I work communications technology for the Army; satellite communications is my specialty, but I can get around computers okay.
The kit comes in today. The way I understand it, it includes the router, controller, all the hardware that’s necessary for the router to cover an 18”x15” bed (included, but made of thin plywood). It has a depth capacity of 3.5” or about that.
The software is open source. I read up on some of it today. Essentially, you can use any drawing, 3d, or cad program to create your design in the form of a JPEG image. There is another program you feed the image to (in this case the riser shape from the template and/or cutouts for accent work). It takes the lines and references the coordinates on the cutting table on all three axis (sp? Axes? Axii? You know what I mean... 3 of them. X, Y, and Z is height.
It generates a text document that feeds the controller the coordinates in a specific format. You start the router at 0,0,0 x, y, and z, and then it goes to town. They recommend cutting about 1/16th” depth on each pass, so that’s about 32 passes for 2” stock, and a feed rate of 20” per minute. But you don’t even have to do anything once it gets going.
I talked to Bob himself for quite awhile. I sent him a picture of a finished riser I grabbed online as an example. It was a pretty damned intricate 3 piece takedown riser, and he said it could do that. He said it would be difficult, but he was talking about all the shaping-contours for the grip along the side. When I explained that I would just want the outline (belly and back surface) cut to shape accurately, along with any accents I’d be cutting from another piece, he said it would handle that no problem.
Limitations being the size of the work surface, which is adequate for any riser you can fit in there diagonally (there’s a bigger one for a couple hundred more that’s 24”x24”). Also, the bit sizes are 1/8” and 1/4”, so a minimum of 1/8 kerf loss.
Potential seems pretty much whatever you can imagine for shapes. I think the 24” one could even be used to perfectly generate a limb profile template straight from one of the force draw calculator spreadsheets. Not to mention cool stippling, shapes that can’t be made accurately even with a jig... little pictures of deer etched into the riser and all o that.
It might be kind of cheating, I don’t know. I’m really starting to enjoy the build process. It’s one of the few things that’s every bit as gratifying as I had hoped it would be, even after years of build up. I’ll let you guys know how it’s going when I get the kit. I’m skeptical; the price is way lower than I would expect. More to follow.
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