Showing posts with label laser wood cutting machine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label laser wood cutting machine. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 21, 2017

Multiple Furniture Parts to Be Made Using CNC Router

Question: Why Not Make More Than One?

For every digital woodworker, sooner or later you’re going ask yourself an important question: If you’re going to the trouble of making something, why not make more than one while you’re at it? In the previous post, I gave an example of CNC Router part making by showing a shape being cut out of a board. It was a simple triangle, but it demonstrated two important benefits of a CNCRouter. These tools have the ability to make accurate and difficult cuts. But, I hinted at another part making benefit: repeatability. I cut out eight of those triangles in less than 20 minutes.



A CNC Router’s accuracy benefits woodworkers when you need repeatability. They are excellent tools for making not just one part, but multiple, identical parts. So, instead of machining just one stool leg for example, why not make the other three legs at the same time? Or you might choose to make several stools, while you’re at it. Accurate part making on a CNC Router is something that can be multiplied.

There’s more than one way to make parts

Making more than one part at a time with a CNC Router is a big topic that I’ll cover in detail later on, but this is a good time to introduce the basic concepts and methods of making multiples. You have choices in how you approach this.
Like a lot of processes in woodworking, there’s more than one way to do this. In general, the methods are a combination of how you layout your drawings and how you set up your CNC Router machine. The same approaches would be valid if you were using a laser cutter.

The first method is to layout parts on a drawing of the board you’re cutting in your CAD program. 

This method works just the way that it sounds. In your CAD program, lay out your parts on a drawing of the board you’re planning on cutting the parts from. Take the drawing of the individual parts and move them around and lay them out on a measured drawing of the board you’re cutting from until they fit, leaving extra room between the individual parts for the bit to travel and extra along the sides for clamping the board to the table. For example, with a 3/8” bit I leave at least a 1/2” gap between parts. Prepare the actual board as you normally would — making sure the board is perfectly flat on the bottom so that it won’t move when clamped to the table. Position the board in place and begin cutting.

The second method is to setup accurate part registration of blank stock.

If you set up the CNC Router, blank stock, and your cut properly, you can easily make multiple, identical parts. To do that, you need to first decide on an “origin point” that you reference to. Usually, that’s the position in your CAD drawing where the X and Y axes intersect. Then set up the same position on the CNC Router’s bed making that your CNC Router’s origin so that they match.
Next you setup stops on the table so that your blank stock is held at the same location every time. Then clamp, mill and repeat until you’re done.
An example of three parts being cut on a CNC Router at the same time.

Let’s take this idea even further

If you’re set up for it, you can take the idea of repeatability even farther. I regularly mill up to 8 identical furniture parts at a time on my machine. I can do this because my CNC Router’s table is laid out for pin-register accuracy and I make good use of a companion modular system of various clamping jigs and fixtures that I created to take advantage of it. Thus, I can have multiple, accurately placed positioning setups on my table and quickly mill several parts at the same time.

As I’ve said before, making accurate parts with a CNC Router is one of the best uses of the machine. And now you know that it’s not just about the accuracy of its cuts. The ability to produce multiple parts makes a CNC Router an even more useful tool in a woodworker’s workshop. The downside, of course, is that you’ll have fewer excuses to only make one of your latest woodworking creations.

Wednesday, May 3, 2017

Is a CNC Router Necessary for Every Craftsman?

CNC routers have been widely used in commercial woodworking for years, and now they’re making their way into hobbyist shops.


Some woodworkers just don’t believe in using CNC routers. They believe that someone who cuts and shapes parts with a CNC router is not a craftsman, and has little or no connection with the materials he or she uses. As someone who began his woodworking career with a strong interest in hand tools, I can understand this point of view. However, my time in the woodworking industry has taught me that proficiency with CNC routers requires more creativity and skill than most people probably realize.
No matter what tool you use to cut or shape a piece of wood, you need to know how the material is going to respond. When you’re cutting end grain, you’re going to tear out the back edge of it whether you use a handheld router, hand plane or a CNC. You need to clamp a block behind your board, chamfer the back edge or take some other action to prevent this tear out.
CNC routers cut solid wood just like portable routers and hand planes. They need to take shallow cuts and multiple passes. Setting a machine’s feed rate too low will result in burns, and setting it slightly too high will give you chatter. When a cut is too deep, a CNC router bit can break. Bit selection is also important, and you need to be able to choose from options like single-flute, straight flute, spiral flute, up-cut, down-cut and compression.
Work holding on a CNC can be a real challenge. Most commercial machines use vacuum systems to keep work pieces in place, with somewhat inconsistent results. If a part is too small, the vacuum won’t hold it. Operators need to know how to build jigs for these situations and how to accommodate them in CNC programs. Hobby machines usually rely on clamps or fasteners for work holding, and knowing how to arrange them, as well as how to program a machine to avoid routing into them requires skill.
Programming a CNC machine is an ability that takes time to master. You can learn the basic G Code commands that control a machine very quickly and use them to create simple parts. However, to really exploit a CNC’s capabilities, you’ll need to learn some kind of CAM software. Once you do, you can cut intricate 3D shapes and ornate carvings.
If you’re interested in learning to use CNC routers for your woodworking projects but are a little intimidated after reading the above, don’t be. Learning to work with CNCs is just like learning to work with hand tools; once you know your material and a few basic skills, you’ll be able to complete some simple projects. With practice, you’ll be able to do more advanced work. The real fun of CNC is in the learning process: exploring the code that drives the machine, using the software and figuring out how to hold difficult work pieces. I can tell you from experience that this process can be one of the most exciting and rewarding parts of your woodworking.
You can build your own CNC router for woodworking. Take Nick’s Popular Woodworking University course, Build a CNC Router. You’ll get a parts list, step by step instructions, a SketchUp model and dimensioned drawings.