HeliGav
Established Member
Any one used an x-carve or know of any alternatives in the UK its nearly birthday time and ive been a good boy lol
HeliGav":or0aw3qs said:Any one used an x-carve or know of any alternatives in the UK its nearly birthday time and ive been a good boy lol
RobCee":183sc22p said:So far, I have used it to machine the following materials:
MDF, Cork, Slate, Plywood, Oak, Mahogany, Acrylic, Perspex, Delrin, Engraving Laminate, Aluminium (up to 1/4" thick)
Totally depends on what you want it for. Most of the mid-size machines are probably too small for furniture work, and aren't really strong enough to do much aluminium (or any steel).custard":235stoz5 said:You just feel there's a real revolution about to happen in furniture design, where instead of being confined to metal OR wood OR fabric OR whatever, suddenly the designer's palette has every conceivable material laid out at once, all to be mixed up together just as you please. In addition the degree of texture and organic shaping that CNC enables at a realistic price is astonishing.
It's a tough call because I was trained in a rigorous Arts & Crafts furniture making tradition, but even if it means abandoning much of that hard won knowledge I don't feel I can let this revolution pass me by.
The question is at what point do you jump in? If I leave it too late then I'll be miles behind the learning curve, if I go too early then I'll waste a lot of money on quickly outdated kit with too small capacity. Many of my contemporaries are saying the X Carve is the one, and the moment is now.
I'm not entirely convinced, if I can wait another year or 18 months I feel sure something much better, with a significantly more substantial capacity, will suddenly pop up at the much the same price. Who knows?
sploo":181o4jeu said:I've got a 39x25" machine made by K2. Sadly out of action due to a fault at the moment (and K2 have recently gone out of business ) but it was originally sold to the electric guitar making world.
Thanks for the offer. It's the control box - the machine uses servos and the control box runs three Gecko G320 units. One axis has suddenly started tripping out with a few seconds of jogging it back and forth. It doesn't matter which machine axis is connected to it - that control box axis will always trip the whole box out.Sporky McGuffin":fg88wml3 said:sploo":fg88wml3 said:I've got a 39x25" machine made by K2. Sadly out of action due to a fault at the moment (and K2 have recently gone out of business ) but it was originally sold to the electric guitar making world.
Snap!
What's the problem? I rebuilt a fair bit of mine so might be able to help.
Software-wise I'm using Rhino3D and MADCam, then Mach3 for runtime control.
Sporky McGuffin":3srtk70f said:Software-wise I'm using Rhino3D and MADCam, then Mach3 for runtime control.
Not questioning for a second that your build is anything less than hugely impressive (it is hugely impressive) but I'm not sure it's a good solution for a professional shop - even a small one. The longevity and repeatable accuracy of a mostly MDF machine isn't going to match something made from aluminium or steel, plus there's a reason many commercial machines use sealed THK rails (dust).Steve Jones":31286whl said:
sploo":3m6839hk said:Thanks for the offer. It's the control box - the machine uses servos and the control box runs three Gecko G320 units. One axis has suddenly started tripping out with a few seconds of jogging it back and forth. It doesn't matter which machine axis is connected to it - that control box axis will always trip the whole box out.
I sent the G320 back to Gecko, who tested it and claimed it was OK. I've refitted it, but it still does the same. My next task will be to flip a pair of the Geckos around, to try to isolate if it's something else in the control box.
Rhino is out of my price range, but I also use Mach for control. I've not used MADCam though.
What are you using yours for?
I've read the manual, but it looks like it's not a 5 minute job - and it would require me to do quite a bit of rewiring/moving stuff around to do the testing.Sporky McGuffin":7mf8u24j said:That's an odd one. I replaced all the G320s in mine with G320X when one blew and I rebuilt the whole thing, and there are tweaks to do to get them going. Have you run through the Gecko setup routine?
Similar here - jigs, surfacing. Not done any guitar bodies though. Lots of loudspeakers that have played recordings of guitars :wink:Sporky McGuffin":7mf8u24j said:I got Rhino at the educational price - I used to work one day a week at a University and had a staff ID card; I emailed McNeil and asked if that qualified me and they said it did. I originally got mine for guitar building, but I've also found it's really good for thicknessing timber with curly grain, using a big surfacing bit, and I've also used it for precisely cutting jig components and the like.
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