I'm a guy who spends a fair bit of time building stuff in my garage.
I started reading about the CarveWright machine, and it sounds like it could be useful. But I'm a longtime Linux user, and I'd prefer an open-source and modifiable solution. Also, I'd like to be able to work with materials that are harder than just wood -- like steel. Also, I'm concerned that the sandpaper belts that the CarveWright uses to move the material forward and backward may not produce as consistent of a result as, say, clamping the material to the plate.
Also, I see that EMC2 is used with a lot of homebrew style mills. That's wonderful and I'd love to get into that -- but, at the moment, I have a lot of projects in mind -- from wood carving to the occasional adapter-plate. So, I'd like to spend more time building stuff than tinkering with a CNC machine. I'm quite capable of building a kit, soldering, and all of that -- but if I do that, I'd rather build a well-supported popular design. Or just buy a reasonably priced commercial unit.
My questions are: * What kind of a desktop mill (for a hobbyist-sized workload) would you all recommend for me? * Any recommendations for CAD software? * Are there any FAQs that I should review to get myself up to speed on the small-scale CNC technologies? Thanks! -Luke
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