Does anyone have the alphabet done very simply, so there would be as few XYZ moves as possible, with no broken contours etc.. 3/8' tall would be good, but I can scale it. I want to attempt a macro to do lettering.
Does anyone have the alphabet done very simply, so there would be as few XYZ moves as possible, with no broken contours etc.. 3/8' tall would be good, but I can scale it. I want to attempt a macro to do lettering.
here is the scroll in metric used a friends mastercam (his work) and Mach3 post this version uses a 19mm 45Deg V cutter I have placed it in a txt file so it should be good for all
(project size is X=115mm Y=240mm)
is this a good Grey Hound
See if this will work
Jim
That greyhound is really nice...I will use it....Thanks alot
bike doing wheelie:idea:
Heres a deer and fairy done in inkscape
heres a good flower pot and design
Thanks Salty that worked better. Heres a photo of it. made on a scrap of lamenent flooring and spray painted
Heres some tv network trade marks :bs:
here some funny sport drawing
Just a test. The flooring is eazy to machine and the backside is flat smooth and takes laquer paint well. You could incorperate it into a wall tile set in a dry location or something.
the flooring you cut, would you say it is VINAL in apperance here in Australia (if it's the stuff I'm thinking off) we call it "LINO"..
Normally the LINO is glued to a Brown board which has a yellow insert running it's length so it can be joined? if it is this stuff it seams to be fairly rubberry and I am wondering what sort of cuter / Speed / feed you use to cut the "LINO" also was it glue to a spoil board when you cut it?
No it is a tounge and groove board made to look like hardwood flooring, a kind of a mdf pressed sawdust with a super hard suface top and bottom, the botom side is smooth the top has the fake wood grain. I cut it on my mill with a carbide v groove router bit.
Salty do a search for laminate flooring. You will find tons of it. I have some that looks like oak in my living room. It is much more scratch resistant than real oak. It locks together on all edges. It is also water resistant. I got a sample and put it under the drip of my shop for about 6 months before I decided to put it down in the house. It was untouched by the weather.
Jerry
Oh! OK, yer we that stuff here also, over here it's called floating flooring, Ours is like plywood with a 2-3mm veneer of real timber glued to the top and once assembled the whole floor is coated in a heay duty Polyurathane varnish
here is another
another