CAD/CAM

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05 Feb 2013 07:05 #29613 by allenwg2005
CAD/CAM was created by allenwg2005
Hello EMC warriors,

I am in need of advice as to which CAD/CAM software folks out there find useful and affordable.

Over the past twelve years I have spent countless hours learning different programs only to find. issues, unwelcome changes, and insane maintenance price tags.

I have "VisualMill" on my laptop and I am about to reembark on another learning adventure, before doing so I thought I would see what (if anything) you folks might have to share on the subject.

One additional point: I'm running a Linux OS so any CAD/CAM program would need to function on that platform or in wine. I am hoping to avoid wine as it slows things down a bit, but you gota do what you gota do.

Look forward to any advise you may have.

Thanks, Allen

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02 Mar 2013 08:37 #30750 by andypugh
Replied by andypugh on topic CAD/CAM
PyCAM is free, it may be worth the money :-)

SheetCAM does 2.5D stuff OK at a reasonable price.

But, really, there seems to be a hole in that part of the process on Linux.
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02 Mar 2013 16:15 #30753 by emcPT
Replied by emcPT on topic CAD/CAM
Can you inform for what kind of work you need a CAD/CAM?
For milling / lathe?

I only use a CAD for helping with the coordinates, but the gcode I write all by hand (except to engrave letters or numbers). Both in milling machine and lathe. I find that a CAM does not do what I want, although I never experiment those fancy stuff that cost more than 10k.
Sometimes I write a program in 100 lines that a CAM writes in 1000 lines (or more).
All that I do by hand is readable and the CAM stuff is not.
My opinion
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03 Mar 2013 07:48 #30783 by allenwg2005
Replied by allenwg2005 on topic CAD/CAM
I am going to be running a router.

I'm not smart enough to write my own G-Code.
If things go as planned I would be doing some fairly complex contouring and I know I not that smart!
(Can't type to save my life)!

Sadly I'm limited to plug and play, at lest for the time being. (Limiting I know).

So many opptions for CAD/CAM it's hard to know what to pick and who or what to trust.

Thank you for your help, Allen

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03 Mar 2013 08:32 #30785 by Todd Zuercher
Replied by Todd Zuercher on topic CAD/CAM
For wood working I feel www.vectric.com/ software is very reasonably priced. However I haven't really used it.
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03 Mar 2013 16:36 #30789 by emcPT
Replied by emcPT on topic CAD/CAM
If your parts are complex, then a CAM really is necessary. I worked before with ArtCam, that is good for 2D and also allows engraving and 3D parts.
It is easy to start, but the price I think is high.

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03 Mar 2013 18:57 #30791 by Rick G
Replied by Rick G on topic CAD/CAM

am going to be running a router.

I'm not smart enough to write my own G-Code.
If things go as planned I would be doing some fairly complex contouring and I know I not that smart!


As Todd stated take a look at Vectric, also they have great tutorials that I believe you can download for free to see how to run the programs.
A friend of mine uses it for everything from simple shapes to complex engraving on contours instead of CAD CAM packages.

Rick G

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03 Mar 2013 20:59 #30798 by andypugh
Replied by andypugh on topic CAD/CAM
Image-to-Gcode is free and already included in LinuxCNC. (try opening an image file instead of a G-code file in Axis)
In some cases you can probably machine direct from a rendered image of your 3D model. Though this seems like a kludge.

FreeMill is probably worth a look. They are trying to get you to buy one of their full-on products, but it has its uses.
No Linux version AFAIK. www.mecsoft.com/freemill.shtml

PyCAM is probably the most Linux-y offering out there: pycam.sourceforge.net

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04 Mar 2013 06:47 #30810 by allenwg2005
Replied by allenwg2005 on topic CAD/CAM
Andy,

I went to Pycam and tried to download the program using a terminal box.
Being new as to how all of this is done in a Linux operating system I got no where.
Can step by step instructions be found to install the program?

Thanks so much for your help, Allen

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04 Mar 2013 07:01 #30811 by andypugh
Replied by andypugh on topic CAD/CAM

Can step by step instructions be found to install the program?

Working from the command line might not be the easiest way, but I just tried this, and it worked

cd ~/Downloads
wget sourceforge.net/projects/pycam/files/pyc...ycam_0.5.1-1_all.deb
sudo dpkg -i pycam_0.5.1-1_all.deb

And that's it.

You can run it from the command line by typing
pycam

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