Thanks guys! @TinWhisperer, I’ll up the hole size or pierce and drill. I do have a CNC mill, I may just have to make the pieces with some alignment holes so I can mill the holes quick. This is a learning process to see what I need to do.
On the slots would it work to create a tool profile with smaller kerf size in sheetcam so it cuts the slot oversize? ie, if the actual kerf is .050, I make a tool profile with a .040 kerf and when it cuts the slot will be nominally .020 oversized.
I get the issue with bevels blowing away accuracy. First thing I’ll do is run a bunch of test cards to see what the accuracy is like.
This will be the fun part, seeing how to get the most out of it! Now if the table would just ship…. I got the THC mod the other day, it’s like a tease
Respectfully, I’m curious why not and what the advantage is?
In my thinking (and I could easily be wrong), In changing the kerf, it allows me to alter the clearance of slots without going through the workflow. For example, if I tried a sample one, and it was a little too loose, I could increase the kerf size on the tool in SheetCam to tighten it up. If I do it with the original model, I would have to go back and redraw the CAD, and then go through the entire CAM process as well.
Yes, they would have to be the same layer. I’ve already learned how to do that. I would make tools labeled with over or undersized kerfs so I wouldn’t confuse them.
So on Fusion… if you have a model on Fusion, and change a dimension, that will automatically transfer to the work you’ve done on the CAM portion? I understand you’ll have to generate new gcode.
I’ve got years on Inventor, so I really like to use that. That said, Fusion is basically same but everything is in different places… which is frustrating I haven’t bought SheetCam yet, but do like how it works - very straight forward. I use BobCam for my mill, but no post for that available from Langmuir.
Maybe I’ll just start playing with Fusion. I’m sure it’ll import .ipt files from Inventor - same company - so I could do work on either. There are advantages to that. I was also confused about it’s free status.
Yes that is exactly like that it’s fully parametric with history.
The free version (hobbyist) license of fusion 360 is is limited to some extent but is completely usable to design a product and produce g code to cut it.
Also there’s probably no other software that is advancing as quickly as fusion 360 is. They’ve just added an amazing plastics 3D interface to fusion and there’s always something new coming and being improved.
When it comes to developing CAD and CAM for product manufacturing nothing else holds a candle even close to fusion 360.
I think they’re only is one or two items that sheetcam has on fusion 360.
One is to center Pierce mark a hole.
And the other is… Maybe some sheetCAM people can shed some light on some of the functions sheetCAM has that fusion 360 does not?
edit ;You can alter the plunge rate that’s another one…
Thanks! I think 10 active projects in the ‘free’ version? Kind of a pain, but worth a couple hundred a year. Pierce marking is a kind of major one, but can’t you just have it make a .050 hole to pierce a center? Plus, I guess there’s no reason why you couldn’t generate a separate Gcode from sheetcam to pierce mark hole centers and run it independently - same 0,0 and don’t move the metal… or just copy and paste it into the Fusion generated GCode.
@TinWhisperer I may have found a way to cut the slots oversize in Fusion. In the 2D profile in the Passes section, there is a “Stock to Leave” option. It is to leave material that you will later want to clean up on the mill. It says you can put in a negative number to “remove more stock than the model shows”. This should cut oversize instead of leaving extra material to be milled. Should have known. This is a standard feature on most CAM programs.
Using a negative number in “Stock to Leave” absolutely works to make an oversized slot. Here’s some test cards, plus I used it on the computer table attachment to the crossfire that I modified. I had designed it for 16 gauge and decided to move up to 12 gauge for the arm. Used it to increase the size of the slots. They were a little long, but since I was welding them anyway…
Smallest slot here is a 1/16". I had trouble programming the cut in Fusion since it was such a small slot. Had to make clearance 0, square corners, no lead-in. Plus it’s the first pierce. Didn’t really care since I just wanted to know the width here. This is in 12 gauge, increase in program is -.010", which makes the slot .020" wider (for others reading).
NP! I both hate and love those pop-ups… I’ll turn them off once I stop spending half my time figuring out how to use the program. Basically most CAM programs have the same features… they just hide them differently!