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Brian Crowe  
#1 Posted : Thursday, August 21, 2008 9:38:11 AM(UTC)
Brian Crowe

Rank: Junior Member

Joined: 8/9/2008(UTC)
Posts: 29

Hi Folks - Newbie Q1 and 2 are in the general section - FYI...

When I am aligning solids in a model, I have found that drawing several lines or other 2D objects with conveniently located snap points make my alignment problems almost disappear. When I export my model to a DXF file, I presume that these 2D objects are embedded in the file along with the 3D solid information. So, maybe someone can confirm that is true - just curious...

If I send my model to a machine shop, I assume that they know how to process out the 2D objects. Does someone know more about the process of the receipt of a DXF file and the conversion of that file to be useful input into the CAM machine - a 3D mill for example. I am sure that there are trivial elements in that process on the CAM end that I do not need to even know about on the model design end, but i suspect that there are quite a number of considerations (some I will learn the hard way) that impact the utility of the DXF file and the end result from the CAM machinery. Some things I might do may require unanticipated attention from the CAM folks...

So, just curious what a ViaCAD 2D/3D user needs to do to make the CAM operation as smooth as possible - starting first with considerations for 2D objects, for example.

A second consideration I am making is whether the order of the model build process has an impact. For example, I tend to model from the Top view first, and then from the Bottom view - does that impact a CAM process directly (I doubt it)? I tend to mix Unions and Subtractions - is it less ambiguous on the CAM end to do all Unions before any Subtractions?

Thanks - Brian
ZeroLengthCurve  
#2 Posted : Thursday, August 21, 2008 10:45:39 AM(UTC)
ZeroLengthCurve

Rank: Senior Member

Joined: 5/15/2008(UTC)
Posts: 991

Thanks: 19 times
Was thanked: 37 time(s) in 25 post(s)
I'm curious: Why do you leave the alignment aids in the drawing? Why not put them on a layer you can delete, saving a copy of the file for machining and one for your own edits, after assembling/aligning the parts?
blowlamp  
#3 Posted : Thursday, August 21, 2008 10:49:13 AM(UTC)
blowlamp

Rank: Senior Member

Joined: 6/28/2008(UTC)
Posts: 648

Hi Brian.
I might be able to answer some of your questions as I'm using ViaCad for drawing parts for machining. I also do the Cam bit myself for lathe and milling. If you're talking about milling, then 2D and 3D operations are done differently, so we perhaps need to know a little more about what you want to make. The one thing I can tell you is that the machine shop will not know how you want your part making from just a drawing. For example, a drawing of a 2D rectangle could be machined on the inside to create a pocket (of any realistic depth you specify) or around the outside to create a relief - different things from the same drawing. I hope I'm not telling you things you already know.
I will help you if I can. Cheers, Martin.
unique  
#4 Posted : Thursday, August 21, 2008 12:06:23 PM(UTC)
unique

Rank: Senior Member

Joined: 6/24/2008(UTC)
Posts: 591

Hi Brian,

Quote:
If I send my model to a machine shop, I assume that they know how to process out the 2D objects. Does someone know more about the process of the receipt of a DXF file and the conversion of that file to be useful input into the CAM machine - a 3D mill for example. I am sure that there are trivial elements in that process on the CAM end that I do not need to even know about on the model design end, but i suspect that there are quite a number of considerations (some I will learn the hard way) that impact the utility of the DXF file and the end result from the CAM machinery. Some things I might do may require unanticipated attention from the CAM folks...

Firsty, alignment aids and probably of no interest to the CAM programmer unless they too need this info to reference from ?. If the wireframe is being used in CAM then putting it on a seperate layer will be a blessing for them, DXF should respect layers. Dont forget you also have the option to export 'selected' geometry?

Quote:
So, just curious what a ViaCAD 2D/3D user needs to do to make the CAM operation as smooth as possible - starting first with considerations for 2D objects, for example.


Again, depends on what they are doing / being told to do ?. We are new to VC but I am designing and modeling upto 3D including adding complex stuff from Rhino etc etc...my resulting model is then exported as SAT into EdgeCAM and paths are produced.

Quote:
A second consideration I am making is whether the order of the model build process has an impact. For example, I tend to model from the Top view first, and then from the Bottom view - does that impact a CAM process directly (I doubt it)? I tend to mix Unions and Subtractions - is it less ambiguous on the CAM end to do all Unions before any Subtractions?


