Max Power
Established Member
What is entailed from having the idea to the finished article? I have no experience of cnc but have fancied getting one for a while to produce wood carvings
Just getting a machine was not right for me. I bought one for not much money on Amazon and after carefully assembling it, over a couple of days, I found it was actually DOA. That was a machine of the type now known as 3018 (upgraded). It was essentially junk that was badly manufactured. I next went for an all in one (Snapmaker 1) and that had some plug and play benefits but I could never get the 3D printing side to work well. The software had some severe limitations and the bed was only 125mm square but that was reduced to about 75mm square for CNC. The work holding clamping was problematic too but I cut my CNC teeth on that machine producing 40mm square Alphabet blocks for kids.What is entailed from having the idea to the finished article? I have no experience of cnc but have fancied getting one for a while to produce wood carvings
Just getting a machine was not right for me. I bought one for not much money on Amazon and after carefully assembling it, over a couple of days, I found it was actually DOA. That was a machine of the type now known as 3018 (upgraded). It was essentially junk that was badly manufactured. I next went for an all in one (Snapmaker 1) and that had some plug and play benefits but I could never get the 3D printing side to work well. The software had some severe limitations and the bed was only 125mm square but that was reduced to about 75mm square for CNC. The work holding clamping was problematic too but I cut my CNC teeth on that machine producing 40mm square Alphabet blocks for kids.
After a few months I bought a Shapeoko standard (400 x 400 x 95mm work area) I learned many techniques and then became unhappy with work holding and accuracy. I modified the belt tensioners and the baseboard so it now gives me great accuracy (±0.001") and I have machined brass, aluminium, glass, ceramic, slate and wood. You would be welcome to come and look and get a feel for the process. Software plays an important part. The first piece is the controlling software which is hardwired into my machine being GRBL 1.1f. This is an 8 bit operating system which very common and translates G code instructions into actions. This is the software that knows the size of the machine (via limit switches) controls its speed of movement, and the homing routine and general housekeeping that keeps the machine doing what it is instructed to do. One can vary stepper motor steps if so inclined and duration for certain operations.
The second piece of essential software is the design software. It is important in that it needs to know how to recognise the third dimension so if you design an outline of a square, it should have some means of knowing what to do with that information if you want some depth to the outline. I use Carveco Maker which is an £18 per month subscription. It is in reality $18 but after you add VAT it is more or less £18. This software understand depth of an outline well and making 3D items is trivial (see images).
It also includes the third essential piece of software, which is a post processor. This software knows about many different CNC machines and translates the design into a specific code that any particular machine understands. I use both a Mac and a PC. It sometimes creates some complications but I prefer my Mac for designing things. Most CNC software will suit a Windows PC better. Finally, I send my designs (including the post processor information) to the CNC machine using gSender which the name tells you is a G Code sender.
The pictures show respectively, the ash wood (200 x 200 x 25mm) wedding heart after roughing, finishing, engraved and finished with beeswax and walnut oil creme and engraved with laser. If you would like to visit, let me know.
No Worries, Max. The offer will not expire... just in case you find yourself with time on your hands and feel like heading south for any reason. I also use my CNC machine to carry a JTech 4.2 Watt blue diode laser. The pix are of 6 x 6" plain white ceramic tiles from B & Q. The cost was a very reasonable 14 pence each (£5.80 for 44 tiles) and the results speak for themselves. 1) A scientific drawing a of a carp for a friend who was a keen fisherman. 2) An attempt to replicate pop art of the 60s. 3) A narrow gauge steam engine for an engine driver who was keen on narrow gauge railways from all around the world.Thanks Jepho, great advice and I would have taken you up on your kind offer if you had of been closer.
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