Guy offered me a job doing this type of work. Only issue is I've never done it. How hard are these machines to learn?
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How hard is cnc mill and lathe machine operations?
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is you are familiar with machinery in general it's not a hard concept to learn, but understand that while simple, they are VERY FUCKING DANGEROUS if you are not taking the correct safety measures
oh and stop wearing any kinds of jewelry watches live strong bracelets or anything else that can get snatched up
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As long as you can read micrometers and calipers, you'll be fine. You need to know how to read and setup a dial indicator too.
My dad has been a tool and die maker for 30 years or so. He has a manual mill and lathe at the shop that he makes everything with but a cnc would be nice !
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whoa.
I don't doubt your talent, or knowledge - but, I have a very hard time believeing that someone would hire a complete noob for that kind of scratch (even a good friend wouldn't do that).
I, personally, wouldn't take that kind of responsibility as an employee. There are cutters that are 1000$ a piece, one decimal point off, one extra 0, or a + or - in the wrong spot and you'll plow that cutter through the part, table or fixture at 100-1000IPM...then you're out a table, part, cutter and the machine is out of tram - and in some cases, you have to hire a factory trained rep to come recalibrate the machine.
If you don't have a decent understanding of the cartesian coordinate system, fractions, decimals, G codes and M codes, I would respectfully bow out.
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Originally posted by JFurst View PostRetail management
on the other hand you could pick up on it quickly and love it
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Originally posted by grove rat View Postif you have never worked directly with machinery/using your hands with tools, i'd consider turbostang's idea of respectfully declining. you will be on a learning curve and if your employer thinks that curve is taking too long they can simply fire you and that is that
on the other hand you could pick up on it quickly and love it
Even then, if they are clean, you have to know tool setup (after they've handed you a program), work offsets etc... and THAT is where you can screw some shit up.
If you are leaving a secure job for this one, I'd think about it - I just don't know about someone hiring a green operator who has little experience...
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I had to deal with offsets and a dumbass boss that didn't want to listen when I was running a CNC CV axle grinding machine. I told him that each axle was different and I needed to measure so I didn't eat $100 bits up on every one I ground. He swore that if they measured the same from one point to the other then they couldn't be off. Well low and behold, the curve for the axle was always different and it took about $1000 worth of bits for him to listen to me. I wouldn't even want to think about programming one from scratch!
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