Modeling process is a black art and specific to each and every designer and part for that matter...theres more than one way of skinning a cat right ?. Why dont you post something up in the forum so that users can advise possible methods you can try. An advice/help section in the forum would be a good idea for people to pass ideas & knowledge over (Tim) ?

HTH
Brian Crowe  
#5 Posted : Thursday, August 21, 2008 12:17:00 PM(UTC)
Brian Crowe

Rank: Junior Member

Joined: 8/9/2008(UTC)
Posts: 29

Thanks both of you for replying.

To ZeroLengthCurve, I have my 2D objects in a separate layer from the solids. That in itself is good to organize my drawing as I can hide it easily or even delete it entirely if that is necessary. Thanks for that tip!

To blowlamp, my 2D objects are not intended to be machined in any way. They are all "helpers". Some are surface profiles that I extrude, and these remain afterwards. Some are simply lines with a convenient snap point that help me align elements of my model. An extruded rectangle would be a block, and that block is what I would machine. The rectangle is just the surface profile...

The Concept Explorer shows all the surface profiles that I extrude as children of the corresponding solids in the features list, and these profiles are referred again to when I do Addition, Subtraction, Intersection and even Solid Alignment operations on my model. Further, deleting these profiles causes a warning dialog that links will be lost upon their deletion. This leads me to wonder if this information (the 2D surface profiles) may be necessary to retain for some reason.

So, I guess I can narrow this discussion down to a few questions for starters:
- If I export a DXF file to a machine shop, is the 2D surface profile information necessary?
- If I export my "helper" layer in the DXF file to the machine shop, do the 2D helper lines and other 2D shapes cause a problem? Does it hurt to include the Helper layer, or is it essential to eliminate it before export?

Now, the order of modeling operations - the concept explorer presents a rough sequence-wise order for my modeling work - because of the link relationships and object-children containment, it is not exactly the sequence of my own work, but it is often quite close. Does the sequence of my model creation matter to the machinability and cost for my part? Here is one question to consider that is more specific:
- Is it important to do all my building up - all the Extrusions, Solid Adds, Bosses and Chamfers first to create the gross rough form before I do my removals - before I do Subtractions, Intersections, Holes and Fillets?

Sound like Newbie questions, don't they? Sorry for that... I DO certainly appreciate your time and the experience you are sharing.

Thanks - Brian
Brian Crowe  
#6 Posted : Thursday, August 21, 2008 12:31:43 PM(UTC)
Brian Crowe

Rank: Junior Member

Joined: 8/9/2008(UTC)
Posts: 29

Hi Paul,

Martin sounds like he has a fair amount of first hand experience here as he does both the modeling and machining! Lucky - sounds fun! It would be really beneficial to walk a trial part all the way through the CAM process to see what they do from the receipt of the DXF file or whatever I send to the production of the finished part.

I would assume that if all dimensions and measurements can be relative to the origin on ViaCAD (none need to be absolute), then the 2D alignment information is unnecessary. That is probably the case if the CAM process is all done on one machine. I am not sure I can really visualize the need for an absolute measurement from some external reference point...

I posted a reply while you were typing, Paul. I boiled my concerns down to three questions.

Thanks for all of your time folks! I appreciate it.

Brian
blowlamp  
#7 Posted : Thursday, August 21, 2008 1:59:58 PM(UTC)
blowlamp

Rank: Senior Member

Joined: 6/28/2008(UTC)
Posts: 648

Brian.
You are aware that Cam is another process before machining aren't you? I ask because you said this "That is probably the case if the CAM process is all done on one machine." and it made me wonder. What I mean is, that you can't just send a drawing (2D or 3D) to the miller and expect it to make it from that, it has to be converted to a language the machine tool understands and this is known as Gcode. Gcode is what the Cam system produces. Have a look here http://www.zen26610.zen.co.uk/overview/level2%202.html for an intro into 2D Cam systems.
Cheers, Martin.
Brian Crowe  
#8 Posted : Thursday, August 21, 2008 2:56:58 PM(UTC)
Brian Crowe

Rank: Junior Member

Joined: 8/9/2008(UTC)
Posts: 29

Hi Martin -

I was certain that the mill wouldn't accept the DXF file directly and operate from it. The link you give makes it fairly clear some of what a person must do with the dxf file to generate the machine's control file. It looks like it can be a fair amount of work for even a 2D part.

There must be some fundamental limitations to what a 3D machine can do - I guess it depends completely on the machine used. Time for me to immerse myself in this - I have a friend with a machine shop...

Thanks for this link, Martin!

Best regards,

Brian
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