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Thread: Jog to Position - Need instructions

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  1. #1

    Default Jog to Position - Need instructions

    I am trying to use the Jog to Position method to place a carving on a piece of wood in a particular place.
    I have a customer who is an engineer and he wants this carving off center in a certain position that he has drawn on the wood.
    Can anyone give me some detailed instructions on how to use this feature?
    I have tried. I can get the truck to jog to the starting position, but when I tell it to start carving, it moves several inches from where I instructed it and tries to carve there.

  2. #2
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    Jun 2013
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    From my experience, the jog to position is the top left corner of the board in designer, not the carving itself. you would jog to the corner (standing at the keyboard) to the right of the board, the keyboard side. (essentially upside down from what you see on screen)

  3. #3
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    I use place on end most of the time.

    If I wanted to place art on a specific point on the board I would first take a tape measure and measure from the front end of the board and from the brass roller side of the board to the center of the engineer point.

    I would then in designer draw 2 boxes, one on the length of the board and one on the width and place the boxes like a on screen tape measure.

    I would then place a drill hole in the center of the designer board offset location, remembering that the brass roller is on the top of the screen and the right side of the screen is front of the board.

    You can delete the measuring blocks and place the art centered on the drill hole then delete the drill hole.

    Another option is to use a peek a boo sled with a cover sheet....

    I needed to re cut some holes last summer in some FRP Plastic making them bigger. I used a sled and had previously cut the top sheet and indexed it on my railed sled. I would align the sheet needing to be cut with the peek a boo sheet on top. Once lined up, I removed the top sheet and used tape to hold the sheet needing to be cut. I let the bit touch on the wide sled rail and set the depth to cut through the FRP. worked...

    You could make a sled and a peek a boo to position the board offset area on the sled then tape of hot glue it down for repeatable results.


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  4. #4
    Join Date
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    http://support.carvewright.com/wp-co..._Chapter_1.pdf

    See Determine Project Size on Page 21

    If you add the 7" to your board, we suggest say NO to STAY UNDER ROLLERS. Otherwise, it will shrink your project 3.5" from the end.
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  5. #5
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    The easiest thing to do is jog to center. Mark where you want the center of the pattern to be on the board and jog to it.

  6. #6
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    I use sleds with 4" end pieces for virtually everything. Most of the time I say yes to stay under rollers, using both center on board and jog to corner depending on the project. It has never resized my project, not once.

  7. #7
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    Well I hope we are not confusing Rick to much on his question. He called me yesterday to see if I know how to use the jog to position so he could place the pattern at the location the customer wanted. Since I do not use this function, lack of understanding for the most part and not able to find documentation on the feature, I pointed him to the forum as I thought there were several who do use it.

    I told him if all else fails to to set up his design board as the pocket in his sled. (he is using a sled) Then draw a rectangle to show the placement of the board in the sled and after measuring the location for the pattern on the real board, place the pattern on the design board at that location. Then he could do the normal set up as, no to stay under rollers and place on center.....
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  8. #8
    Join Date
    Feb 2011
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    Hey Dan , So your saying that when you use jog , the point where you jog to is going to be the center of the carve . I don't use jog , I tried it a few times in the early dayz and just gave up trying to figure out what it was doing. Ha
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  9. #9
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    When you use jog to center, it puts the center of the pattern where you jog to. (This is not the jog to touch but jog to place.)

  10. #10

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    Quote Originally Posted by bergerud View Post
    When you use jog to center, it puts the center of the pattern where you jog to. (This is not the jog to touch but jog to place.)
    Technically, jog to center places the center of your virtual board, not a pattern. No difference if a single pattern is centered on the board of course.

    Another way to do this would be to set your virtual board in Designer the same size as your actual board, and place the project off center in Designer per your engineer's drawing.

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