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Jake L

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Everything posted by Jake L

  1. Method above gives Ø3.0176 Did you have to specify a radius?
  2. Thank you sir. That is what I got using the method in the video I posted above. Good to know that method works. Just curious, was it simple to do in Solidworks? 4 clicks?
  3. Dang I thought that was gonna work. Looks like for some reason MC decides the tangent point should be a little ways up the angled line. It's a little scary how close to correct it is, but also kind of way off
  4. Appreciate the effort! If we assume there isn't a magic easy button to do this, is there an easier way to do it than what I showed in the video above? Here you go Dropbox Link to Sample File Thanks for the reply! This is the closest "easy" solution I came up with as well. I figured I was missing something, seems like there should be a "create arc - tangent to two lines and one tangent point"
  5. Thanks for the reply! I could do that but I still want the arc to be tangent to the angled line at the point where it intersects the small vertical line. When I originally ran into this challenge I needed the radius of the arc I'm trying to get. It wasn't so much about making something close, I was looking for the actual number
  6. Here's a video showing another workaround to get the arc I want. Dropbox - Create Arc Workaround Example
  7. I think you end up with the same issue of not having the ability to specify you want the arc tangent thru the endpoint of the angled line. Unless there's something I'm missing? Maybe I'm asking for too much all at once?
  8. Thanks for the speedy reply! With this method there's no way to have the arc tangent to the angled line at its endpoint. It just makes an arc tangent to both lines and then you must specify a radius. Thanks for the reply! I'd like the arc tangent to both lines. This method gets me an arc tangent to the "flat" line that goes thru the endpoint of the angled line, but the arc won't be tangent to the angled line. BTW had a laugh at your signature
  9. I feel like there must be a function to do this but I can't find it. I have 2D wireframe (shown light blue) and I want to create the green arc as shown. Currently I use "Circle Edge Point" set to "2 Points tangent" and adjust the the arc radius until I get something close. But there must be a way to get the exact arc right? Not sure it matters but I'm in MC2024 TIA
  10. I believe the only generic post that supports right angle head is MPROUTER.pst. So your options are: 1. use MPROUTER and hand edit the gcode for all your M-codes. This will get you correct x/y/z moves. 2. modify MPROUTER to output good code for your machine 3. buy a post for your machine that supports right angle head
  11. Honestly if it's a simple cut the easiest way to program it is point to point. To get Mastercam to output code for a right angle head you need to modify a post, modify a machine def, and there's no way to actually simulate the tool for verification in Mastercam. Here are a couple links for you. The youtube video is long and old, but it is what I followed to get right angle head code output from MC. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lxhlx5wa97o
  12. Ask the pushers if they want the machines making more chips or checking parts. Maybe your management team thinks differently, but my management team always wants to make more chips. Some of them may not understand much about manufacturing, but they all understand more chips = more parts = more $$ ...food for thought, a CNC can do a CMM's job but not visa versa.
  13. Might be worth checking out this thread: From what I remember there was a lot of good stuff in that one.
  14. Someone else will have to take this one. I've done very little work in C#
  15. Maybe try running VS not in admin mode? I remember having some weird errors with admin mode a while back so I turned it off and haven't had an issue since. As a work around you can disable the post build - right click on the project in VS > Properties > Post-Build Event > Build Events > Use In Build < turn this off and the error should go away. The post Post Build bat file just copies the dll from where it's created (with the solution) to the Mastercam Add-Ins folder
  16. The most common reason that error is thrown is because you have Mastercam open. When you build a project, if you have Mastercam open VS can't access the folder to copy the dll file into
  17. It looks like you downloaded the Create Letters sample from my.mastercam.com. I downloaded this file and everything linked up fine for me. So the file should automatically find the sdk. If you want to double check, the path to the sdk is in Property Sheets > MastercamSDK.props > <SDKDir>. Looking at the header files VS can't find, it looks like you might not have MFC installed. To install MFC 1. Open "Visual Studio Installer" 2. on whichever version of VS you're using click "Modify" 3. Ensure "Desktop development with C++" is checked 4. in the sidebar go to "Desktop development with C++" > Optional > and ensure "C++ MFC for latest v143 build tools" is checked 5. if it is not checked, check it and click "Modify" in the bottom right
  18. Visual Studio cannot locate the specified header files. Have you successfully run other chooks before? Do you have the 2023 sdk installed? Is there any other errors before or after all the E1696 errors?
  19. Sounds like you're on the wrong page. You can find chook samples and the sdk here: my.mastercam.com > Communities > 3rd Party Developers > C++ Downloads If you do not have access to this page you can email [email protected] to request access
  20. That looks like C++ I could be wrong, but I don't think manual entry is supported in C#.
  21. I've got to get around to customizing my radial menu. I know it's there, I know it would be super useful, I've just never used it. I forgot about my keyboard shortcuts: D - dynamic transform B - backplot R - clear colors T - toggle cplane 2D / 3D G - regen selected ops I just recently found Alt + 1 (or any number) to set the view to a plane, 1 = top, 2 = front etc.
  22. That used to happen to me constantly. I used the ribbon for a couple years before changing to my current setup. I'm glad I used the ribbon for as long as I did to get a feel for the functions I use the most, and to discover the ones I didn't know about. Before my current setup I tried loading up my RMB. I couldn't get used to that flow. I tried for about a month before switching the QAT.
  23. Only thing I don't like about "defeating the ribbon" is if the button isn't on my "hotbar" sometimes I'll forget about it. The other day I rediscovered wireframe project, saved me a bunch of time.
  24. If you can make do with a coolant driven head, El Tool makes one with .688 clearance https://eltool.com/products/angle-heads/sizes-and-dimensions-how-to-order/ The website's pretty clunky if you've never used it You'd need a 3M weldon nose, so you'd also unfortunately be in a weldon

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