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Thread: CNC mist coolant system - videos

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    Jon
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    CNC mist coolant system - videos

    CNC mist system. By routercnc.

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    Supporting Member Frank S's Avatar
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    OK I only scanned through his 2 hours of videos in about 5 minutes or less so I may have missed something important, but I doubt it
    His system is entirely too complex.
    Bridgeport mills have had a simple coolant mister for decades which is little more than a reservoir a nipple to connect an air supply mounted in a block of aluminum with a needle valve to control the siphon of the coolant a hose and an adjustable nozzle They are in expensive and reliable
    CNC mist coolant system - videos-r-3-.jpg

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    Supporting Member tonyfoale's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Frank S View Post
    OK I only scanned through his 2 hours of videos in about 5 minutes or less so I may have missed something important, but I doubt it
    His system is entirely too complex.
    I used the same watching technique and reached the same conclusion.

    Quote Originally Posted by Frank S View Post
    Bridgeport mills have had a simple coolant mister for decades which is little more than a reservoir a nipple to connect an air supply mounted in a block of aluminum with a needle valve to control the siphon of the coolant a hose and an adjustable nozzle They are in expensive and reliable
    I had a Koolmist system which seems as if it was like the Bridgeport system that you mention but I was never really happy with it. I was forever having to adjust it. A year or so back I made a new block with rearranged passages and I replaced the coolant tank with a filter housing similar to the one in the video, which allowed for the coolant to be pressure balanced to the air flow. The system works much better now. It is no more complicated than the original, just different. The block was replaced with another and the coolant tank was replaced with the filter housing. None of the complication of the video.

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    Supporting Member Frank S's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by tonyfoale View Post
    I used the same watching technique and reached the same conclusion.



    I had a Koolmist system which seems as if it was like the Bridgeport system that you mention but I was never really happy with it. I was forever having to adjust it. A year or so back I made a new block with rearranged passages and I replaced the coolant tank with a filter housing similar to the one in the video, which allowed for the coolant to be pressure balanced to the air flow. The system works much better now. It is no more complicated than the original, just different. The block was replaced with another and the coolant tank was replaced with the filter housing. None of the complication of the video.
    When I had my Bridgeport, I usually ran Chevron soluble oil B at a 10 to 15 to 1 ratio coolant, and I always seemed to neglect cleaning out my tank, frequently the mix might stay in the tank for weeks maybe longer if I wasn't doing any milling, sometimes it would be left in the tank so long I would even have to add a tablespoon of bleach to get rid of the Monday morning stink. I don't remember having to fiddle with adjusting it all that much, as I would normally just open the valve and nozzle pretty wide
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    Quote Originally Posted by Frank S View Post
    When I had my Bridgeport, I usually ran Chevron soluble oil B at a 10 to 15 to 1 ratio coolant, and I always seemed to neglect cleaning out my tank, frequently the mix might stay in the tank for weeks maybe longer if I wasn't doing any milling, sometimes it would be left in the tank so long I would even have to add a tablespoon of bleach to get rid of the Monday morning stink. I don't remember having to fiddle with adjusting it all that much, as I would normally just open the valve and nozzle pretty wide
    Frank, I've not watched the video at all, but there is a difference between mist and flood cooling. Mist cooling is supposed to do the job without as much coolant going everywhere. I think that's it's major pro, anyway. Flood is used for chip removal as well as cooling. All I know about it is what I've learned watching videos. The coolant I bought when I got my first lathe is still sealed in the bottle, as I've not needed it. Most of my machining experience is in a really long (7+ years) class, where none of the manual machines used coolant of any kind, while all the CNC machines had flood cooling, and conveyors to carry the chips away with the coolant. And I never used any of the CNC machines. I've been following this stuff because I expect that one day I might need to know about it...

    Today is not really that day, either, but I think a potential problem with mist cooling would be inhalation of the mist. Not sure the chemicals they use are good in the lungs. I'm sure that there is some mist from flood cooling, too, but since I've not seen it IRL, I'd be interested in hearing what you have to say about it. I've been setting up my machines so they have drip trays under them, with the intent to use flood cooling. My little Atlas MF horizontal mill came with a pump installed, and drain hole in the table, but I got it in a box and 57 baggies, so never saw it set up or operating.

