Wanted to learn how to model in blender for a new 3d printer. Followed along Blender Guru's donut tutorial which ended in rendering a video. Very Informative. Thanks!
I’m confused a bit about at the beginning why you chose the avoidance geometry for the part. I thought that was for areas you didn’t want to get near like a vise for example. I’m learning still
That's not quality bro. Use this 3.82 x 15 and divide by tap Dia, iquals RPM , RPM divided by rpm iquals the feed, and use a different method like the machine and a fixture.
Are we talking on the machine or mastercam? I would check setup on both but would advise not to run this on a machine. It's an incomplete program and was just used to go over flow line tool path.
I haven't used mastercam in about a year so I'm a little fuzzy on the reasoning. I just remember doing it that for years. You might be right to use Machining Geometry. Try it! Just make sure your simulation represents your actual work environment to avoid gouging and broken endmills. 😁
I would be so happy if you kept making these videos sir…. Thank you for what you’ve already shared. Interested in making some extra money teaching mastercam? If so, let me know. We can chat.
I had a question. I'm trying to machine a undercut. I've been reading on forums that flow line might work? But I don't know much about flowline. Is it possible to make it machine from the top down, but at the end make the tool come back up to the starting point then move off the part? It's kind of like a wide ID slot but at the bottom of the casting there is a feature, so the too can't "lead out" at the bottom or it would machine right through the cast in feature. What I'm trying to make the program do is come down on center to my start depth (the slot is already partially started). Move into the slot and helix down to my depth. Have the tool come back up to the start depth and move back to center before ending. My apologies, I feel like I'm rambling.
I can plunge into where ever I feel like pal! You're right though. I should have made it more clear that this was strictly going over the single tool path not the entire part
Thank you for the content. This is the second time I have referred to your tutorials. You've really helped me... Just a little advice the next time you run a Flowline, start at the bottom, and slow down the first pass only. that way you can utilize the dia of the tool SFM rather than the ball, plunging is hard on the tool very little SFM if any, and loads up.