#1
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3D carving for Father's Day
I put this together for my Dad. It turned out pretty good for being direct drive on the motors. It's about 12" x 27". Can't wait to get gear reduction someday.
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#2
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Looks great !
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#3
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Mike,
Very Impressive. Could you give us some detail on what program you used, where the model came from and wood, cut time etc for this? |
#4
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I used a relief from Vectorart 3d, Did the tool paths in Vectorart 3d machinist. Imported into Vcarve pro, drew offset and some radius'. Used 1/2" roughing endmill, 1/8" round nose for finishing. 14% stepover ( 10% would have taken 1.5-2 hours longer) Cut time was around 3 hours +/-. Oak 1x12, 24 inches long.
I'm finally getting the hang of some of the software from Vectric. Someday I would like to upgrade to Aspire. Right now it's not within my buget. |
#5
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Brilliant!
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#6
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Very good! Amazing detail.
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#7
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Mike,
Very nice. With my limited experience cutting 3D, trying using a 1/4 Ball nose or round nose between the end mill and the final 1/8 round nose. It may speed things up because it will help remove some of the large pieces but it does take a lot of time for the 1/8 bit. The guys at Vectric make some nice software for the price you pay. I really like the features that Aspire has. |
#8
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Nils,
In 3d machinist, it only has option for rough and finish. If I put another toolpath for 1/4", I don't think the finish will calulate things any faster. I am going to try something with the 1/4" bit, just to see how much detail is lost. |
#9
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Mike,
Yes it is the same with Aspire. What I did with one piece was I did a rough cut with 1/4 end mill and 1/4 ball nose. I then did a smooth cut with 1/8 ball nose bit. It took about an hour to cut with the 1/8 ball nose. The first picture is after the 1/4 end mill and the second is after both of the ball nose bits. When I was done, I did not have to sand the material and it was smooth as you could want. |
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