Asher Burkin

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Revision as of 02:36, 6 January 2022 by Aburkin (talk | contribs) (Maker Skills)
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MakerSpace Fabrication Technician

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Email: aburkin@tulane.edu

Major: Engineering Physics

Certificate: Mechanical Engineering

LinkedIn: in/asherburkin

Profile

Maker Skills

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Being a self taught machinist, and understanding that half the battle, at first, is understanding your machine works was eye opening. I started to connect my Milling experience of how learning in depth what you are working with to the other machines and tools in the Makerspace. I was also able to connect that with being an engineer and understanding important principles and how it is very helpful to know the story of the model that you are making fir something or someone. Taking the time to understand the fundamentals and how everything works makes the process of looking at a design or model and figuring out how how to make it, intuitive, practical and above all else doable. The experience I had of working of working with all these tools in the Makerspace has spiked my interests on how things are made and being able to figure out ways to make something quickly, affordable and practical.

Projects

CNC Mill

I have been working on creating some of the Titans of CNC pieces to develop a deep understanding of CAM. Milling has a steep learning curve. I started with watching videos on how to use CAM. I then just started to mill. I found that when I actually started milling I was learning a lot more than just going over and over my CAM and set up. To actually see the tool path cutting in real time, I was able to get a deeper understanding of how everything worked. As my hours on Tulane's CNC Mill added up, I learned that understanding how your machine works, and the limits that you can go has been an essential thing in becoming a better machinist. On this machine, I know what feeds and speeds work best for the different tools, the optimal depths of cuts, adaptive clearing methods for pockets and contours, and most importantly, how hard I can push the machine to get the best results out of it.


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These are the final versions of the first and second piece I milled from the Titans of CNC course.

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CNC MILL Repair

I identified, rewired and fixed Tulane Makerspaces' CNC Mill.


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The Rubtsov Group (Optics Lab)

This lab came to me because they needed a new part for their to hold a prism accurately. They had tried to make this part on a manual mill but were not getting the tolerances they needed. I created the CAM and milled their part. I was able to hit the tolerances needed.

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In the lab

This is a picture of the piece I made for the labs spectrometer. In the picture you can see the NeHe beam on the surface of the mirrors and on the prism that is being held by the piece I milled. The prism is not clean for alignment purposes.

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CNC Lathe And CNC Mill

The Ferris Lab (Ecology Lab)

I worked closely with one of the lab members in The Ferris Lab, Bolivar Aponte, on this project. Bolivar needed to make something to hold the spectrometry probe in a way that when taking measurements of flowers, the probe and holder would not crush the pedals. The original set up of probe and holder was a slab of aluminum sitting on top of the flower with a small hole to hold the probe. We came up with a way that would reduce the amount of surface area on top of the flowers by angling the larger holder by 45 degrees and then making a cylindrical holder for the probe so that there is only a small surface area sitting on the flower. We needed to make this cylindrical holder so that there is no light penetrating to the measurement area. the probe itself is a cylinder with a small hole at the end where light comes out to take measurements. This set up we created will not only preserve the flowers better, but also make it easier to select the sample area.

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Making of the probe holder.

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Machining all the surfaces flat relative to each other.

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Final product. We are still in revision and continuing this project to fine tune the process.

Water Jet

I worked on a project to cut this 1 inch thick, cold rolled slab of steel, into a new base to hold a vice. The entire operation took around 45 minutes. The garnet container needed to be refilled over 10 times and I was constantly checking the orientation of the the water jet cutter. In setting up the program, I had to take into account the kerf of the water as the holes and size of the base needed to run true to the design. I ran a very slow cut for this operation to ensure the the deflection of the water, as it first goes through the steel, does not curve too much through the cut.

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Water jet cut for steel vice.jpg


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Quick Solution during a job

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Casting

I modeled and 3D printed a shape with large draft angles to go through the process of forming the mold and pouring the pewter. I then 3D printed a tiki head to do another casting with the rest of the pewter I had.


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Laser Cutting

Truss Project

I made a Pratt Truss. I designed each component for the truss and then assembled the truss, connecting everything with screws, washers, and nuts.

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Pratt Truss Assembled.jpg