584,871 active members*
5,427 visitors online*
Register for free
Login
IndustryArena Forum > CAM Software > Uncategorised CAM Discussion > Fully automatic 3d toolpath generation with rest milling?
Results 1 to 6 of 6
  1. #1
    Join Date
    May 2015
    Posts
    7

    Fully automatic 3d toolpath generation with rest milling?

    I have wanted this quite a number of times over the years, but not least because even with the laborious creation of geometry, there are still serious problems with some of the toolpaths that I have been able to make in mastercam and also Fusion. But most of all, it is an enormous amount of boring, unredeeming work.

    But now I'm making molds that often have 10 layers or more, stacked up. I have to CAM each of these layers, many surfaces per layer, and we only make a few parts per mold. The labor input for the cam process is massive, and very rote.

    I've encountered the desire many times, especially in 4 axis milling. The 3 problems that I dub rollover (tool going over and around the surface top) rollaround (tool going around almost behind a vertical wall), and stabbing (tool going way down to the machining bottom past the edge of a surface) are especially a problem with 4 axis. I want the tool to go only where needed and nowhere else, ever, basically. Fundamental stuff. I don't know why it's not like that already. Every time I slave away making geometry, it's only in aid of this one thing. Pretty much. Well mostly. I know they can be partly prevented by various means involving tool boundary etc. but they are all far from ideal.

    There are quite a few documents on google scholar that discuss the automatic generation of CAM toolpaths, but not usually with rest milling.

    People tell me "oh, that's advanced stuff, maybe other software has it". I've never seen it though.

    I'm thinking I might be able to collaborate with a software developer to make a plugin for fusion 360... Ideally something that you give a set of tools, each with an associated rpm, feed, and max total tool engagement, (so different "tools" for roughing and finishing etc.). Then tell it which tool to use for each stage (roughing semi roughing and finishing, or skip the semi roughing) . Then point at the surface or set of surfaces you want done, and any avoid surfaces. And it gives you back a set of toolpaths, with tool change operations in between them. Always making the tool go only where needed, and nowhere else. There would be a few more user supplied parameters like the stock to leave, but most of the time the defaults would be fine.

    But I don't get why I seem to be the only one who wants this. It seems to be fundamental to the milling progress: send the tool where it needs to go, and nowhere. else. That naturally reduces or eliminates gouges, gouging nearby surfaces, tool wear, reduces milling time (the lack of finishing paths suitable for bull nose end mills is another story, they can slash finishing time by a factor of 8 on a 25 degree surface for the same cusp height according to some documents).

    I think historically the computational requirements were pretty onerous for this, but if the process is parallelized ... fusion can parallelize toolpath creation over the network. Or do it in the cloud? Or heck if it takes 20 minutes, that's the computer huffing and puffing away, not me.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jun 2015
    Posts
    4131
    hy for a better understanding, please post a video/images about how you are doing it, then another about how you wish to shortcut it / kindly
    Ladyhawke - My Delirium, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X_bFO1SNRZg

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Dec 2003
    Posts
    1206

    Re: Fully automatic 3d toolpath generation with rest milling?

    I was receiving promotional literature for just this kind of thing 18-20 years ago.It was said to be under development-maybe it still is.From the OP's description it seems that he is having to repeat the CAM process many times due to a large number of slabs making up the whole piece.Might we be told the typical height of a large job and the Z axis capability of the machine?I found that a combination of boundaries,and a leftover material cutting strategy worked and if it seems slow,just imagine the manual alternative....

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jul 2018
    Posts
    6254

    Re: Fully automatic 3d toolpath generation with rest milling?

    Hi Doug - Does MC have z containment? sounds like this is what you need. I use mecsoft and you can designate surfaces to machine and not machine. MC is advanced as far as I know and should do what you describe. Have you spoken to MC about it? Peter

  5. #5
    Join Date
    May 2015
    Posts
    7
    Quote Originally Posted by peteeng View Post
    Hi Doug - Does MC have z containment? sounds like this is what you need. I use mecsoft and you can designate surfaces to machine and not machine. MC is advanced as far as I know and should do what you describe. Have you spoken to MC about it? Peter
    Hm. Z containment? Never heard of it. I can check it out.

    I did talk to bobcadcam tech support as I used that too for a while and they said they couldn't do what I wanted without creating extra geometry by hand etc.

    I can designate touch and avoid surfaces and that helps sometimes, but it doesn't prevent some unnecessary cutting paths... I'll see if I can get some examples. I don't know if I'm allowed to post the files I'm working on, I don't think it would help much anyway though. You probably know what I mean from the description, the tools just never go only where they need to go....

  6. #6
    Join Date
    May 2015
    Posts
    7
    Quote Originally Posted by routalot View Post
    I was receiving promotional literature for just this kind of thing 18-20 years ago.It was said to be under development-maybe it still is.From the OP's description it seems that he is having to repeat the CAM process many times due to a large number of slabs making up the whole piece.Might we be told the typical height of a large job and the Z axis capability of the machine?I found that a combination of boundaries,and a leftover material cutting strategy worked and if it seems slow,just imagine the manual alternative....
    Yeah I dig it's impossible compared to the manual method, of course. It's a small machine, 130 mm z travel only. It only uses 1/8 inch shaft tools. Usually quite small tools, I use tools a quarter of a mm flute diameter sometimes.

    Basically all I'm trying to say is that I make a lot of unique objects with 3d surfaces... The size isn't the issue so much. A single object of modest complexity can have 15 layers in it, I was working with one that had fifteen layers just today.

    So fifteen unique objects, several surfaces each, for a single part.

    3axis only fortunately.

Similar Threads

  1. automatic edge banding machine with fully enclosed safety shield
    By elephantcnc in forum News Announcements
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 12-07-2019, 02:22 AM
  2. Toolpath Generation
    By Idiod in forum BobCad-Cam
    Replies: 17
    Last Post: 09-16-2015, 08:48 PM
  3. What kind of spindle do I need for fully automatic toolchanges?
    By slashmaster in forum Benchtop Machines
    Replies: 31
    Last Post: 08-28-2009, 11:22 AM
  4. IIJ-Ⅱ Fully Automatic Oil Tester
    By fire4427zlm in forum News Announcements
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 02-10-2007, 02:05 AM

Tags for this Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •