digiex-chris
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- Dec 6, 2010
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I don't have an edge finder, and didn't want to wait to get one to start my project. I discovered this a while ago when I was using a Taig, and it worked well today.
Take some thin uniform paper (thermal receipt paper works well), and place it between the jaws of your milling vise to electrically insulate your workpiece from the vise. It doesn't seem to affect accuracy that I can see, and seems to slightly increase holding friction. Place your multimeter into continuity beeping mode (so it will beep when you touch the probes together). Check that you've got continuity from wherever you're clamping the one probe to your tool (put one probe on the tool, the other where you're planning on clamping the probe). Replace your cutter with a dowel of a known diameter.
Now you can place one probe on the workpiece, and one probe wherever on the machine (where you'd tested before), and feed in the dowel till it beeps. Back it off, and feed it in in smaller and smaller increments, soon you'll find the point where your dials will show 1 division away it won't beep, and if you feed it in 1 division, it will beep. You've found the edge within the accuracy of your dial. I suspect you can get as accurate as you want, just make sure you keep any metal dust or shavings off of the dowel and the part or it'll get continuity through that.
I also use the same technique when I'm switching between a roughing tool and a finishing tool on my lathe, by wrapping the finishing tool bit in paper. I use a thin shim to keep the clamp bolts from breaking through the paper.
Take some thin uniform paper (thermal receipt paper works well), and place it between the jaws of your milling vise to electrically insulate your workpiece from the vise. It doesn't seem to affect accuracy that I can see, and seems to slightly increase holding friction. Place your multimeter into continuity beeping mode (so it will beep when you touch the probes together). Check that you've got continuity from wherever you're clamping the one probe to your tool (put one probe on the tool, the other where you're planning on clamping the probe). Replace your cutter with a dowel of a known diameter.
Now you can place one probe on the workpiece, and one probe wherever on the machine (where you'd tested before), and feed in the dowel till it beeps. Back it off, and feed it in in smaller and smaller increments, soon you'll find the point where your dials will show 1 division away it won't beep, and if you feed it in 1 division, it will beep. You've found the edge within the accuracy of your dial. I suspect you can get as accurate as you want, just make sure you keep any metal dust or shavings off of the dowel and the part or it'll get continuity through that.
I also use the same technique when I'm switching between a roughing tool and a finishing tool on my lathe, by wrapping the finishing tool bit in paper. I use a thin shim to keep the clamp bolts from breaking through the paper.