@@stevecox552 oh man thanks I appreciate that I know the videos can be long at times but I'm hoping that you know within these videos there are some useful information that individuals can pull from to apply to their own projects. I appreciate the comment thank you and thank you for watching.
@ your right! I was sending the comment and UA-cam switched over to your video which was next in my que and I’m about an hour into now haha! Learning a ton here as well.
I have a Legacy Maverick 3x5 ATC. I make a lot of inlays and have never had a problem. I primarily use the Zank method. CNC weight, rigidity, and HP do make the difference. Love your videos.
Thank you sir for sharing your videos; I learned a lot from them. If you have the time, I'd like to ask you a question: How to make a perfect square. Couple days ago I made a square 9x6 inches and when I tested it with a machinist square it was out of square 1 mm. I checked my design and made a second square, but the result was the same., Thank you for any help on this.
Question: When cutting the ‘teardrop’, bc of the v bit profile angle, the tip of the teardrop isn’t the full depth as the center is, it slopes up; when cutting the male (plug) does the software accommodate the difference or just cuts down in layers until it reaches the flat depth?
when adding wood material pics is there a limit to the size and resolution of the photos you should stay within so it dont slow the rendering down or use more processor etc ? i hope this make sense what im asking
@@bubba6945 you would want the highest resolution for the most accurate representation of the simulation quality. The simulation at its highest quality is a 98% representation of what the finished project will look like. Use high-resolution images. As far as size I'm not aware of any size limit or at least I have not reached it to date
@@bubba6945 zero plane is what gives the illusion of the end grain would for this preview to simulate an end grain cutting board to simulate all of the wood grains in the end grains of all the inlays and parts the zero plane allows for this visual illusion
I'm only a few minutes into this and loving it,,,,, you sir are a great instructor so far,
@@stevecox552 oh man thanks I appreciate that I know the videos can be long at times but I'm hoping that you know within these videos there are some useful information that individuals can pull from to apply to their own projects. I appreciate the comment thank you and thank you for watching.
Thanks Garrett! The weld feature will save me a ton of time over editing nodes! Always learning and appreciate your time to teach.
@@daniofarnese I think you have me confused with Garrett Fromme. I'm Laney Shaughnessy. Thank you for watching.
@ your right! I was sending the comment and UA-cam switched over to your video which was next in my que and I’m about an hour into now haha! Learning a ton here as well.
This inlay is killer, thank you for your instruction. You are very talented to say the least!😊
I have a Legacy Maverick 3x5 ATC. I make a lot of inlays and have never had a problem. I primarily use the Zank method. CNC weight, rigidity, and HP do make the difference. Love your videos.
I haven't been on FB much but happy late birthday. I like that inlay
Thank you sir for sharing your videos; I learned a lot from them. If you have the time, I'd like to ask you a question: How to make a perfect
square. Couple days ago I made a square 9x6 inches and when I tested it with a machinist square it was out of square 1 mm. I checked my
design and made a second square, but the result was the same., Thank you for any help on this.
That says more about your machine than about the software you are using. Better check with your supplier!
Ive heard you shouldnt use end grain and face grain together in a inlay. is this true and if so why
Question:
When cutting the ‘teardrop’, bc of the v bit profile angle, the tip of the teardrop isn’t the full depth as the center is, it slopes up; when cutting the male (plug) does the software accommodate the difference or just cuts down in layers until it reaches the flat depth?
when adding wood material pics is there a limit to the size and resolution of the photos you should stay within so it dont slow the rendering down or use more processor etc ? i hope this make sense what im asking
@@bubba6945 you would want the highest resolution for the most accurate representation of the simulation quality. The simulation at its highest quality is a 98% representation of what the finished project will look like. Use high-resolution images. As far as size I'm not aware of any size limit or at least I have not reached it to date
I think I missed soething. why use a zero plane for this type of carving?
@@bubba6945 zero plane is what gives the illusion of the end grain would for this preview to simulate an end grain cutting board to simulate all of the wood grains in the end grains of all the inlays and parts the zero plane allows for this visual illusion