Wow, roughing with a .015?I would have probably done an extra tool change and used a .02 or .03 for the roughing.
6 of one half-dozen of another though.... the results look great.
If I'm having trouble lining up on the center of the points, I'll put a 60 degree index cutter in, so that I can really get close when lining things up.
I'll sometimes put the cutter on one side, zero out the Y axis, put the cutter on the other edge, (effectively measuring the width of the inlay area) then reset your Y to exactly half of the number you get. That should center you up nicely. If you have a fourth axis, you can do the same with the A axis instead.
On my machine, I have an exact number from the hard stop for zero along my Y, so I can alway find center that way... I just have to dial in the A if I reset the cue.
Top picture is all I can show of Tikklers Ivory cue.
This is not a inlay,but it is done with mach3.
these are some handles with a grapevine splice.
dark coco with zebra
tulip with purple heart
zircote with yellow heart
bill
Here are some inlays I screwed up. Look at the cue in the last post and you'll see the mistake.
Hi,
Great Post & nice work on exhibit.
I have read a couple of things about lining up the spindle with the centerline of the cue. My friend is a CNC pro and does this stuff for a living on a level that is a 1000% more involved than our pockets and inlays.
He told us to machine an alum datum block and place it behind the back side of the alum plate that is the base for the spindle. When you move the X axis back so the spindle base just touches the datum block that becomes wedged to the back frame, you have created a repeatable home position. Clear and zero set your home position to .0000 and then move on X to align your mill bit with your center point of your dead center and write down that reading on the X axis. Clear home to .0000 and you are aligned on your center line. Now every time you want to get on the cue's centerline, touch off on the block and take the spindle over to the number you wrote down and clear home to the .0000 reference.
As far as the Y axis is concerns, we just measure and eye ball for the other center line of the geometry.
Using the datum block gives you fast control for center line finding.
We also fabricated a milled and dowel pined shim plate that installs under the tail stock block on our Cue Monster that compensates for the vertical off set that is created when a tapered cue in mounted between centers. This makes the cue flat so that depth floor of the pocket is uniform when observed in elevation view over the Y axis.
Rick G
Rick,
That sounds like a good way to repeat your position.
Have you ever thought of using home switches? I don't mean the mechanical switch type, but the Photo optic type. They are repeatable to very small numbers and are pretty easy to setup. Once you have them, you just reference your machine to home and setup a work offset to get you to your zero position. You can use different offsets for different work stations on your machine. Currently all our machines are for turning so we don't have as much of a need for them, but I am building a couple of machines for inlay and other things, and they will both have optical home switches.
Another cool thing about good home switches is that you can build a tool changer if your spindle has an air actuated collet. These are really cool!
Rick,
That sounds like a good way to repeat your position.
Have you ever thought of using home switches? I don't mean the mechanical switch type, but the Photo optic type. They are repeatable to very small numbers and are pretty easy to setup. Once you have them, you just reference your machine to home and setup a work offset to get you to your zero position. You can use different offsets for different work stations on your machine. Currently all our machines are for turning so we don't have as much of a need for them, but I am building a couple of machines for inlay and other things, and they will both have optical home switches.
Another cool thing about good home switches is that you can build a tool changer if your spindle has an air actuated collet. These are really cool!
Having a home base is great for moving the spindle to work on a cue. It works when working on a blank pallet and all decorations are inlayed. When inlaying between points or boxes they are never in the exact same piston and the start point changes on every inlay. The adjustment is so small it's not noticeable in the finished cue. If the inlay is not centered it will show. I don't see how home switches or a common start point help in most situations.
Home switches would be really nice, but I never got around to setting them up. Like I stated earlier, I have a number I use to center Y from a hard stop, I just turn the controller off, dial the y into the stop by hand, then fire it back up and run an incremental move to center. This gets me close enough that I haven't bothered with homing.
One thing I've been wanting is a spindle switch, so I can turn the spindle on and off in the G-code. That would be really handy.