peter-harrison
Established Member
Hi, has anyone got a good one of these to recommend? Preferably free and downloadable!
It might be sad to admit this, but I quite liked working out how to cut the panels for my kitchens and wardrobes from 8x4 sheets. I used to sketch them out on A4 , with each piece of paper representing a board. A sort of Sudoku for woodworkers. Some of the trickier combinations often requited "dog leg" cuts in a board to get the best yield.
I am not familiar with these optimiser programmes, so I am curious as to whether they prioritize ease of cutting over best yield.
Works brilliantly with timber. You start with a thorough cutting list and work down in order from largest pieces first, always taken from smallest pieces of stock available and up to standard with your aforementioned variables (knots, straightness, splits etc etc).Yes that’s pretty much what I do, never seem to waste any board, can’t see it working with timber very well though as it can’t take into account all the variables, grain knots splits etc.
I don't know.. I've done it both ways, a lot! Basically, for 20 years up to about 10 years ago I did it your way, and for the last 10 years or so I've used the optimiser for most jobs apart from ones with figured timber or where the grain is a big deal such as table tops, drawer fronts etc. I am pretty sure that my wastage is down a lot. This may say something about my ability with Tetris-type visialisation!Works brilliantly with timber. You start with a thorough cutting list and work down in order from largest pieces first, always taken from smallest pieces of stock available and up to standard with your aforementioned variables (knots, straightness, splits etc etc).
Dead simple, highly effective, minimises waste.
Also needs no calculations or forethought, if you have enough stock to start with. Self correcting - just head-down brain-off. You have the job done before you could even finish putting the data into a computer
You can do the same with sheet but orientation introduces another factor to be considered.
I can't see why anybody would need an "optimiser" and it would most likely take longer and introduce more problems, unless you are IKEA etc.
If the grain or other detail are important enough you'd have a separate cut list for timber stock separately selected for grain, species etc. e.g. for drawer fronts.I don't know.. I've done it both ways, a lot! Basically, for 20 years up to about 10 years ago I did it your way, and for the last 10 years or so I've used the optimiser for most jobs apart from ones with figured timber or where the grain is a big deal such as table tops, drawer fronts etc. I am pretty sure that my wastage is down a lot. This may say something about my ability with Tetris-type visialisation!
I do a lot of painted work, and can't see the difference between a bit of ply and a bit of beech for that.
I can see the usefulness of these programmes. Some of them are amazing, especially the ones they use in the garment industry for the cutting of textiles.The last job I did before Christmas entailed 16 sheets of 18mm material, 2800mm x 2070mm......The thought of working out the position of all those components by hand to achieve the best yield and optimum positioning would be time wasting, to say the least.
If I remember correctly, it took about 90 secs to generate the cutting list and another 30 secs to produce the PDF file and print it off.
Its certainly worth it for me....
Edit. As Cabinetman said, I wouldn't bother with it on real wood, but for manmade panels it's a doddle!
If you use the system I describe no working out is needed. It's more a procedure likely to optimise the outcome. Not guaranteed but highly probable.The last job I did before Christmas entailed 16 sheets of 18mm material, 2800mm x 2070mm......The thought of working out the position of all those components by hand to achieve the best yield and optimum positioning would be time wasting, to say the least.
Impossible. Did you mean 90 minutes perchance?If I remember correctly, it took about 90 secs to generate the cutting list and another 30 secs to produce the PDF file and print it off.
Impossible. Did you mean 90 minutes perchance?
That'd be your 90 minutes or more.......Once all the quantities & dimensions are entered, number of stock sheets entered etc,
No it's much quicker my way. You have to prepare a cutting list of course, and to have enough stock, but after that it's head down brain off. Saves having to key in all that data for starters, and it's self correcting so there's no data to rework or re-enter.I hit " Calculate " and it took about 90 seconds to produce the complete cultist and another 30 seconds to produce and print the PDF file.....Perhaps you should try it Jacob, you never know, we may drag you out of the middle ages.....
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