Last week I took a trip to California
to check out the latest in digital woodworking tools: the Shaper Tools Origin.
Essentially, the Origin is a very high-tech router. It uses a touch screen to
guide you through a cut and CNC Router motion for accuracy. As you’re cutting,
tiny corrections to your position are made along the way. After using one of
the prototypes for a few hours, I can say that it works well. The Origin is
also an easy tool to use, whether you are new to digital woodworking or more
experienced. And, it’s attractively priced. That’s a lot of very good news. The
bad news is that the Origin is still under development and won’t be available
until fall 2017.
The Tour
When visiting the home of Shaper Tools,
you can tell right away that this is unlike most woodworking tool development
projects. For one thing, the company’s location is deep in the heart of one of
San Francisco’s famous technology communities. For another, the developers are
the kind of sharp and talented young people that you’d expect to see working at
Google or Amazon or Uber. But, being different can be a good thing. It’s an
outside perspective that often leads to interesting new solutions to
traditional problems. Look at Tesla, and how it’s a different and successful
challenge to the auto industry, for example. Different thinking can bring
different results. In this case, Shaper Tools’ goal is to bring CNC accuracy
and simplicity to a handheld woodworking tool. The Shaper Tools Origin is the
result.
How does the Shaper Tools Origin work?
As with any handheld router, you place
the Origin on top of the material that you’re cutting. But, unlike conventional
routers, to cut accurately you don’t have to contain your movement with a
straight edge, guide or a pattern. On the Origin, you follow along with the lines
of the drawing shown on the small screen on top of the tool as you move. The
good news is that you don’t have to be perfect as you’re tracing the drawing.
You just need to come fairly close. The Origin does the rest.
As you’re making the cut, the Origin is
adjusting to match the drawing nearly perfectly by correcting your movements.
It does by using small stepper motors to make minute tweaks to the router’s
position. It’s putting the bit precisely where it needs to be so that the
results come out exactly like your drawing.
Here’s an example. Imagine trying to
use a hand held router to freehand cut a perfect 8” circle out of a piece of
plywood. Even on your best day, you won’t come close. With the Origin, it’s
simple. Just follow the drawing of the circle on the screen. The Origin makes
it perfect for you. You can cut a circle, a shape, or any design you can come
up with for results within a 1/100” accuracy. And, accuracy is what digital
woodworking is all about. In the case of the Shaper Tools Origin, you’re
putting CNC accuracy into a tool that you hold in your hand.
A Portable Tool Needs to Know its Location
In order to achieve accurate results
with any digital tool, be it a CNC, 3D printer or laser cutter, the tool needs
to know two things: a defined workspace and its location within it. On fixed
tools like a CNC, the workspace is clearly known. A 24” x 48” CNC, for example,
works inside an obvious boundary and knows it’s location within it. But, on a
hand-held tool like the Origin where you move it to different locations and use
different sizes of materials, defining a workspace is a challenge.
To solve this, Shaper Tools developed a
special tape with patterns made up of dots. Much like fingerprints are unique,
the different patterns on the tape are unique. You simply lay out the tape
every few inches or so on the material you’re cutting. The Origin uses a small
camera that scans the workspace and references the dots to accurately judge the
tool’s location. As you’re following the drawing on the screen, it’s using
these patterns to keep track of where it is. Along the way, it’s fine tuning
the router’s position so that it’s cutting where it’s supposed to. If you get
too far off line, the router’s spindle is quickly raised up to keep it from
cutting outside the line.
What About Those Drawings?
Digital woodworking always requires
drawings. The Origin works from digital drawings created in CAD or other vector
based drawing software like Adobe Illustrator. Getting them into the Origin is
easy. It communicates via Wifi. Or, you can just transfer files from your
computer via a handy flash drive.
But it’s not just the tool that’s
different. Shaper Tools is also creating an interesting solution for help you
get the drawings that you need. Besides being able to use your own designs,
Shaper is developing ready-made designs that they’ll make available through a
cloud-based solution they’re building called, ShaperHub. There, the company and
outside contributors will be offering ready-to-go CAD drawings and complete projects
for users to share, purchase and use. This will work something like Apple’s App
Store. Find a design you like, download it into the Origin and build it.
If the capabilities of the Shaper Tools
Origin have piqued your interest then you likely have two questions. When will
it become available and how much will it cost? The Origin is slated for release
in September 2017 and the cost is pegged at $2099. However, they are offering a
limited pre-sale price of $1499 if you’d like to order one early.
There’s more to come about the Shaper
Tools Origin. In a future post, I’ll get into more detail on what you can do
with it, how it compares to conventional CNCs and where the tool fits within
the digital woodworking world and inside an average woodworker’s shop.
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