MaximeLesveque
Member
- Joined
- Aug 13, 2021
- Messages
- 6
I went to a local CNC shop (the only one in my area) and asked for a grid of 8x14 holes of 20mm diameter, and figured it would be a trivial project.
Having read a few discussions on the subject, I asked that they do a few tests first, and gave them a bench dog that is machined at 19.99mm for testing (made by BenchDogshttps://benchdogs.co.uk/).
They came back saying that they had to make holes of 20.4216mm in order to be able to insert the dog. The diameter of 20.4216 was obtained by trial and error, with after 2 attempts.
When I inserted the dog in the 20.4216 hole, there was no play at first, it had to be really forced in, but after a few insert and removal, there was significant play, while inserting, and the play ends only when the dog is completely inserted, as if the top and bottom ring of the cylindric hole had a tighter/smaller diameter than towards the center.
Question: are the holes in the original festool table actualy 20mm ?
I noticed that Seneca Wood Working has a CAD plan with 20.2 mm holes, and I read a few discussions recommending enlarging holes a bit.
Also, the tests have been made on 18mm baltic birch plywood, and not HDF (it seems that HDF is impossible to get in my area, and apparently MDF is not not great, so I was intending to go with baltic birch ply).
Does baltic birch ply require larger holes given that it's density is less evenly distributed than HDF ?
I also didn't ask them to chamfer the holes prior to testing the fit.
Could be that just chamfering could be sufficient to getting an exact 20mm would work ?
Or perhaps, given that I'm using ply instead of HDF, I will have to settle with 20.X hole, even with a chamfer, hopefuly X smaller than 0.4216 !
The CNC shop uses VCarve, the machine seems quite decent, it would be great if anyone could share a VCarve configuration that is known to work, I realize that there are many cutting and toolpath configurations, and not all of them are good.
I've read things about first making a rough cut of 19.9mm, followed by a finish cut at 20.mmm, using, spiral cut paths, etc, but it would be so much simpler to give a vcarve file !
Thanks !
Having read a few discussions on the subject, I asked that they do a few tests first, and gave them a bench dog that is machined at 19.99mm for testing (made by BenchDogshttps://benchdogs.co.uk/).
They came back saying that they had to make holes of 20.4216mm in order to be able to insert the dog. The diameter of 20.4216 was obtained by trial and error, with after 2 attempts.
When I inserted the dog in the 20.4216 hole, there was no play at first, it had to be really forced in, but after a few insert and removal, there was significant play, while inserting, and the play ends only when the dog is completely inserted, as if the top and bottom ring of the cylindric hole had a tighter/smaller diameter than towards the center.
Question: are the holes in the original festool table actualy 20mm ?
I noticed that Seneca Wood Working has a CAD plan with 20.2 mm holes, and I read a few discussions recommending enlarging holes a bit.
Also, the tests have been made on 18mm baltic birch plywood, and not HDF (it seems that HDF is impossible to get in my area, and apparently MDF is not not great, so I was intending to go with baltic birch ply).
Does baltic birch ply require larger holes given that it's density is less evenly distributed than HDF ?
I also didn't ask them to chamfer the holes prior to testing the fit.
Could be that just chamfering could be sufficient to getting an exact 20mm would work ?
Or perhaps, given that I'm using ply instead of HDF, I will have to settle with 20.X hole, even with a chamfer, hopefuly X smaller than 0.4216 !
The CNC shop uses VCarve, the machine seems quite decent, it would be great if anyone could share a VCarve configuration that is known to work, I realize that there are many cutting and toolpath configurations, and not all of them are good.
I've read things about first making a rough cut of 19.9mm, followed by a finish cut at 20.mmm, using, spiral cut paths, etc, but it would be so much simpler to give a vcarve file !
Thanks !