#HSMWORKS TRACE FEED HEIGHT FULL#
Without a duplicate NC computer (with PLC with all parameters) running the simulation, a full machine simulation cannot be trusted 100%.and there is no room to dispute that, because it is an ARTIFICIAL simulation.
#HSMWORKS TRACE FEED HEIGHT SERIAL#
Mazaks have that.and the offline Mazak simulator requires a hardware device.that is specific to the machine serial number.which is really a duplicate NC computer with it's own parameter storage. Hope this instance isn't costing you too much down time.Ī full machine simulation must have a full set of working parameters and an NC computer from the machine (to be simulated) to operate just like the machine. This has kept me safe in every situation so far.full machine simulation could never do that. ANY turret index call is preceded by "G0 G53 X#101 Z#102".
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In Edgecam, I have the clearance handled parametrically.I disabled as much as possible of the full machine simulation, and I have a set of variables in the program header that are reviewed at during setup. Yes, it is a lot of extra clearance, but it is infallible and the machine will never soft limit in Z. In 5ax HSMWorks, our post handles clearance moves by having G53 Z0 before ANY reorientation of the rotary axes.I'm surprised your isn't set up the same way, whether it is new orientation of B or a new work offset.
![hsmworks trace feed height hsmworks trace feed height](https://i1.rgstatic.net/publication/332267083_A_BRIEF_REVIEW_ON_FEED_RATE_OPTIMIZATION_AND_DIFFERENT_TYPE_OF_TOOLPATH_USE_IN_POCKET_MACHINING/links/5caaf818a6fdcca26d065fe2/largepreview.png)
(like posted clearance moves in the opposite direction of what you see) It is too much overhead for day to day operations, and opens up too many possibilities for dangerous situations that will contradict what you see in your CAM GUI. The problem with full machine simulation is that it is only as good as the accuracy of every damn nut/bolt/clamp/stock/tool/toolholder/fixture/handle/etc that you model into the assembly. I know that sounds weird.but I've never come so close to having UGLY crashes when we started using Edgecam, which has integrated full machine simulation. Trace has owned the beach house for the last six years prior to the events in the pilot, asking Mick to buy it since he was 18, saying that "it reminded him of the best time in his life" the statement convincing Mick to sell it to him.I'm not a fan of full machine simulation.as a matter of fact, I think it is more dangerous. Trace brought the house from Abby's father Mick O'Brien surprising Abby as she thought that her father would never sell it as Mick and his brothers built it. In the Pilot, Trace announces that he's living back in Chesapeake Shores in a house on the water that he bought the beach shack on Spirit Cove and is renovating it just like he had always said he would back when he was 16 (at that age, Trace and Abby planned on living there as their own little seclusion away from the world where nobody could find them).When Abby's planned departure is delayed, the two begin to remember just what they once had and then lost whether they can re-establish their relationship on a solid footing remains to be seen. He is initially cool towards Abby, but during the course of their interactions, their old attraction for one another is rekindled.
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After being on the road as a musician, Trace is now, home reassessing his life and working as a contractor. Abby feared that Trace would never leave their hometown, but she underestimated his resolve.