Art,
I see that in GM but I don't see how it helps me.
I want to be able to take the groove profile, open it in my cam program to create G-code enabling my CNC lathe to make a gear cutter; not an end mill, a gear cutter. I can do that now by loading the whole GM gear into the CAM, but I run into the problem of exactly aligning a grove profile with an axis. Then I need to make a mate to the groove and use that to get code.
It would be so much easier if GT would have an output option "Groove profile STL", with a centered axis line.
With that option we could make a cutter, and others might want to make a "D" mill.
Ozzie
making Helical gear with fly cutter
-
- Old Timer
- Posts: 34
- Joined: Fri Nov 05, 2010 5:43 am
Re: making Helical gear with fly cutter
Ozzie:
Would a dxf of the profile do?
Art
Would a dxf of the profile do?
Art
-
- Old Timer
- Posts: 34
- Joined: Fri Nov 05, 2010 5:43 am
Re: making Helical gear with fly cutter
Don't see why not.
I don't know much about the various formats. I seem to remember that STLs are made of triangles and DXF probably can use true radii where they exist. While an involute gear might not have any radii, a timing pulley does.
If true, a DXF would be better for the timing pulley; don't know about the gear.
How does DXF handle the involute curve?
Ozzie
I don't know much about the various formats. I seem to remember that STLs are made of triangles and DXF probably can use true radii where they exist. While an involute gear might not have any radii, a timing pulley does.
If true, a DXF would be better for the timing pulley; don't know about the gear.
How does DXF handle the involute curve?
Ozzie
Re: making Helical gear with fly cutter
Ozzie:
I think youd want dxf in all cases. STL's are 3d shell objects, dxf is the only real way to get any accuracy on evolutes.
Art
I think youd want dxf in all cases. STL's are 3d shell objects, dxf is the only real way to get any accuracy on evolutes.
Art
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 9 guests