MCU Founder Recalls Pushback Against Robert Downey Jr.’s Casting
May 31, 2023Servo Motors and Drives Market to Surpass USD 18,383 Million Revenue by 2030, Says P&S Intelligence
Jun 01, 2023Bizarre Room Service Requests That Will Leave You Speechless
Jan 26, 2024Balance Shafts Market Growth Forecast 2023: Unveiling Emerging Trends and Players
Aug 29, 2023Council Passes Resolution Supporting Postal Stamp Honoring Martin Luther King Confidante Once Arrested in Pasadena
Jun 25, 2023Hackathon Wire EDM Build Really Works
If you’ve ever short-circuited a car battery, you’ve seen the pitting and damage a few sparks can cause. Smart minds realised that controlled sparks could erode metal very accurately, in a process now known as electrical discharge machining. [Tanner Beard] decided to build just such a machine for a hackathon, and it works a treat.
[Tanner]'s video explains the benefits of EDM well. Spark-based machining doesn't care about the hardness of the given material, making it ideal for working with very tough steels, for example. It's also non-contact, so the motion platform doesn't have to be built to resist huge forces.
The build was done with a low budget of just $300, and uses some smart shortcuts. Instead of an expensive mains-powered DC power supply to generate the discharge, [Tanner] just uses a powerful lithium-polymer battery with his own MOSFET board to deliver the high current needed. A nifty combination of a stepper motor and O-drive motor setup feed the discharge wire at a constant rate during the machining.
Overall, it's a neat build that shows wire EDM doesn't have to break the bank. We’ve seen other similar builds before, too. Video after the break.