Carving

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Kerry Fullington
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Carving

Post by Kerry Fullington »

I ran a fairly detailed carving last Friday. There were approx. 800,000 lines of code with lots of small, jerky movements on the machine. Another local shop owner said that this type of carving wore out the drive motors on his machine.
My question, Is this type carving hard on the router?
Will Williamson
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Re: Carving

Post by Will Williamson »

Slow the feed rate down to 150 ipm
Will

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Kerry Fullington
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Company Name: Double E Cabinets
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Re: Carving

Post by Kerry Fullington »

Thanks Will,

I had the tool at 200 ipm in the design but I slowed the machine to 60%.
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Re: Carving

Post by Josh Rayburn »

Hi Kerry,
On my machine the tangency factor could be changed to better suit those types of short movements, and make things less jerky.
On the machine you're using, it could be a little different, I'm not sure.
What controller do you have?
jnr
Josh Rayburn
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Kerry Fullington
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Joined: Mon, May 09 2005, 7:33PM
Company Name: Double E Cabinets
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Re: Carving

Post by Kerry Fullington »

Thanks Josh,

We are running the Gen 2 Supercontrol and will be upgrading to the Q-Core shortly. I will look into adjusting the tangency factor. This particular carving ate up four hours of machine time as is so if slowing the machine down as Will mentioned is the only option, it would make it where we couldn't offer many carvings. They would just be too expensive to run.
Josh Rayburn
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Re: Carving

Post by Josh Rayburn »

I hear ya Kerry - they are indeed a slow process. There are so many easy sources for carvings that it's hard for us to compete! I think I've done...maybe one carving over the past 3 years....?
Josh Rayburn
Hall's Edge, Inc.
CNC Machining Service


Dell Precision T3400
Win7 Professional 64 Bit/Core2Duo E8400 3ghz/4 GB Ram/NVIDIA Quadro FX570
Kerry Fullington
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Posts: 4722
Joined: Mon, May 09 2005, 7:33PM
Company Name: Double E Cabinets
Country: UNITED STATES
Location: Amarillo, TX

Re: Carving

Post by Kerry Fullington »

Outsourcing carvings is definitely less expensive but an integral carving looks and feels so much better than an applied one.
Josh Rayburn
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Re: Carving

Post by Josh Rayburn »

I don't know what you were carving but there's always those hand tool thingies - they cause less wear and tear on the CNC!
:joker: :joker:
Haha!
jnr
Josh Rayburn
Hall's Edge, Inc.
CNC Machining Service


Dell Precision T3400
Win7 Professional 64 Bit/Core2Duo E8400 3ghz/4 GB Ram/NVIDIA Quadro FX570
Kerry Fullington
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Posts: 4722
Joined: Mon, May 09 2005, 7:33PM
Company Name: Double E Cabinets
Country: UNITED STATES
Location: Amarillo, TX

Re: Carving

Post by Kerry Fullington »

But they require talent. :D
Daniel Vonderheide
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Re: Carving

Post by Daniel Vonderheide »

Kerry,

On the Gen 2 and the Qcore you really dont need to adjust the tanfac. What you would really want to adjust is your accelerations. If you change from 100 percent (G800) accellerations to 70 percent (G803), you should see an improvement on the shaking and you will not loose as much time in the machininig.
Will Williamson
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Re: Carving

Post by Will Williamson »

Daniel can you just insert this line ( G803 )at the beginning of the program?
Kerry another thing that seams to help is to raster in the Y direction if possible. Rapid raster acceleration in the x direction causes the whole gantry to shake.
Will

http://www.willmade.com

KEG/Intel Core i 7 CPU K875 @ 2.93 GHZ/12G Ram
Dual boot XP PRO/Windows 7 Nvidia Quatro 600 1Gig Ram
Daniel Vonderheide
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Re: Carving

Post by Daniel Vonderheide »

Will,

You can place the acceleration macro anywhere in the program and it will take effect immediately. If you want to slow the accelerations down only on the carving, you can add a G803 before it starts on that section of the code and then place a G800 afterwards so the rest of the cutting is at regular accelerations.
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