custard":1vpacaj8 said:
Now I'll just de-skill myself, or pretend I can no longer do what it can, so I can justify getting one.
Personally I'm seeing it's application more for things like jig making. I guess some people will buy them as a alternative to hand skills, but I think they'll end up being disappointed, I've met plenty of people who got a Domino or a Leigh Dovetail Jig with a similar rationale and it rarely takes them as far up the curve as they'd hoped. I think it'll be no different with this.
Hello,
They are handy for jigs, but I think it is just better to make the things as part of the (enjoyable) process of designing and making things. If the machine will allow you time to get on with other stuff, while it works away, then I suppose it is justified. But how much time will it save? Someone still has to draw the design and program the machine to run it, set the thing up, hoover up after it.....could we just have made the jig?
CNC does little to add to creativity, and a lot to enable the unskilled to make stuff the skilled already can. Silver Lining, the furniture makers for the uber-wealthy in Cheshire no longer make chairs. They farm everything out to CNC production and have thier makers assemble the stuff, sand and polish it. Still they cost £1000 plus each for a dining chair. Are the chairs better, is the craftsman's work more fulfilling? We humans seem to invent more and more insidious ways to reduce ourselves to talentless morons, for the sake of saving money or making more for the already wealthy. I run a basic CNC router in school and laser and 3D printer. The processes are boring, the products mostly reduced in scope to accommodate the machine, and the end products devoid of any 'life'. Whenever I teach the kids a hand process, most of the responses are, 'Isn't there a machine to do this?' All because of the 'gee-whizz' syndrome. Isn't that robot clever!
Mike.