Thanks for input. What laser do you have? I don’t understand 2D vs 2.5D…would he also consider a laser?
Mine will cut 3/4" softwoods and c. 10mm hardwoods
you have the disadvantage of a charred edge (which can be sanded back), but you have far more accuracy than with a CNC
you are also limited to 2D whereas a CNC can typically do 2.5D
Thanks for input. What laser do you have? I don’t understand 2D vs 2.5D…
Thanks AkirkSome burning yes but you can go slower (lower power and more passes) to reduce burning but it takes longer… also depends on the wood eg maple burns more than eg walnut and shows up more
Kerf is I think about 0.05mm from memory
This is not a simple question.@Ollie78 - is there a good intro level cnc / brand?
This is not a bad way to go I guess.Fair points - Within the laser world and the 3D printing world there are no brands who do good reliable entry machines where there is a track record of reliability and they are easy to set up and use…
Have bought an entry Chinese clone 3040 and will play with it but with the intention of then buying something decent but it is difficult to know whether you can get something for £500 / £1,000 / £2,000 etc
For 3D printing I'd argue the Creality Ender 3 models are entry level, pretty reliable, and pretty easy to set up and use (depending on your definition of "easy").Fair points - Within the laser world and the 3D printing world there are no brands who do good reliable entry machines where there is a track record of reliability and they are easy to set up and use…
Have bought an entry Chinese clone 3040 and will play with it but with the intention of then buying something decent but it is difficult to know whether you can get something for £500 / £1,000 / £2,000 etc
For 3D printing I'd argue the Creality Ender 3 models are entry level, pretty reliable, and pretty easy to set up and use (depending on your definition of "easy").
CNC is just that bit harder due to the rigidity requirements of pushing a spinning cutter through material. There are enough belt based models around now that (I guess) it can't be completely terrible, but personally I'd want something running on ballscrews or rack and pinion, and on proper linear slides. At any decent size that's unfortunately going to cost money.
I'm slightly on the fence with Ollie's suggestion about building your own; if you know what you're doing, have the machinery to make the parts, and either understand current machines (to make a design) or are working from a good design, then I agree you could save money and make something good. However, I do see a fair number of unfinished CNC projects for sale; presumably because the builder ran out of time/ideas to get it finished.
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