Hey Nick, great video. Another option that might simplify things would be to use your bracket with the scribed lines to zero X and Y. Then, use the Onefinity user interface to move your bit to 1" in X and 1" in Y. Then, simply zero out x and y again. This would save you having to enlarge your stock on your designs and would be just as repeatable. Cheers.
I've made several jigs on 3/4 mdf, I machine it flat and then drill holes every inch to thread inserts, I put the whole board on my machine and it nests itself square, I use an xyz probe with openbuilds blackbox. Use macros to save locations per jig
Hi Mr. Zamora, thank you for sharing. Got a question for you, if you can help me. Couple days ago I cut a square 9 x 6 inches, and when I finished it and tested it with a machinist square, it was off of square by about a mm. I checked the design and tried again; the result was the same. I have a TTC450 and use vcarve pro. Thank you for any help.
For the vast majority of cases I'd say that would work great. I've had times where those edges have been machined in one way or another and are unable to be used at a later time. And it also squares up your material.
Hey Nick, great video. Another option that might simplify things would be to use your bracket with the scribed lines to zero X and Y. Then, use the Onefinity user interface to move your bit to 1" in X and 1" in Y. Then, simply zero out x and y again. This would save you having to enlarge your stock on your designs and would be just as repeatable. Cheers.
I've made several jigs on 3/4 mdf, I machine it flat and then drill holes every inch to thread inserts, I put the whole board on my machine and it nests itself square, I use an xyz probe with openbuilds blackbox. Use macros to save locations per jig
use a dial test indicator and set xy0 the center
Hi Mr. Zamora, thank you for sharing. Got a question for you, if you can help me. Couple days ago I cut a square 9 x 6 inches, and when I
finished it and tested it with a machinist square, it was off of square by about a mm. I checked the design and tried again; the result was
the same. I have a TTC450 and use vcarve pro. Thank you for any help.
Why not just use a triquetra xyz probe?
For the vast majority of cases I'd say that would work great. I've had times where those edges have been machined in one way or another and are unable to be used at a later time. And it also squares up your material.
let the finished ht be z0