I see alot of guy's who join this site are jewelry makers, do they use CNC machines?
I see alot of guy's who join this site are jewelry makers, do they use CNC machines?
I have seen some nice little CNC that jewlers use but is seems they are spacifically designed for engraving
L.S. Tool & Precision Inc.
Taking machining to the
next level, combining creativity, ingenuity and the technology of CAD/CAM & CNC Machining
“When ingenuity makes all the difference”
http://hometown.aol.com/lstool1/myhomepage/business.html
Check out this site I know it says handcrafted but a link from a machine tool site lead me hear so I know better, beautiful work tho
http://members.rennlist.com/statmand...lticKnots.html
boxwood
OOh man they are beautiful rings!
I am new to your forum. My name is Jeff Dunnington. One of my clients told me about your great site. I have been a Designer/Jeweler for 31 years and playing with a Roland MDX-15 for 3 years. I now sell this machine and a simple cad cam solution to the jewelry industry.
I am exploring other CAD-CAM programs to supplement my system and my new machine the JWX-10. Looks like the resources of your board will be invaluable. Hope I will be able to contribute to your forum and if there is any help anybody needs in reference to jewelry or any of the mills made by Roland please let me know.
Please take a look at my website http://www.3dwaxmill.com any input would be appreciated.
Best regards
Jeff Dunnington
http://www.3dwaxmill.com
http://www.dreamgold.com
That is Dan Statmans site. He made all his own cnc machines and uses turbocnc to control them.
E
Originally Posted by boxwood
I wish it wouldn't crash.
Paul
Yes there is a lot of CNC in the Jewelry Industry. I use a benchman 2500 39k spindle.
design in solidworks. the higher End of jewelry manufacturing is the swiss Watch industry. they have machine that will blow your mind and any budget.
Mbair
Made this using Artcam Jewelsmith, Rhino and a CNC machine
[IMG][/IMG]
Well, the 3D printers certainly get used to make models that get used for casting. Milling precious metals has got to be frowned upon due to the material lost as chips which are difficult to recover uncontaminated and there's significant limits to what the milling process can do.
3D printing is cheap and fast, and relatively straightforward, with a great deal of detail and can make surfaces that would be impossible to do with milling. No tool changes necessary! No complicated questions of how the toolpath's gonna do work. Of course you end up with a prototype made out of 3D printer medium which isn't usually an art project in itself, it's a casting prototype.
IIRC some 3D printers are made to print out in wax that can be burned out in standard investment casting, which is pretty awesome. Plastic models would have to have a silicone mold step to make a wax copy, which couldn't support complex internal surfaces- you'd not be able to remove the plastic model nor the wax model from the silicone mold. Wax going direct to investment casting, that has essentially limitless capabilities.
Hi guys,I'm new to this site,I own a roland machine and have little problems with it but it works generally fine,I've been in jewelry manufacturing for 27 years and seems that everybody uses cnc now,so I've tried to update myself,I have a lot of questions but I'll post them little by litle later,if you have any questions about jewelry,(the hand work side of it),feel free to tell them to me.
Thanks
[email protected]
You have already seen for of the great guys and their work, Here is my build thread on turning a maxnc into a jewelry making machine.............
http://www.cnczone.com/forums/showthread.php?t=30988
*chuckle*....NO, Paul they actually carve all these intricate designs manually.....see http://3dcadjewelry.com/
Also, don't be offended....it's Saturday and the wine bottle is starting to float.
Paul
I bet Paul has learned a lot since 2003
I make small jewelry type items.
I found this lathe http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...m=220279605743
Would you jewelers recommend something like this?
Jason
Jason,
What are you thinking about using it for?
Most of us use a four axis mill for jewelry design, not a cnc lathe.
Jeff...
Jorge
Please let me know if I can help you with your Roland Mill.
I specialize in the Roland MDX-15 and have a rotary axis I make for that mill.
Take a look at the Jewelry that has been produce using the 3D Wax Mill Cad Jewelry Solution. Here is the link to my Gallery with more than 450 pictures.
Jeff Dunnington
http://www.3dwaxmill.com
Best regards
Jeff Dunnington
http://www.3dwaxmill.com
http://www.dreamgold.com
Jason, I believe that the cnc lathe you linked to is a bit over kill for wax. I have almost that same lathe but manual, and I have used the crank handles and hand effort to blank out some simple bands........ Wax is soft enough that you can use simple tools to shape and carve it. CNC may not be your best bet my friend. But that depends on what your wanting to do.
Hello
We are a jewelry manufacturer based in Jaipur, India. Most of our jewelry is being made by casting processes. Now we plan to automate the factory & introduce CNC technology for making rings. I have many questions, Which machines have what capabilities, how to set small diamonds into the rings etc.
Looking for some help.
Sambhav K.
Jewelove | Facebook
in the jewelry industry we use cnc to cut wax models and then use the traditional lost wax casting process to turn the wax into metal.
There are several types of machines suited for this. All of which have their strengths and weaknesses. Google it you will find many options out there.