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Lab talk, the good, the bad, and the ugly
Dental-CAM
Sum3d frustration
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<blockquote data-quote="Marcusthegladiator CDT" data-source="post: 73038" data-attributes="member: 7071"><p>Are your units failing or are you milling successfully?</p><p>Everything your seeing on sum3d sounds normal to me.</p><p>I know you may not see these thing every time you calculate a job.</p><p>But still, this is normal.</p><p>I would have to see a screenshot to explain it better so were looking at exactly the same thing.</p><p>Sevan, there's no reason to scrap a job that's unfinished. Unless its broken of course.</p><p>But if your mill stops and the job isn't finished.</p><p>Ask luigi to show you how to post process the cnc. This way you can pick up where you left off.</p><p>I spent an entire Saturday with luigi last year and had him all to myself while we sat at the computer playing with sum3d. It was quite the learning experience. And I was fortunate to be in the right place at the right time as he visited Los Angeles.</p><p>Of course you can always post process by deleting blocks of G code from the CNC file your milling, but you have to know what your doing or you'll break stuff. Lotsa stuff.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Marcusthegladiator CDT, post: 73038, member: 7071"] Are your units failing or are you milling successfully? Everything your seeing on sum3d sounds normal to me. I know you may not see these thing every time you calculate a job. But still, this is normal. I would have to see a screenshot to explain it better so were looking at exactly the same thing. Sevan, there's no reason to scrap a job that's unfinished. Unless its broken of course. But if your mill stops and the job isn't finished. Ask luigi to show you how to post process the cnc. This way you can pick up where you left off. I spent an entire Saturday with luigi last year and had him all to myself while we sat at the computer playing with sum3d. It was quite the learning experience. And I was fortunate to be in the right place at the right time as he visited Los Angeles. Of course you can always post process by deleting blocks of G code from the CNC file your milling, but you have to know what your doing or you'll break stuff. Lotsa stuff. [/QUOTE]
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Lab talk, the good, the bad, and the ugly
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Sum3d frustration
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