The Smell of Molten Projects in the Morning

Ed Nisley's Blog: Shop notes, electronics, firmware, machinery, 3D printing, laser cuttery, and curiosities. Contents: 100% human thinking, 0% AI slop.

The New Hotness

  • Acrylic Coasters: Edge Finishing, Round 1

    Assembling acrylic pieces inside an epoxy-filled frame produces nice results:

    Cut Acrylic Coaster - bottom
    Cut Acrylic Coaster – bottom

    The gotcha: epoxy oozes from between the layers to form a slobbery edge.

    I tried introducing a similar coaster to Mr Disk Sander with reasonable results:

    Coaster Epoxy Rim - disk sanded rim
    Coaster Epoxy Rim – disk sanded rim

    The coaster on the bottom has its original generous epoxy slobber around the acrylic disks.

    Assembling the layers inside a mold seems fraught with messiness, particularly if I eventually want to get it out of the mold.

    Using a finer abrasive disk would certainly help, but the whole process requires intense concentration and is utterly unforgiving of mistakes.

    I figured I could attach the coaster to a lathe fixture and turn the rim, so I made a fixture from scrap acrylic:

    Coaster Epoxy Rim - cutting fixture plate
    Coaster Epoxy Rim – cutting fixture plate

    The lathe chuck inside jaws fit inside the hole and I set up to turn the OD to a nice even diameter:

    Coaster Epoxy Rim - turning fixture rim
    Coaster Epoxy Rim – turning fixture rim

    The fixture sat flush against the middle step of the jaws with plenty of clearance from the outer step, so I could turn the OD without whacking the carbide insert.

    I planned to grab the OD and turn the ID to a (reasonably) concentric finish, but the outer jaws have an absolute diameter limit a few millimeters less than the 4 inch = 101.4 mm coaster OD.

    After some increasingly desperate attempts, I concluded that, lacking a 4-jaw lathe chuck, there was no way to mount the coaster on the fixture and have it sit it even approximately centered on the spindle axis.

    I do, however, have a 4-jaw chuck for the Sherline mill, normally used with the rotary table.

    Next up: Round 2.