Dave my dust collector is different but the basics if sound deadening is the same. They sell lots of options but they would blow my budget out of the water. I have read that many layer like 6 works very well each layer needs to have some air space between them 1/8 to 1/4” seems to be fine. Just not smushed together. Layers of blankets or towels were used in the testing. They also say that if you are going to have a hard surface in your sound barrier it should be towards the sound souce( not sure about this part til I test it.
The biggest advice I can give you is to download a sound meter app so you can work from a concrete reference point. You will not soundproof this equipment but reduce the sound escaping that work area.
That enough gas bagging
Dave out
The next think I was going to try was gluing 2 pieces of 5/8 inch plaster board together and build an enclosure out of that. I found two references for that on YouTube but I too don’t want to stick money into something that possibly won’t work.
Yes Dave that is a standard part of a sound reduction system. Usually followed by staggered studs with insulation and an off set of the two layers of 5/8” drywall. https://www.lowes.com/pd/2-in-W-x-144-in-L-x-0-5-in-D-RC1-Pro-Galvanized-Steel-Stud/50433096
Let me know what you finally come up with. Thank you for responding
This is what I downloaded a while ago - tried for an entire day to get it into Fusion without any luck. I tried to upload to the Forums but it’s too big. If the link doesn’t work let me know.
-Tom
I am late to the table but I took the Sketchup file that cyberreefguru had link to and converted to Fusion360 format .f3d, Its basically a STL file once you open in Fusion360 not a true solid.
Tim
I am waiting to on the 80 mm spindle mount to order but in the mean time I wanted to work on a stand/enclosure design. As such I needed a model…which lead me here.
I wanted to thank everyone on the forum for all the helpful posts - the sketchup model was a big help in getting started but it had some errors like 1" shafts instead of 35 mm. @cyberreefguru I initially downloaded your spoilboard files to use and have added them as a base here. @mkngjoy Your unboxing post helped with all the pictures and measurements.
I used the data I could find and rebuilt in it native Fusion 360 with joints that allow motion. There are certainly lot of errors in the details so I would not use this for any super high accuracy work. For example, I modeled the entire z axis using pictures from the manual as canvases. Note: I do not have a Onefinity yet so verify all dimensions before using them. Seriously - there are a lot of SWAGs. If you notice anything horrible, let me know. I think there is a small issue in the overall heights but I could not find enough data to help me get that perfect.
I have included spoilboard files from cyberreefguru and dragchain files from MuddyFeet Designs ( Drag Chain Cable Raceway for Onefinity CNC by muddyfeet - Thingiverse ) The stl files for the dragchain mounts do not export into the step file but are in the F360 file.
Looks amazing - I will definitely download and validate the dimensions as soon as I can.
Does anyone happen to have one of the journeyman specifically with the altered mounts
What do you mean altered mounts?
Just to follow up a Journeyman version is now out there. It is more accurate than the woodworker file since I actually have this one on hand. I did not go back and update the parts that are used on both but overall it was some minor changes and better detail in the z axis assembly. Just pull down both models and combine as needed.
any chance you’ve modeled the qcw by chance?
No, I am very slowly building my own frame.