Excellent tutorial! The instructor clearly knows her stuff, and is thorough about explaining everything that's happening as she does it. (So many tutorials gloss over things that are assumed to be known already.) The cadence is great too; I didn't have to skip back much at all for missing anything.
Excellent video thank you. I do have a question, if I have a xyz probe and have centered the job elements do I need to use the dowels or am I missing something?
Hey John, thank you for your kind comments. Yes you need dowels, so you'll machine through the material and into the waste board so when you flip the part over you can align it to the dowel positions :) I hope this helps :)
Hi! Thank you so much for posting this great tutorial! I am having some trouble with the symmetrical doweling system and I wanted to ask how you might correct it. In my jobs, I always flip horizontally along the X axis using four dowel holes pre-drilled into the spoiler board (it should be noted that my material is always 4'x4' 1/4" baltic birch ply) that correspond with four dowel holes that are drilled into the corners of the sheet at the beginning of my machining process. However, there is almost always variation (usually between 0.025" to 0.05") along the X axis. I have watched this video a few times and have tried to make sure that I am following these steps exactly, but I usually end up having to use an offset on Mach 3 to compensate for this variation. I am wondering if you have ever dealt with this issue before and if so, what was your solution? My jobs do not have very much variation in tool path or process so I'm looking for a sort of "set it and forget it" solution. Thank you so much for reading!
Hey There! Thanks for reaching out to us here on UA-cam, this one may be better answered by our support team who could take a look at your file too to help point anything that could be a problem. You can e-mail them on support@vectric.com I hope this helps, thanks again for your comments and thank you for watching! Good luck!
Спасибо! Но так и не понял почему при вырезании по контуру с обратной стороны прорезались только 3 из 5 квадратов... а на двух просто сделало пару отверстий...
Hey there! It's really up to you where you want to set it, I prefer to set it from the material surface on the top and machine bed for the bottom side so that I'm always referencing from the same face (that being the top cut) I hope this helps :)
Hi John if you have V11 the new files are now here: www.vectric.com/support/tutorials/cut2d-desktop?search=two%20sided&video=introduction-to-two-sided-machining Thanks, hope this helps!
Excellent tutorial! The instructor clearly knows her stuff, and is thorough about explaining everything that's happening as she does it. (So many tutorials gloss over things that are assumed to be known already.) The cadence is great too; I didn't have to skip back much at all for missing anything.
Glad it was helpful! Thank you!
Best explanatory video I've yet seen. You made this 100% clear. Thank you.
Hey Don! Thank you for your comments, we appreciate your feedback and it's good to know that this is clear :) Thanks again!
Wonderful tutorial. You guys rock! I could listen to out English cousins all day long! My Texas twang does not do justice! Thanks!!!!
Thank you Jay!
Excellent video thank you. I do have a question, if I have a xyz probe and have centered the job elements do I need to use the dowels or am I missing something?
Hey John, thank you for your kind comments. Yes you need dowels, so you'll machine through the material and into the waste board so when you flip the part over you can align it to the dowel positions :) I hope this helps :)
Hi! Thank you so much for posting this great tutorial! I am having some trouble with the symmetrical doweling system and I wanted to ask how you might correct it. In my jobs, I always flip horizontally along the X axis using four dowel holes pre-drilled into the spoiler board (it should be noted that my material is always 4'x4' 1/4" baltic birch ply) that correspond with four dowel holes that are drilled into the corners of the sheet at the beginning of my machining process. However, there is almost always variation (usually between 0.025" to 0.05") along the X axis. I have watched this video a few times and have tried to make sure that I am following these steps exactly, but I usually end up having to use an offset on Mach 3 to compensate for this variation. I am wondering if you have ever dealt with this issue before and if so, what was your solution? My jobs do not have very much variation in tool path or process so I'm looking for a sort of "set it and forget it" solution. Thank you so much for reading!
Hey There! Thanks for reaching out to us here on UA-cam, this one may be better answered by our support team who could take a look at your file too to help point anything that could be a problem. You can e-mail them on support@vectric.com I hope this helps, thanks again for your comments and thank you for watching! Good luck!
Great video 👍
Thank you for your kind comments! Glad you liked it!
Спасибо! Но так и не понял почему при вырезании по контуру с обратной стороны прорезались только 3 из 5 квадратов... а на двух просто сделало пару отверстий...
After you flip your board over, do you do your tool set from the board face or the machine bed?
Hey there! It's really up to you where you want to set it, I prefer to set it from the material surface on the top and machine bed for the bottom side so that I'm always referencing from the same face (that being the top cut) I hope this helps :)
I cannot find the file for this project on your website, can you please share link?
Hi John if you have V11 the new files are now here: www.vectric.com/support/tutorials/cut2d-desktop?search=two%20sided&video=introduction-to-two-sided-machining Thanks, hope this helps!
Muy enredado y con mala dicción evita que el traductor de Google traduzca con su reconocida certeza. Buena intención sin duda.