Showing posts with label Diacro bender. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Diacro bender. Show all posts

Thursday, November 12, 2009

One thing leads to another - Ring Roller interlude

Some friends asked me to design a gate that incorporated calligraphy in the design. I thought I would do the calligraphy inside a circle and I started working on a prototype. I usually make circles by wrapping some 1" x 1/8" bar stock around a cylinder of some kinds a piece of pipe ora paint can for small ones or a trash can for big ones. This circle was about 12" in diameter and nothing in the shop was the right diameter. I thought about cutting a piece of MDF in a circle but didn't want to cover all my machines to protect them from the sawdust.

'It's only a prototype' I thought and being lazy, I quickly made the circle using my Diacro #2 bender. This is a beautiful piece of equipment for making precise, discrete bends. I made a small bend every 1" around the circumference and while my friends liked the design, all I could see were the bends, each one a precise angle. I did not want discrete bends, I wanted a smooth circle. In short, I needed a ring roller!

My first stop was the web where I saw lots of expensive ring rollers for sale, and some cheap imports. I went to Harbor Freight prepared to buy one but when I actually saw the way it was made -- not well -- I could not bring myself to purchase it. I wound up designing and building a ring roller with enough capacity to handle up to 1 1/4" wide bar stock, 1/8" thick. Several trials, about five weekends, and I had some education in how to design and fabricate (or rather, how not to d & f). Just as important, I had a new tool and some rings.

I took pics of the design and will post them eventually - too many to put on this blog. As for the gate, I am still working on the overall design.

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Diacro tooling


Several years ago I bought a Diacro #2 Bender. This is a beautifully made machine for bending steel bar and tube. Put the piece of metal between two pins, apply some leverage, and you have a bend. The Cadillac of benders is the Hossfeld and, IMHO, the Rolls Royce is the Diacro. Of course, if I had a Hossfeld I might reverse the analogy. All of the inexpensive benders on eBay are based on the Hossfeld design because it is much easier to copy.

My Diacro came with a roller nose and no tooling. Easy enough to make some pins but the roller nose is for curves, not sharp bends. Not only do I need a standard nose, I need tons of tooling. Want to bend square or round tube? Want to make sharp 90 degree bends? Want to make spirals? All of these require tooling that, similar to mills and lathes, can easily cost more than the machine.

Over the years I have had the bender, my tooling desire has grown. Finally, with my new mill, I can make it myself. The photo shows my first project, a standard nose which is sitting on the bender. Above it, installed on the handle is the roller nose.

Doing the math, I spent a couple of thousand for a mill that I used to make a tool worth a couple of hundred. Only nine more tools to go before I am even!