Stevos758 Posted May 19, 2014 Posted May 19, 2014 What about guys with CNC machines. What Cam program are you running for engraving? All I have is meshcam to work with right now and it's not ideal for engraving. Thinking of giving cut2d a whirl. Right now I am planning on using white acrylic for light plate and faceplate but you may have convinced me otherwise. Facebook Ripp's Garage Tech LLC
cichlidfan Posted May 19, 2014 Posted May 19, 2014 Here is a good post by Gadroc, which mentions some of the software he has tried. http://forums.eagle.ru/showpost.php?p=2024289&postcount=9 Not sure if this is helpful but... ASUS ROG Maximus VIII Hero, i7-6700K, Noctua NH-D14 Cooler, Crucial 32GB DDR4 2133, Samsung 950 Pro NVMe 256GB, Samsung EVO 250GB & 500GB SSD, 2TB Caviar Black, Zotac GTX 1080 AMP! Extreme 8GB, Corsair HX1000i, Phillips BDM4065UC 40" 4k monitor, VX2258 TouchScreen, TIR 5 w/ProClip, TM Warthog, VKB Gladiator Pro, Saitek X56, et. al., MFG Crosswind Pedals #1199, VolairSim Pit, Rift CV1 :thumbup:
metalnwood Posted May 19, 2014 Posted May 19, 2014 Cut2d will do everything that you need for panels, it's missing the v-carving of vcarve pro but that is something that is usually used for decorative woodworking. cut2d has a demo which is limited but it might give you an idea. Steve, if there is something you want to try using cut2d you can give it to me and I can create the tool paths and geode for you. I will do it from vcarvepro but it will be the same output that cut2d will produce. It's important when doing rotary engraving that you have a flat area so make sure that your table is surfaced properly. It wouldn't be a bad idea to put down a small piece of MDF and surface it then put your panel on top to ensure it is as flat as can be because your engraving bit has a small tip and differences in height can show up as uneven engraving.
Stevos758 Posted May 20, 2014 Posted May 20, 2014 I think I will just pick up Cut 2D. Thanks very much for the offer metalnwood! I have played with the demo and it looks good to go! Facebook Ripp's Garage Tech LLC
Devon Custard Posted May 20, 2014 Author Posted May 20, 2014 Out of interest what kind of quality can you get with a CNC? how fine can you engrave?
Stevos758 Posted May 20, 2014 Posted May 20, 2014 I'm not sure yet. I have a cutter that has a .002" tip so we will see. Ill be trying some engraving out in the next few days hopefully and will report back. Facebook Ripp's Garage Tech LLC
geneb Posted May 20, 2014 Posted May 20, 2014 I hate to say it, but you'll get a much better finish if you can scrounge up a laser engraver. g. Proud owner of 80-0007. http://www.f15sim.com - The only one of her kind.
Devon Custard Posted May 20, 2014 Author Posted May 20, 2014 I hate to say it, but you'll get a much better finish if you can scrounge up a laser engraver. g. I guess with a laser you can engrave reasonably deep. But the problem with laser engraving is the heat it generates, tends to melt paint!!! Finally got a working process, stumbled onto acrylic paints which can be used to fill the engraving and then the excess is simpled wiped away. Cut and engrave Base paint Dry Clear coat Dry Paint/engrave Remove excess Dry. Getting this to work for the CDU and UFC buttons has been a royal PAIN in the ass. However finally there i think...
geneb Posted May 20, 2014 Posted May 20, 2014 When I made the panels that I needed for the F-15, I didn't engrave deeply at all. In fact I set it up such that it would only ablate the paint mask and the black layer of paint. I'd go back over it with white paint to catch any spots that under-engraved. The end result is a museum quality Type 5 panel replica. The only way to make the process more technically accurate is to screen print them. (which is something I'm going to check out at some point) g. Proud owner of 80-0007. http://www.f15sim.com - The only one of her kind.
Warhog Posted May 20, 2014 Posted May 20, 2014 My panels were drawn in AutoCAD and then exported out as a dxf file. The software I have bee using is called CamBam. It has 40 free uses before you need to buy it. I just leave it running all the time and so far I have only used 20 of the 40 uses it gives you and that's over the past 2 years. Its very easy to learn how to use it and it will let you engrave, cut out the holes and anything else you may need. I also use it for PCBs. http://www.cambam.info/ As far as quality goes, here are several examples of what a rotary type engraver can do. Compared to a laser I would say they are close but the laser is probably a little easier to use. A CNC mini mill however has so much more to offer as it can do many things a laser can not do. But it gets down to what you want to do. Besides engraving I use my CNC mill to make a lot of parts for various projects unrelated to flying. If you download these pictures and then blow then up you will see how fine a cut you can get. And to put this last photo in perspective, there is a 14 pin connector on the other side of the PCB. The lettering is .1" high and the holes are .030" diameter. The plastic in photo 1 is Rowmark engraving plastic, .060" thick. The cutter is a 60 degree V cutter, .010" tip and the cutting depth I used for the PCB was .07" deep. I hope that gives you an idea of what the rotary engraver can do and the quality you can obtain with it. Regards John W aka WarHog. My Cockpit Build Pictures... My Arduino Sketches ... https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1-Dc0Wd9C5l3uY-cPj1iQD3iAEHY6EuHg?usp=sharing WIN 10 Pro, i8-8700k @ 5.0ghz, ASUS Maximus x Code, 16GB Corsair Dominator Platinum Ram, AIO Water Cooler, M.2 512GB NVMe, 500gb SSD, EVGA GTX 1080 ti (11gb), Sony 65” 4K Display VPC MongoosT-50, TM Warthog Throttle, TRK IR 5.0, Slaw Viper Pedals
geneb Posted May 20, 2014 Posted May 20, 2014 You're preaching to the choir. Check out http://www.f15sim.com/index.html - that links to the pre-blog site and the first few entries show how the fuel panel was done. That's as close as you're going to get to a real Type 5 without screen printing it. At that time I used VCarve Pro for all my tool paths. I've since upgraded to Aspire. g. Proud owner of 80-0007. http://www.f15sim.com - The only one of her kind.
