Fun with Shaper Origin

HowardH

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Jan 23, 2007
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A good friend of mine is CEO of this company so I made a maple cutting board and used the Shaper to do the inlays and engraving.  For the logo, I used epoxy.  I have some white and blue bottled Festool polish coming in any day which should help polish up the epoxy a bit more.  It was a nice learning experience and could lead to a commission to build more, without the Longhorn logo on the flip side as we are both Texas grads, to be used as gifts to clients.

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Nice. There was earlier talk of how much error was in the inlays and joint files, but it looks as if it works great
 
Yes, it is extremely accurate.  I also found, pardon the pun, the thinner the bit, the better things fit.  The longhorn inlay really didn't need glue.  It fit that tight. 
 
"If you tell the truth you don't have to remember anything." Mark Twain

Unfortunately, I have reached the age where I want to tell the truth, but I am not always able to remember what happened. My most frequent truthful statement is, I do not remember you saying that. The second is probably, I do not remember saying that.
 
We were just talking about them at work the other day. I really like the idea of the origin, but I haven't yet come across the project that would justify it.
 
Crazyraceguy said:
We were just talking about them at work the other day. I really like the idea of the origin, but I haven't yet come across the project that would justify it.

It would be great if you had to add fancy inlay to something already installed.
 
Crazyraceguy said:
We were just talking about them at work the other day. I really like the idea of the origin, but I haven't yet come across the project that would justify it.

It’s one of those tools that you would find projects after you bought it. I have a bunch of projects lined up. I’ve been watching their videos and discovering all kinds of capabilities I didn’t know it had. 
 
I bought an Origin a couple years ago - found it's practical limitations, and just ordered an X-Carve Pro. Digital Fabrication is a slippery slope.
 
Love my Origin, helped my son make a v-day  project a few weeks ago when he decided the night before he wanted to make something for mommy.....
 

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It is definitely on my list. A friend of mine was an early adopter and has one. I recently had to do a bunch of "soul searching" on getting one vs expanding my CNC machine to a full 8 foot capacity. I chose the CNC just because crawling around on my knees on top a sheet of plywood didn't sound like fun.

But certainly is a LOT cheaper to get an infinite capacity on large sheet goods. and if you had a limited number of uses for it, would still be a good deal. If I ever have to downsize the abode, it's how I'll replace the CNC machine.
 
I agree that if you already have a cnc that expanding it is probably a better solution for your needs but I still like my capability of doing an inlay in a floor on site for a customer and that's about the only time I'm crawling around on the floor with Origin lol.  Usually I work with sheets of plywood on a table or smaller peices on Shapers workstation
 
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