    Bill

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    Supporting Member Frank S's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by WmRMeyers View Post
    Frank, there is a difference between mist and flood cooling. Mist cooling is supposed to do the job without as much coolant going everywhere. I think that's it's major pro, anyway. Flood is used for chip removal as well as cooling.
    Bill
    Bill I bought my first lathe about 55 years ago, never ran any CNC for machining but use coolant in one form or another for most operations whether turning, milling or sawing and probably would for grinding if I had a surface or Blanchard grinder. When I use mist, you can see a fog in the air and it is only by the shielding containments, I set up that prevents there being a mess all over the place. when flood cooling if it were possible, I would use emersion cooling instead for some operations. I don't concern myself with breathing airborne partials from the mist I just step aside and view the operation from a slight distance up wind if possible providing I have as fan going Heck I've been welding and or smoking for 60 years so a little more crap in my lungs is probably not going to make much difference at this stage in life anyway
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    Quote Originally Posted by Frank S View Post
    Bill I bought my first lathe about 55 years ago, never ran any CNC for machining but use coolant in one form or another for most operations whether turning, milling or sawing and probably would for grinding if I had a surface or Blanchard grinder. When I use mist, you can see a fog in the air and it is only by the shielding containments, I set up that prevents there being a mess all over the place. when flood cooling if it were possible, I would use emersion cooling instead for some operations. I don't concern myself with breathing airborne partials from the mist I just step aside and view the operation from a slight distance up wind if possible providing I have as fan going Heck I've been welding and or smoking for 60 years so a little more crap in my lungs is probably not going to make much difference at this stage in life anyway
    The Koolmist did as its name suggests. It created a mist which was messy and not good for breathing. There is another system whose name I forget but it is something like "No-mist" or "Zero-mist" which was the inspiration for my modifications. I did not copy the no-mist system but it gave me the idea. The coolant does not mist, it tends to stay as liquid drops. It works at least as well as the mist but uses less coolant because you are not spraying a sizeable portion around the room. I was so pleased with the modifications to the Koolmist that I made one from scratch for the lathe but I used a smaller filter housing. That was adequate because it is in an easy to fill location whereas the mill one is not so easy.

    I just did a search the other system that I mentioned is called "FogBuster".

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    Supporting Member Frank S's Avatar
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    The Chevron B seems to atomize well enough, for me at least but I don't pay much attention to the mess it causes but after a couple days' worth of milling it is time to break out a spray bottle of dish soap or something like simple green and give your machine a real good wash down and rinse otherwise the stuff will build up and before long you won't even be able to tell what color it is. I hate milling almost as much as having to do a blind 2" 18TPI left hand thread deep inside of a counter bore
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    Quote Originally Posted by Frank S View Post
    I hate milling almost as much as having to do a blind 2" 18TPI left hand thread deep inside of a counter bore
    Such a thread would not generate any fear with my lathe conversion Ball screw and electronic lathe conversion

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    Quote Originally Posted by Frank S View Post
    Bill I bought my first lathe about 55 years ago, never ran any CNC for machining but use coolant in one form or another for most operations whether turning, milling or sawing and probably would for grinding if I had a surface or Blanchard grinder. When I use mist, you can see a fog in the air and it is only by the shielding containments, I set up that prevents there being a mess all over the place. when flood cooling if it were possible, I would use emersion cooling instead for some operations. I don't concern myself with breathing airborne partials from the mist I just step aside and view the operation from a slight distance up wind if possible providing I have as fan going Heck I've been welding and or smoking for 60 years so a little more crap in my lungs is probably not going to make much difference at this stage in life anyway
    You're just tougher than I am! I developed asthma in 1993, while I was living in Munchweiler, Germany. They don't do air conditioning there, and we had a linden (aka Basswood) tree growing outside the apartment. Woke up one night in the wee hours, thought I was having a heart attack. Wife was too pregnant to drive the car so I had to drive myself to the ER on base a Sembach AS. Hooked me up to a nebulizer, and hit me with albuterol. All good. Started carrying an albuterol inhaler... And stopped taking clean air for granted. I did smoke for a short while as a teen. Found out I could get 5 paperback books for what my 3 packs a day of Marlboro's cost, and quit the same day. Maybe three months smoking. I've had arthritis since I was 17, bad knees since I was 19, bad back since 32. Family joke is that if we were horses, we'd have gone to the glue factory.

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