Recently finished this guy for a commission, came out so pretty 🖖

  • Flying Squid
    link
    fedilink
    92 months ago

    Wait, this is carved out of wood? Holy shit, I thought it was just 3-D printed from your own model, which was impressive enough to me! Mad respect!

    • @[email protected]OP
      link
      fedilink
      102 months ago

      Thanks! Full transparency the rough carving was done on a CNC machine, but all finished by hand :)

      • Flying Squid
        link
        fedilink
        52 months ago

        I wish I had an ounce of that level of talent when it came to making things, great job!

      • jawa21
        link
        fedilink
        52 months ago

        If you ever want some tips on CNC stuff, let me know and I’d be glad to offer advice. I’ve been a CNC machinist for 20 years now.

        • @[email protected]OP
          link
          fedilink
          32 months ago

          Yknow, I actually would really like to know how to stop this nonsense happening…

          0.5mm tapered ballnose in maple, doing a raster finish pass in the grain direction, I keep getting these nests of strandy stuff on descending sloped sections, takes an annoying amount of cleanup to remove

          Any ideas how to adjust the parameters to stop it? Tends to happen in oak as well

          • jawa21
            link
            fedilink
            62 months ago

            That is not a programming issue per se. That is material and setup. Wood is going to do that. It is fibrous, and will tend to tear like this instead of cut (especially if it isn’t 100% dry). There is also chatter that I can see, meaning the work needed to be more secure. One thing that I have learned with the few instances I have worked with wood is to seriously just max out the machine on feed and speed.

            I’d don’t know your setup (or setup practices) but the tldr here is to hold the work tighter and let it rip. Wood is like butter to an end mill like that.

            • @[email protected]OP
              link
              fedilink
              32 months ago

              Thanks! Yeah I’m always a bit wary of running these bits too fast, I’ve broken far too many lately, but I’ll max out the rpm and see what happens 🤞

              • jawa21
                link
                fedilink
                52 months ago

                Oh yeah. Don’t use the tiny end mill for everything. Use maybe a 2mm ball nose as a roughing pass. Let the big one do the work, then go in for the details.

              • @[email protected]
                link
                fedilink
                English
                32 months ago

                Your average woodworking router is already running at something like 20k RPM for ~6mm and larger bits. High speed should do fine on wood, at whatever feed rate doesn’t burn it. Maybe just use light passes to save your endmills.

                That said, I am most assuredly NOT a CNC machinist, just a nerd with woodworking tools and a couple of low end maker devices that run gcode.