Thank you for the insight! Relatively new to cnc, and it seems that most bit manufacturers lean more conservative on the speeds and feeds. (Is my understanding) That is not necessarily a bad thing, but most manufacturers will then state, make the adjustments on your own particular machine for optimal use for a particular bit. Well, how many bits do I need to break, to find out what would be optimal? lol Thanks for sharing the info, and giving a basis in which to start dialing in the correct feeds and speeds.
Thanks - glad it helped! I also partnered with another CNC users and created the CNC Explorer application to help dial in feeds and speeds if you are interested as well. Thanks for watching!
Tom - really appreciate your videos. Made my journey into CNC smoother. Quick question - I have the Onefinity X50 Woodworker. After updating to a new version of the firmware, my config file seems to be problematic. Can you share the changes you have made and/or where I might find the correct ones? Thanks, Tom
Hi Tom - thanks for the kudos! Which config files are you referring to? The Onefinity configuration file? I can send you mine if you shoot me an email. You might have to tweak it a little since I adjusted my revolutions/step. Alternatively, I think you can completely reset the config from the controller. Let me know - thanks for watching!
Hello Christian -- generally I recommend the Whiteside (amzn.to/3MER9ls) or the Amana (amzn.to/49xXJ7a) -- both are bowl bits with a nice profile. If you want to flatten something, then you have a couple options: Whiteside spoil board bit (amzn.to/3syiOxO) or the Amana Flycutter (amzn.to/3ssI3S5) -- the flycutter is utterly amazing, but it is stupid expensive on the surface. If you factor in the replaceable cutters, it is the best long term investment. Hope this helps and thanks for watching!
Hi Anthony - yes it is. now that hobbyist level machines are capable of reliably milling metal (mostly aluminum, it will play a bigger factor. I still think DOC is most important though :) Thanks for watching!
Thank you so much
This is exactly what i was looking for a starting point to make my own adjustment on the way. Very helpfull
Thanks Christian - and thanks for watching!
Thank you for the insight! Relatively new to cnc, and it seems that most bit manufacturers lean more conservative on the speeds and feeds. (Is my understanding) That is not necessarily a bad thing, but most manufacturers will then state, make the adjustments on your own particular machine for optimal use for a particular bit. Well, how many bits do I need to break, to find out what would be optimal? lol Thanks for sharing the info, and giving a basis in which to start dialing in the correct feeds and speeds.
Thanks - glad it helped! I also partnered with another CNC users and created the CNC Explorer application to help dial in feeds and speeds if you are interested as well. Thanks for watching!
Tom - really appreciate your videos. Made my journey into CNC smoother. Quick question - I have the Onefinity X50 Woodworker. After updating to a new version of the firmware, my config file seems to be problematic. Can you share the changes you have made and/or where I might find the correct ones? Thanks, Tom
Hi Tom - thanks for the kudos! Which config files are you referring to? The Onefinity configuration file? I can send you mine if you shoot me an email. You might have to tweak it a little since I adjusted my revolutions/step. Alternatively, I think you can completely reset the config from the controller. Let me know - thanks for watching!
Hello I am looking for a bit that can take out a large amount of ships to make trays or bowl
Could you guide me please
Hello Christian -- generally I recommend the Whiteside (amzn.to/3MER9ls) or the Amana (amzn.to/49xXJ7a) -- both are bowl bits with a nice profile. If you want to flatten something, then you have a couple options: Whiteside spoil board bit (amzn.to/3syiOxO) or the Amana Flycutter (amzn.to/3ssI3S5) -- the flycutter is utterly amazing, but it is stupid expensive on the surface. If you factor in the replaceable cutters, it is the best long term investment. Hope this helps and thanks for watching!
Thank you
Very appreciated
@@christiantardieu7561 No problem -- best of luck!
Is chip load more important to metal carving rather than wood
Hi Anthony - yes it is. now that hobbyist level machines are capable of reliably milling metal (mostly aluminum, it will play a bigger factor. I still think DOC is most important though :) Thanks for watching!