Mooselake wrote: Hessel
I'm sort of working along with a book on Guilloche and Rose Engines and trying to duplicate some of the simpler patterns, of course no guarantee that this is the right or best way since I'm really using the wizard in unintended ways.
I used the Elliptical Order box to set the number of lobes, and slid the coefficient slider all the way to the right to get the "gently undulating" curve. I've been setting both the inner and outer envelopes the same for now, but real rose engines used a variety of shapes. Search for Bill Oombs for a rose engine simulator, trying that out is on my list for the future. I set phase% to zero, only because it makes it easier to read and match up the numbers on successive traces.
Fill density is set to 1, Fill type to line.
The maximum radius will need to be adjusted to be greater than where you want the trace. Use the Outband and Inband Radius sliders (if you click on them you can use the keyboard arrow keys for fine adjustments) to get the size where you want it. When the outer ring looks right (it's actually the middle one in the screenshot) then click next.
I closed Vexx before the second screenshot so some values might be a little different. The Maximum Radius will change, set it back to your first value or something that gets the outer envelope outside your work, in this example I made it a little larger. You'll do this every time, different values for max radius might make the slidering easier as the pattern gets smaller.
Use the InBand Radius to get the second trace close to the first one, then use the Phase slider to align the high spots so they touch. You need to set both the inner and outer phase the same (or maybe not, if you want a different effect). Then zoom in and get the two bumps almost touching, and adjust the phase if necessary. When it looks good then click next and repeat, alternating a phase of zero and the value that lines them up. After a couple passes it goes fairly fast. Repeat until you get the desired effect or get tired of repeating :)
Hope that helps! After rewatching the Vexx videos I'm going to try the celtic knot cutout again, maybe with the snip tool and reworking the knot dxf to make sure all the shapes are closed. We'll see. My inspiration is attached (this one is from a swiss watch company via a link on cnccookbook.com) but I'll never get that good. No special reason for the celtic knot other than I like them and had this particular dxf sitting around. Why try something easy when there's something much harder sitting around :)
The diamond dragon (aka drag bit) is on it's way, a couple 120 degree bits from drillman1 on eBay are here (shipped and at the post office half an hour after ordering Saturday afternoon on a US holiday weekend, highly recommend him if you eBay in the states), and I used a christmas gift card I'd forgotten about to order some 1.5"/38mm 20g brass "stamping" disks. I expect my problems are more operator than material, but brass is the traditional practice material. I don't think I'll be trying gold, silver, or platinum or ordering a $100K US MADE Rose Engine...
Kirk
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wonderful design.