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Lab talk, the good, the bad, and the ugly
Dental-CAD
zircon chipping - amann girrbach milling machine and 3shape software.
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<blockquote data-quote="Sevan P" data-source="post: 99897" data-attributes="member: 7766"><p>I say the tools as well.</p><p></p><p>Here is a tip, I did this on our Roland and Imes 340i</p><p></p><p>Make a chart in word or excel. Lets say the machine has 5 tools, you would make 5 rows all the way the length of the paper, tool1, tool2, tool3, tool4, tool5. Now stick that to the front of the machine where you load the pucks so every time you cut you mark the amount cut on those tool on the chart. Reason I do this is to keep track of how many units I have cut, per day, how many units I can get on a set of burs, and it lets you know a ballpark figure of when your probably start to see chipping. It saved my rear a few time when I was near the end of the burs life and had to cut a long span bridge, I counted the number of units then decided to swap a new set in then cut the big bridge. </p><p></p><p>I was getting 150-180 on my 1mm Tilladium tools for the roland and about 120-150 on the 2mm NON coated that is. On the 340i I got as high as 1800 on the 2.5mm coated and 900 on the 1mm before it broke, im sure the 1mm would go higher if it didn't break.</p><p></p><p>Also out of the 1mm and 2mm the 2mm is going to be the one that starts to chip first cause you will notice that the 2mm chips the extra left over for the 1mm to clean up. We used to change out both burs when chipping occured now I change out the roughing bur is the first one I change out then the finishing tool. That charts helps out big time with that cause now you can see how many cuts you have and roughly how many more you can go.</p><p></p><p>But If you do not have separate burs for separate material start of doing so first. </p><p></p><p>Also do you have different tool to cut ZR, PMMA wax and so on? Or do you cut everything on one set of burs? Reason I ask is I was cutting everything on one set and noticed that I was changing burs really fast, once I separated pmma and wax from ZR I noticed I was changing the burs WAY less often. How many tool does the machine have?</p><p></p><p>Here is a image of the chart I have also made a download link you can download the word chart and modify it if needed. I mark 10 marks in each box for each tool, llll then the fifth one crosses the four from corner to corner making that five, much easier to count in the end.</p><p></p><p>[ATTACH=full]12737[/ATTACH]</p><p></p><p>Download link <a href="http://www.shotsintime.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/Tool-Chart.docx" target="_blank">Tool Chat</a></p><p></p><p>Sevan</p><p>[ATTACH=full]12737[/ATTACH]</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Sevan P, post: 99897, member: 7766"] I say the tools as well. Here is a tip, I did this on our Roland and Imes 340i Make a chart in word or excel. Lets say the machine has 5 tools, you would make 5 rows all the way the length of the paper, tool1, tool2, tool3, tool4, tool5. Now stick that to the front of the machine where you load the pucks so every time you cut you mark the amount cut on those tool on the chart. Reason I do this is to keep track of how many units I have cut, per day, how many units I can get on a set of burs, and it lets you know a ballpark figure of when your probably start to see chipping. It saved my rear a few time when I was near the end of the burs life and had to cut a long span bridge, I counted the number of units then decided to swap a new set in then cut the big bridge. I was getting 150-180 on my 1mm Tilladium tools for the roland and about 120-150 on the 2mm NON coated that is. On the 340i I got as high as 1800 on the 2.5mm coated and 900 on the 1mm before it broke, im sure the 1mm would go higher if it didn't break. Also out of the 1mm and 2mm the 2mm is going to be the one that starts to chip first cause you will notice that the 2mm chips the extra left over for the 1mm to clean up. We used to change out both burs when chipping occured now I change out the roughing bur is the first one I change out then the finishing tool. That charts helps out big time with that cause now you can see how many cuts you have and roughly how many more you can go. But If you do not have separate burs for separate material start of doing so first. Also do you have different tool to cut ZR, PMMA wax and so on? Or do you cut everything on one set of burs? Reason I ask is I was cutting everything on one set and noticed that I was changing burs really fast, once I separated pmma and wax from ZR I noticed I was changing the burs WAY less often. How many tool does the machine have? Here is a image of the chart I have also made a download link you can download the word chart and modify it if needed. I mark 10 marks in each box for each tool, llll then the fifth one crosses the four from corner to corner making that five, much easier to count in the end. [attach=full]12737[/attach] Download link [url=www.shotsintime.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/Tool-Chart.docx]Tool Chat[/url] Sevan [ATTACH=full]12737[/ATTACH] [/QUOTE]
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Lab talk, the good, the bad, and the ugly
Dental-CAD
zircon chipping - amann girrbach milling machine and 3shape software.
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