metalnwood Posted May 20, 2014 Posted May 20, 2014 You shouldn't get melting paint and a bad finish because of it. You should just get vaporised paint and something is not right otherwise. Like Gene said most people I have seen work with paint, professionals, not just hobbyists will only try to remove a layer or two of paint, as little as needed to get to the other colour layer below. Lasers and cnc mills both have pro's and cons. Thats why you need both :)
geneb Posted May 20, 2014 Posted May 20, 2014 Lasers and cnc mills both have pro's and cons. Thats why you need both :) This helps meet the "He who dies with the most toys, wins." mandate in the Man Caves 101 Handbook. :D g. Proud owner of 80-0007. http://www.f15sim.com - The only one of her kind.
Devon Custard Posted May 20, 2014 Author Posted May 20, 2014 youre playing with a better toy than most lols gauging that correct scan gap to ensure a clean cut vs minimal overlap and therefore burning thru too many layers? ouch
metalnwood Posted May 20, 2014 Posted May 20, 2014 I never found the scan gap to interfere with things to much. Just set your scan gap and test for power and speed to get you where you want to. Make sure focus is OK first.
geneb Posted May 21, 2014 Posted May 21, 2014 I've never seen a "scan gap" parameter to work with. I just treat it like a printer (literally). I set the power & speed of the laser and make sure I tick the "auto-focus" box. :) (I use an Epilog Mini-24 with a 45W laser) g. Proud owner of 80-0007. http://www.f15sim.com - The only one of her kind.
metalnwood Posted May 21, 2014 Posted May 21, 2014 Gene, I think on the epilog you set the DPI, on these machines the scan gap another way of essentially saying this. It's the gaps between the lines when doing the engraving. E.g. 0.085 is the same as 300 dpi, 0.05 is the same as 500dpi.
geneb Posted May 21, 2014 Posted May 21, 2014 Ahh, ok. I get it. I typically use either 600 or 1200 dpi. g. Proud owner of 80-0007. http://www.f15sim.com - The only one of her kind.
Stevos758 Posted May 22, 2014 Posted May 22, 2014 Ok, now you all really did it. Recommend a laser cutter for 1-2K I "NEED" one! Facebook Ripp's Garage Tech LLC
metalnwood Posted May 22, 2014 Posted May 22, 2014 Off the top of my head, not sure. $2k is a little below getting a machine that will pretty much run without any coaxing. For any reasonable price you are looking at a chinese laser, not an epilog or similar american/european brand. Whatever you do, do not run off and buy a cheap desktop one off ebay until you fully understand what will be required to make it work. Search back for some posts about lasers and see what it took Gadroc to turn his cheap one in to a properly working one. From memory it cost about the same as the base machine in upgrades.
Devon Custard Posted May 22, 2014 Author Posted May 22, 2014 Heartily agree with metalnwood. I spend £3k on mine and i love it but it still feels like a hobbyists laser :) And you will spend a good month or two playing with it before you get results youre happy with (assuming you work for a living, have a wife/gf etc all of which will get in the way) However you will love it when it starts chucking out nice clean cuts and your panels look (more) professional than a "cut by dremmel" look. Also make sure you have a workshop away from kids/family etc. The outgassing on these things is rough on the lungs, i literally made myself sick in the first week breathing in the fumes. Good ventilation/extraction is a must.
Stevos758 Posted May 22, 2014 Posted May 22, 2014 Any brand names you could recommend? I may be willing to spend 3k I have a job that will pay for most of it lined up already. Facebook Ripp's Garage Tech LLC
Stevos758 Posted May 22, 2014 Posted May 22, 2014 What about this guy here? http://www.automationtechnologiesinc.com/products-page/laser-engraving/35w-co2-laser-machine-19-7%E2%80%B3-x-11-8%E2%80%B3 Facebook Ripp's Garage Tech LLC
agrasyuk Posted May 22, 2014 Posted May 22, 2014 (edited) thats where i got my laser. cheap but immediately required controller upgrade to be usefull. Can't say much about the company, i think those are generic china lasers that they redistribute and they have a messy website without much info. might be quite a drive for you however Edited May 22, 2014 by agrasyuk Anton. My pit build thread . Simple and cheap UFC project
Stevos758 Posted May 22, 2014 Posted May 22, 2014 (edited) thats where i got my laser. cheap but immediately required controller upgrade to be usefull. Can't say much about the company, i think those are generic china lasers that they redistribute. might be quite a drive for you however They will ship for a reasonable fee. What do I need for a controller? I'll start pricing one out. Something like this? http://www.geckodrive.com/geckodrive-step-motor-drives.html How do you like the laser? Edited May 22, 2014 by Stevos758 Facebook Ripp's Garage Tech LLC
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