That wasn't done in fusion ether.Īs of yet though I haven't herd of any one being able to cam from a mesh." I spent a fortune to have some stl files I had made from point clouds re drawn into surfaces that I could use. Many of things I have customers inquire about come from their stl files. You need a surface or a solid for fusion cam to work. Your best bet is to maybe use the intersect mesh plunging and redraw the model. "The one thing fusion can't do at the moment is cam a stl file.
Here is a quote for a Fusion Forum Thread (I have successfully export STL files to Solidworks for 3d printing on multiple 3D printers)įusion seem to have a problem with OBJ and STL import.įusion has a polygon limit of 10K, which I can work with if I have to, but I would like more. And it allows me to export OBJ or STL files.
Sorry, it isnt your burden to educate me, so please feel free to point me to some documentation to read and educate myself.
How is that different from your statement that Fusion supports Full 3_axis with 2d added as positioning?
That sentence also sounds like it says DeskProto supports 3-axis combined with a part rotation. So you are really saying that DeskProto's interpretation of 5-Axis is called "index machining"? Each side is done using three-axis machining, with a part-rotation in-between these operations." The support is for indexed machining, so to machine the part from several sides. Yes, you can: since Version 6 DeskProto supports 5-axis machining, in the Multi-Axis edition. "5.6 - We have a five-axis CNC machine: can we use DeskProto ? So when I first read this Faq question at DeskProto, I thought it said that DeskProto supports 5-axis.īut after reading your post, this novice is confused. I worked a Cincinnati Mill.Īlso, I am familiar with the world of 3d digital tech, using Autodesk 3DStudio, Maya and Alias Power Animator to make games.īut I have ZERO experience with milling AND 3D software. Just some background, I use to work as a machinist at Kinsley Machine in Hollywood back in the late '70's.