Mechanical limitations of the machine prevented us from basing the quality & speed of a carve on the radius of the bit.
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Mechanical limitations of the machine prevented us from basing the quality & speed of a carve on the radius of the bit.
1/8" carving bit is NOW available. Along with new set of carbide bits for CT spindle.
(thought it was live last night)
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http://store.carvewright.com/product...34&j=274458919
Just got the note!
Is there a list of other materials?
The CarveWright 1/8" ballnose carving bit allows for faster carvings in ONLY soft materials such as basswood or foam.
So how does the machine know you're carving balsa or foam board, or does the machine just carve faster when you choose the 1/8" bit? I think the answer is obvious, but I can see people selecting it unsuspectingly, and there does not seem to be any pop-up warning in the software when it is selected. And then there are those who wish to use the bit in other materials?
So the machine can push a 3/16 carving bit but not a 1/8. Why not split the difference on feed and speed and give us that option?
By "mechanical limitations" I think Metallus may be referring to the limitations on z truck acceleration. There is a limit to how fast the z truck can move up and down as it follows a pattern.
Maybe the question should be: why can the 3/16 bit carve twice as fast? Is the x feed rate, the y feed rate, or both rates which are faster?
I am going to beat this dead horse one more time. A tapered 1/8 bit is very stout. If the X axis step size was doubled that of the 1/16 rate, and all other settings stayed the same, would that not cut the carve time in half. I would think the machine is stout enough to do that. OK I'm done. I promise not to bring it up again.
Morton
We do not sell a tapered 1/8" carving bit. It is a straight ball nose bit.
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