigger machines not to mention the costs go up considerably.
if you are hell bent on going big your first time out...don't say you were not warned and if you do not have any experience i would recommend buying a cheap o small router off of ebay or some other source and familiarizing yourself with the general concept, they really are not complex machines and then you can reverse engineer the project.
an alternative that i am seeing many people do is to buy an older professionally built cnc router that runs on .dos or some even older than that that require manual writing of g-code or even punchcards and then replacing the motors and control systems, i have seen some very nice builds from ppl who have gone this direction. just recently i encountered an old shopbot for less than $1200 for a 4X8 machine you will be hard pressed to purchase the components for that dollar amount and then upgrade and update from there.
just some thoughts to get this topic going.
the first thing i will say is that i have encountered MANY more people who have started to build a router and failed to complete it than those who have completed the project.
my recommendation for your first build is to throw the ideas of building a 4' X 8' table out of your mind. start small. build a small router say 14" X 26" giving you a cutting area of 12" X 24" so that you can learn the fundamentals and control costs. there are many challenges that arise as you get into bigger machines not to mention the costs go up considerably.
if you are hell bent on going big your first time out...don't say you were not warned and if you do not have any experience i would recommend buying a cheap o small router off of ebay or some other source and familiarizing yourself with the general concept, they really are not complex machines and then you can reverse engineer the project.
an alternative that i am seeing many people do is to buy an older professionally built cnc router that runs on .dos or some even older than that that require manual writing of g-code or even punchcards and then replacing the motors and control systems, i have seen some very nice builds from ppl who have gone this direction. just recently i encountered an old shopbot for less than $1200 for a 4X8 machine you will be hard pressed to purchase the components for that dollar amount and then upgrade and update from there.
just some thoughts to get this topic going.