Hi,
a waterjet CNC cutter could do that. If you want to do it in metal then either waterjet or wireEDM.
Craig
Hey guys,
New to woodworking, and even newer to CNC so please excuse the elementary questions.
I’m looking to create something similar to what’s attached, I essentially want to be able to cut out 26mm beech hardwood with perfect accuracy, what cnc machine would be appropriate for this? I’d really appreciate some help because I don’t know who to ask! Many thanks!
Similar Threads:
Hi,
a waterjet CNC cutter could do that. If you want to do it in metal then either waterjet or wireEDM.
Craig
That's not going to work too well on a CNC router. The combination of depth and sharp inside corners make it a better candidate for another process, like waterjet, as was suggested above.
[FONT=Verdana]Andrew Werby[/FONT]
[URL="http://www.computersculpture.com/"]Website[/URL]
Hi Usman -They would have been done on a laser cutter. Start researching them. Peter
Hi,
a laser cutter burns it way through materials and is going to char the wood.
You don't buy a waterjet, you take it to a company who has one and pay them to do it.
Craig
Hi Craig - That's why they are painted, a contract water cutter will cost too much for the job.... There will be heaps of laser cutters around that can do this... Peter
Hi Peter,
Glad you mentioned laser because that’s the first thing I tried, the workshop I go to has a trotec speedy 500. But I’m trying to cut 26mm beechwood. It struggled cutting 9mm, even if I cut 3 pieces together, it’s a lot of labour to then sand the charred parts which are unavoidable since I have to do it at full power, low speed and 3 passes.
There has to be a way to do it
Hi Usman - You need to find a more powerful laser that can cut clean and fast. Simples. If you don't want the charring then it has to be a router job. In this case you can't get the pointed details. You will have to round out details to suit the tooling. Maybe a rough pass then a finish cut in 2mm or 3mm dia tool. So you will have 1 or 1.5mm rads in the corners... I find two finishing passes are good with a small tool. At that diameter it maybe a burr vs a cutting tool . They are a bit flexy and the second finish cut will clean up some fuzz. I also sometimes offset the second finish pass 0.2mm Kyocera are good tools...But the laser is the correct weapon for that job. Peter
Look closely at the cuts and see it they where cut with a Scroll Saw by a skilled woodworker, if the surface is smooth in all places it most likely was done with a CNC water Jet machine but could be done with a Scroll Saw as well which would be the cheapest way to do it
Mactec54
Yes, waterjet or scroll saw are really your only options here.
Gerry
UCCNC 2017 Screenset
[URL]http://www.thecncwoodworker.com/2017.html[/URL]
Mach3 2010 Screenset
[URL]http://www.thecncwoodworker.com/2010.html[/URL]
JointCAM - CNC Dovetails & Box Joints
[URL]http://www.g-forcecnc.com/jointcam.html[/URL]
(Note: The opinions expressed in this post are my own and are not necessarily those of CNCzone and its management)
...3D Printer ?
Or you can build a CNC Scroll Saw.
https://www.youtube.com/results?sear...nc+scroll+saw+
If you look at any CNC router just as a machine it has normally 3 Axis X Y Z, with a scroll saw you have the Z axis which is the cutting blade so the X and Y Axis would move around the Scroll saw Blade giving you 2 Axis of movement X and Y which is all that is needed to do your profiles around any shape
Your part that you where cutting would have to be suspended over a gap in the table cut area so the Blade could cut through the part and not the table
What's the max dimensions of parts you want to cut, this would determine the Table design
Mactec54
Makes sense, for the moment the max dimensions of parts I would want to cut would be 297 x 420 mm. (A3 paper size).
This has also got me thinking, I know somebody who made something in front of me very similar to this on a mill. Could a CNC mill do this or could we apply the same X and Y table principal on a mill instead? Just thinking they'll be more accurate unless im mistaken?
Or even something like this? https://shop.stepcraft-systems.com/s...hoCjl4QAvD_BwE
Hi Usman - Router or Mill you have the issue of tool radius and length. If you want a sharp corner you have to laser, waterjet or scroll saw. If you want to make many objects the scroll saw is out the laser is the answer. Or use a cheap router with a 3mm tool but then you will have to file the corners.... Peter