Four Axis Milling


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For this week’s skillbuilder, I started by thinking about what the advantages and limitations of the 4-axis are.

Things the 4-axis is good at:

Limitations of the 4-axis:

I decided to run this test with the leftover poplar that I’d already turned round on the lathe.

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I took inspiration from framed ~ obscured, another experiment that I’m currently working on. I already had these swoopy designs in Illustrator, so I drew up yet another version and exported these as SVGs into Fusion.

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In Fusion, modeled a simple cylinder and embossed my designs onto the outside. (This required two separate SVG imports, in order to place the embosses on opposite sides of the cylinder).

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Then, I exported as an STL, and brought it down to the sub-basement to start milling.

The original estimate (with default supports) came out to around 1.2 hours. After tweaking, I got it down to .6 hours. After that, running it was a snap.

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At first, I was a little startled with how deep the bit was milling, so I paused the job. I think that was the F&S from choosing soft wood rather than hard. I’d done a little research on whether Poplar should be milled as one or the other, and came up with a some conflicting answers; from my experience with it on the lathe, I decided to chance the soft setting. It seemed to work out well.

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I did make the mistake of not updating margins in both the roughing and the finishing steps. The finishing step plunged twice into the un-cut margin to the side of my piece before I stopped it; nothing seemed damaged, but it was definitely an unpleasantly surprising experience. I was able to edit the milling paths and only re-run the finishing pass.

I’m pretty pleased with the final piece. The two plunges make me a bit hesitant to run with my original plan of parting the piece on the lathe, but I’ll find a way of cutting the ends off and turning it into something nice.

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Tools:

Takeaways:

Posted/updated 2022-11-08

Tagged: content , itp , subtraction
Tech: , lathe , 4-axis , CNC , CAD , Fusion360

pre-fermenting: ingredients have been mixed, roughly stirred by hand, water and flour and the magic in the air, this will become something new and the change is rapid but we just have to wait to see when it'll be ready

* also found frequently in sunlight, on the pier, in the middle of it all, at a cafe table