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I own two DIY 4' class (5X5 cutting area) CNC routers, a DIY 3d printer, and a retrofitted CNC 1050 knee mill.
I build them myself so the learning curve is much steeper my way vs buying a proven supported vendor based machine. Camaster, shopbot, and probotix are three very popular vendors to buy from. They have great vendor support for their post processor solutions and their machines in general. User community is awesome on those machines too.
The CAD/CAM requirements can be very effectively satisfied by software from Vectric in 80% of the cuts made on a router. 2.5D vcarvepro and 3d aspire make it very easy to go from drawing lines to generating the gcode needed for your machine to be cutting. I think their software is about as easy as it gets. Visit their site to see tutorials, view how to videos, download demo software, and visit their forums for help and ideas on what is involved in using Vectric software. I believe a small machine vcarvepro desktop is $350, $700 for a vcarve pro used with larger machines typically, and $2K for full 3d aspire.
http://www.vectric.com/index.html
Glad its my shop I am responsible for - I only have to make me happy.
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Location: Centre County Pennsylvania
I have the original Shapeoko from Inventables. They have moved on to the X-carve, the Shapeoko 3 is being sold by another company. My machine is an inadequate little thing, the Shapeoko 3 and X carve look a lot better. I am currently searching for a router to use. I'm going with my own electronics to be driven by linuxcnc or makerkit, so that's a lot of fiddling, but you can get all the electronics with the machine and be up and running fairly quickly.
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My advice is that you need to be able to run a computer. May sound obvious but it is a basic skill you will need or be willing to develop. There is a bit of software to learn like MACH3 that took me several hours of study. The good news is there are more than enough tutorial videos available and they have been made understandable. IMHO Vectric is the cad/cam software of choice that you would want. Also wrap your head around the fact that software is not cheap it could cost you more than your machine did! The CNC community online are very friendly and helpful people so getting a helping hand with your problems will not be an issue. To sum up my ramblings the learning curve is kinda steep, or it was for me anyways, but worth it in the end. I do need to point out I am in my 60's so what is steep to me may be a bump in the road to others.
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Do you enjoy computer programming?
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Joined: Oct 1999
I have nearly 20 years experience programming, operating and training CNC machines.
The learning curve is NOWHERE near what it used to be, but a lot depends on what you already know. You will need to know CAD drawing, and the CAM side where you instruct the machine which tools to use at what speed and depth on the lines in the drawing. This is a simplified version, but covers the bases.
If you wish, feel free to PM me and we can set up a chance to chat on the phone. I will happily discuss the various machines available, along with software and how you plan to use the machine.
In my opinion, Vectric's VCarve Pro is the best value in CAD/CAM software currently. It is reasonably easy to learn and use, VERY powerful and comes compatible with virtually every machine. It is the included software for most smaller CNC systems and several industrial level machines. I use it to program my CNC Shark, as well as industrial machines of several of my clients around the country.
Ralph