Not sure where to go from here? Did I zero it wrong? Is there some setting in fusion 360 that is causing this to happen?Īttached is my. it did not and the motor started clicking.
I thought maybe it was starting with a z-axis probe, so I put a block of wood underneath it to see if it would stop once it hit. Looking for a specific pasta Click the links below for specific letters, or click the 'Next' (or 'Prev') links. So I decided to go back and try to dry run the CNC with the program again, except now no matter what when I start it, the machine is going straight down the z-axis all the way to the plate without the spindle spinning (naturally I stopped it before it crashed into the plate) and I have no idea how to fix this. Talk (1) The following are pastas that will give you a new insight on reality.
The first try it decided to cut down ~2mm and then begin cutting - not what I had in mind, but ok. So here's what happened, I zero'd my cnc at the origin I programmed in fusion 360 which is dead center on the piece. However, it did cut down into my stock ~2mm and then began the program which is not what was supposed to happen. That issue is probably on me and I should have fudged the length of my mill by a bit to avoid going too deep. This is my first time ever doing CNC and I was very excited to finally try and actually put a block of wood on my machine and press go, but of course it failed with the first instructions by cutting too deep and I had to pull the power on it to keep it from breaking.