Out of curiosity I looked at wood working stuff. CompuCarve/CarveWright
looks pretty awesome being able to handle some pretty complex stuff, and
even copy stuff using a probe instead of a cutter. The price seemed good
for what it does at 1699 when I looked at it. It will handle 14" by (???
infinite / practical limitations) by about 5" wood and carve some really
amazing stuff. Then I looked at the customer reviews. "Works great when it
works, 1st machine spit bearing everywhere, but 2nd one worked ok, poor
machine great support then better machine and crappy support," and other
things like that seemed to be the normal type of review. Oops. That does
not sound promising
Anybody know if this thing is any better or worse than the reviews now?
"Bob La Londe" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Out of curiosity I looked at wood working stuff. CompuCarve/CarveWright
> looks pretty awesome being able to handle some pretty complex stuff, and
> even copy stuff using a probe instead of a cutter. The price seemed good
> for what it does at 1699 when I looked at it. It will handle 14" by (???
> infinite / practical limitations) by about 5" wood and carve some really
> amazing stuff. Then I looked at the customer reviews. "Works great when
> it works, 1st machine spit bearing everywhere, but 2nd one worked ok, poor
> machine great support then better machine and crappy support," and other
> things like that seemed to be the normal type of review. Oops. That does
> not sound promising
>
> Anybody know if this thing is any better or worse than the reviews now?
I can tell you that it is extremely LOUD. Hearing protection for you, a
must. For your neighbors, likely.
Bob La Londe wrote:
> Out of curiosity I looked at wood working stuff. CompuCarve/CarveWright
> looks pretty awesome being able to handle some pretty complex stuff, and
> even copy stuff using a probe instead of a cutter. The price seemed
> good for what it does at 1699 when I looked at it. It will handle 14" by
> (??? infinite / practical limitations) by about 5" wood and carve some
> really amazing stuff. Then I looked at the customer reviews. "Works
> great when it works, 1st machine spit bearing everywhere, but 2nd one
> worked ok, poor machine great support then better machine and crappy
> support," and other things like that seemed to be the normal type of
> review. Oops. That does not sound promising
>
> Anybody know if this thing is any better or worse than the reviews now?
...and does anyone have a link to technical specifications?
--
Morris Dovey
DeSoto Solar
DeSoto, Iowa USA
http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/
mac davis wrote:
> The reviews that I read said that it was very slow, too.. Not a
> problem, I'd guess, unless you're doing something where it stops and
> asks for bit changes.. Otherwise, I guess you start a carving and
> then go somewhere quiet for a while..
Ooooh - not a good idea. If there's a glitch and motion stops with the
bit in the workpiece, CNC routers make pretty good fire starters...
--
Morris Dovey
DeSoto Solar
DeSoto, Iowa USA
http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/
On Mon, 27 Oct 2008 07:40:25 -0500, "Leon" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>
>"Bob La Londe" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>news:[email protected]...
>> Out of curiosity I looked at wood working stuff. CompuCarve/CarveWright
>> looks pretty awesome being able to handle some pretty complex stuff, and
>> even copy stuff using a probe instead of a cutter. The price seemed good
>> for what it does at 1699 when I looked at it. It will handle 14" by (???
>> infinite / practical limitations) by about 5" wood and carve some really
>> amazing stuff. Then I looked at the customer reviews. "Works great when
>> it works, 1st machine spit bearing everywhere, but 2nd one worked ok, poor
>> machine great support then better machine and crappy support," and other
>> things like that seemed to be the normal type of review. Oops. That does
>> not sound promising
>>
>> Anybody know if this thing is any better or worse than the reviews now?
>
>I can tell you that it is extremely LOUD. Hearing protection for you, a
>must. For your neighbors, likely.
>
The reviews that I read said that it was very slow, too..
Not a problem, I'd guess, unless you're doing something where it stops and asks
for bit changes.. Otherwise, I guess you start a carving and then go somewhere
quiet for a while..
mac
Please remove splinters before emailing
"Robatoid" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> In article <[email protected]>, "Bob La Londe" <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>> Out of curiosity I looked at wood working stuff. CompuCarve/CarveWright
>> looks pretty awesome being able to handle some pretty complex stuff, and
>> even copy stuff using a probe instead of a cutter. The price seemed good
>> for what it does at 1699 when I looked at it. It will handle 14" by (???
>> infinite / practical limitations) by about 5" wood and carve some really
>> amazing stuff. Then I looked at the customer reviews. "Works great when
>> it
>> works, 1st machine spit bearing everywhere, but 2nd one worked ok, poor
>> machine great support then better machine and crappy support," and other
>> things like that seemed to be the normal type of review. Oops. That
>> does
>> not sound promising
>>
>> Anybody know if this thing is any better or worse than the reviews now?
>
> This topic comes up the odd times on CNC type chats and forums.
> Most consider it along the lines of an EasyBake® oven. Yes it is an
> oven, but..... Perhaps that is a bit extreme, but those light duty CNC
> routers simply don't have the versatility or ruggedness to do any _work_.
>
> An other way of looking at it, the chain of distribution needs to make a
> certain amount at each link. Working that backwards from a retail price,
> you might end up with 200-300 dollars worth of parts.
>
> It is basically a toy.
That is basically the conclusion I have come up with. When I look at some
of the CNC controllers and rail assemblies available I find there are a lot
of designs with a lot more capacity and flexibility for the same price.
With most of those its an open design, easy to clean, and easy to replace
parts if they fail. I actually started looking at CNC milling (for metal
engraving and mold prototyping) when I notied this thing and thought of a
way it could fill one (one small one) of my needs. I think I'm going to
start looking at two seperate tools instead. A rail frame CNC router, and a
small CNC mill. I am sure the CNC router can be prorammed with Mach 3 or
similar to do any of the wood carving I might need as well.
In article <[email protected]>, "Bob La Londe" <[email protected]>
wrote:
> Out of curiosity I looked at wood working stuff. CompuCarve/CarveWright
> looks pretty awesome being able to handle some pretty complex stuff, and
> even copy stuff using a probe instead of a cutter. The price seemed good
> for what it does at 1699 when I looked at it. It will handle 14" by (???
> infinite / practical limitations) by about 5" wood and carve some really
> amazing stuff. Then I looked at the customer reviews. "Works great when it
> works, 1st machine spit bearing everywhere, but 2nd one worked ok, poor
> machine great support then better machine and crappy support," and other
> things like that seemed to be the normal type of review. Oops. That does
> not sound promising
>
> Anybody know if this thing is any better or worse than the reviews now?
This topic comes up the odd times on CNC type chats and forums.
Most consider it along the lines of an EasyBake® oven. Yes it is an
oven, but..... Perhaps that is a bit extreme, but those light duty CNC
routers simply don't have the versatility or ruggedness to do any _work_.
An other way of looking at it, the chain of distribution needs to make a
certain amount at each link. Working that backwards from a retail price,
you might end up with 200-300 dollars worth of parts.
It is basically a toy.