I know longer endmills can very quickly start to go “sideways” (pun intended ) but by adjusting my feedrates I have had a lot of luck with these and find myself using them as one of my go-to endmills: CTS 1/16x3/8 4fl
They are tough little dudes that take abuse very well.
They also have a 5/8" length I am curious to test out:CTS 1/16x5/8 4fl
Edit: I should make it clear I cut mostly softer woods.
(ridiculously small stepover used just as a way to preview the details of the resulting cut)
@fenrus: agreed on the looong roughing ahead if I use a small stepdown. Is that g-code you posted from your own G-code generation tool (last time I checked it “only” managed SVGs) ? The header does not look like either Fusion or CCPro. Just when I needed a large block of Renshape to max out feedrate, I used my last/only one.
@Microwave_Monkey thanks for the recommendation, I’m afraid I would have a hard time finding that brand here, but I might be able to find the next best thing.
I saw that thread, but somehow missed that one post where you mentioned using your own CAM. It’s not up on github yet right ? (and tell me if I should stop mentioning you and your awesome tools, maybe you’re preparing a commercial version of your own). Still impressed.
Allright, first road bump, I had never tried using a non-rectangular area for heightmaps in CC Pro, I draw a circle and I thought it would clamp the heightmap to within that selected shape…but no it doesn’t.
Am I right that heightmaps are currently only supported on a region that is the same shape/dimensions as the imported image (after scaling), i.e. the black & red outline ?
I have different ways to workaround this, but wanted to double-check if I am missing something. I do want to contain the heightmap-generated 3D surface within that circular region.
I had this on the backburner and now I’m back to it, and…it turns that CC Pro seems to not care much about me selecting the circle for the roughing toolpath,
I wonder if this is a variation of the same bug/behavior reported in other threads (about CC Pro using the selected shape as the limit for the tip of the endmill, i.e. not containing the endmill within the shape as it does for regular pockets)
So I took a look at your contest entry to see how you managed that, and your spindle heightmap shows up with jagged edges all around the circle shape:
so what it will do is an outer contour with center of the bit at the circle (that I complained about) but that contour is at the height of the thing at the edges of the endmill… for you most of that is at surface (since it’s dark in your screenshots) except for the spikes.where it’ll go down
in my picture it was “mid level gray” so not at the surface
I first tried using a circle which radius is smaller by half the tool diameter compared to the original circle, to compensate for that “center of the bit at the circle”, but…it will still try and cut into those pointy corners a bit. Only when I use a circle that is one tool diameter smaller in radius, does it behave as I want.
It really looks to me as if the toolpath is using an “outer contour of the selected shape with the selected tool” as the boundary, but I have messed up with my file so much that I’ll have to redo a simple project from scratch to confirm.
What I would have liked is that CC Pro contain the toolpath generation within the boundary I selected (circle below in orange), so I would have expected it NOT to try and go in those pointy corners:
but it does:
Anyway, I compensated for that behavior by reducing the outer circle diameter and it turned out ok, but it’s far from intuitive.
I wish we had a formal bug report & tracking system (à la github), because posting about a bug (or at least a questionable implementation) and hoping for someone to catch the ball on the developer side is not very predictable.
Yes, I understand, and I was also thinking about it for other projects, how to manage this.
I have a solution, I think you would have to rework your drawing on another software, cut the tips and reload in the same way in CC.
What format do you have it in?
Yeah I’m sure I could clamp/mask the PNG heightmap manually in GIMP or something, to only keep the circular area, but that’s extra work, and I think CC should do it for us by enforcing the boundary of the selected shape.