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Why Laser Cut MDF?

A project log for Prototype SCARA

A "demo" direct drive SCARA made out of MDF. The idea is to test my SCARA Controller.

agpcooperagp.cooper 02/23/2019 at 06:580 Comments

Material Mechanical Properties

Aluminium

I often start a mechanical design with Aluminum (steel is too hard for my China CNC machine to cut (unless I am desperate). Aluminium is easy to cut if you use the right cutter (i.e. single flute). Aluminium angle is light and stiff, but cutting both sides of the angle accurately is an unresolved problem. Aluminium flat bar is a good compromise. It just becomes a design issue.

Aluminium Mechanical Properties

Alloy                          6061-T1

Thickness                    3 mm

Young's Modulus     69 GPa

Ultimate Strength    210 MPa

Yield Strength          110 MPa

Working Stress         80 MPa

Perspex (Acrylic)

The stuff looks good and the "good" stuff lasts. I find most of the stuff I get stress cracks after a few months. So although I am keen to use it, I dare not as I don't know if I have the "good" stuff.

Acrylic Mechanical Properties

Thickness                    3 mm

Young's Modulus     3.2 GPa

Yield Strength          70 MPa

Working Stress         45 MPa

MDF (that cheap fibrewood board!)

I use an online laser cutting service and the thickest they offer is 6mm.

MDF Mechanical Properties

Thickness                    6 mm

Young's Modulus     4.0 GPa

Bending Strength      18 MPa

Working Stress          12 MPa

So MDF is pretty weak but it is thicker. So why use it?

Stress and Deflection

There are lots of failure modes and serviceability requiements that real mechanical design needs to consider, but for toys only "stress" and "deflection" are important.

For a canterlever flat bar (beam) of length (L), width (b), thickness (h) and a point load of (F):

Young's Modulus     E

Moment of Inertia    I=b*h^3/12   (m^4) 

Section Modulus     Z=b*h^2/6   (m^3)

Moment                   M=L*F           (Nm)

Stress                       S=M/Z          (Pa)

Deflection                d=F*L^3/I/E/3

So what does all this mean?

From a serviceability point of view, deflection is important.

A "floppy" CNC machine is not much use.

We can either use very stiff (high Young's Modulus (E)) materials or use thicker materials.

The deflection equation tells us that if the material is twice as thick (6 mm versus 3 mm) then the deflection will be 1/8. So although Aluminium is 17 times stiffer than MDF,  as the MDF is twice as thick the deflection will only be twice that of Aluminium!

One of the advantages of MDF is that you only need to glue two pieces together (for 12 mm thickness) and it will be much stiffer than Aluminium and just stiffer than 3 mm steel (E=210 GPa).

The other reason to use MDF is that so long as it does not get wet it is dimensionally stable.

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Although I considered doubling up the thickness of the first arm of the SCARA, I have "another trick up my sleeve", I can epoxy fibreglass on both sides of the MDF to increase both strength and stiffness.

AlanX

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