navigator7
10-23-2009, 01:46 AM
Hello All!
First post.
I'm in the market for a ShopBot for fun and profit.
Mostly fun .... if there is a profit! ;-)
I'm 54, healthy, fit, strong....but sooner or later......
I owned and operated a concrete pumping, crane service and a 3D printing service in a remote section of washington state.
Biz was good for many years concrete pumping, growing for crane work and poor for 3D printing. The housing market crash last fall devastated my biz so I'm starting over. I work construction now but I am owner operator material! I've tasted self employment for a decade and must get back to the fight.
I owned a $60K Zcorp 3D printer that printed parts made from plaster. Great for rapid prototyping but I found it very limited making items I could sell between paying customers. It was just too darned expensive to run the machine to produce scrap. I bought the machine hoping I could stay busy during the very long winters here. I made molds mostly for hobby metal casters and printed a house models as sales gimmicks for Realtors and contractors. (It was a poor buying decision or maybe poor marketing on my part.) The housing crash affected me big time so now and I'm back to square one.
Anyway....
I'm a mac fan, own a $3,500.00 3D Ashlar Vellum Cobalt 3D solids modeling program. I do well with this program. I also own a $1500 2D PowerCadd program. I'd say I'm pretty good with this program.
Got a great mac for file creation.
Importing a files into the ZCorp 3d printer was a snap and I had few problems operating this machine with import and export of files.
My question to you users is:
1. How is easy is it to import files from other programs into the ShopBot without major headaches and tool destruction if things go awry?
2. I can export dwg, dxf, .igs, .iges, sat, eps, .cgm, .wrl, .raw, .stl, .w3D,. pict and a few others.
I can also export as Catia5, Cosmos, FormZ, I-deas, Think3, Vellum solids, 3dMax, Adobe Illustrator, CadKey, Autodesk and 3D and a few others.
Do any of the tools I have put me into a postion of operating a ShopBot without a huge learning curve? I was also a machinist in a past life, welder, fitter, and understand rpm's, tool feed speeds, depth of cuts and the law of unintended consequences when you turn on rotating machinery!
3. Has anyone created any stone patterns/molds or done any custom work for home construction? I have/had a very good customer base and I am finding lot of work in custom concrete stamping/staining and anything that is not run of the mill. I believe I could sell ideas to my former customer that they would include in their concrete stamp work.
I tried to accomplish this with the 3D printer but the product cost more than what anybody was willing to pay. I've got wood coming out my ears!
(It could be sawdust.)
Am I nuts to be thinking about a ShopBot?
Nav
First post.
I'm in the market for a ShopBot for fun and profit.
Mostly fun .... if there is a profit! ;-)
I'm 54, healthy, fit, strong....but sooner or later......
I owned and operated a concrete pumping, crane service and a 3D printing service in a remote section of washington state.
Biz was good for many years concrete pumping, growing for crane work and poor for 3D printing. The housing market crash last fall devastated my biz so I'm starting over. I work construction now but I am owner operator material! I've tasted self employment for a decade and must get back to the fight.
I owned a $60K Zcorp 3D printer that printed parts made from plaster. Great for rapid prototyping but I found it very limited making items I could sell between paying customers. It was just too darned expensive to run the machine to produce scrap. I bought the machine hoping I could stay busy during the very long winters here. I made molds mostly for hobby metal casters and printed a house models as sales gimmicks for Realtors and contractors. (It was a poor buying decision or maybe poor marketing on my part.) The housing crash affected me big time so now and I'm back to square one.
Anyway....
I'm a mac fan, own a $3,500.00 3D Ashlar Vellum Cobalt 3D solids modeling program. I do well with this program. I also own a $1500 2D PowerCadd program. I'd say I'm pretty good with this program.
Got a great mac for file creation.
Importing a files into the ZCorp 3d printer was a snap and I had few problems operating this machine with import and export of files.
My question to you users is:
1. How is easy is it to import files from other programs into the ShopBot without major headaches and tool destruction if things go awry?
2. I can export dwg, dxf, .igs, .iges, sat, eps, .cgm, .wrl, .raw, .stl, .w3D,. pict and a few others.
I can also export as Catia5, Cosmos, FormZ, I-deas, Think3, Vellum solids, 3dMax, Adobe Illustrator, CadKey, Autodesk and 3D and a few others.
Do any of the tools I have put me into a postion of operating a ShopBot without a huge learning curve? I was also a machinist in a past life, welder, fitter, and understand rpm's, tool feed speeds, depth of cuts and the law of unintended consequences when you turn on rotating machinery!
3. Has anyone created any stone patterns/molds or done any custom work for home construction? I have/had a very good customer base and I am finding lot of work in custom concrete stamping/staining and anything that is not run of the mill. I believe I could sell ideas to my former customer that they would include in their concrete stamp work.
I tried to accomplish this with the 3D printer but the product cost more than what anybody was willing to pay. I've got wood coming out my ears!
(It could be sawdust.)
Am I nuts to be thinking about a ShopBot?
Nav