I have a circle that I would like to use one of the Mouldings in the clipart. When I follow the directions in help it puts the moulding on the waste side and not on my circle piece.
I read in help that you cant reverse rail the moulding lines inwards on a closed vector. If I draw a line I can reverse the red line up or down but not on a closed vector? Not sure what I am missing. Why cant you put the moulding on the edge of your piece so you have a nice edge?
Moulding On Profile Edge
- highpockets
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Re: Moulding On Profile Edge
John's advice is right on in making sure the sweep vector is oriented correctly. Also, to make the moulding toolpath end at the outside perimeter of your piece, you need to create a new rail vector by offsetting the perimeter vector inward by the width of the sweep. The moulding profile will go on the outside of this new vector. Use the perimeter vector to cut the part out, but not for the moulding.
Steve Godding
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Re: Moulding On Profile Edge
That explains a lot about my last moulding project. Thanks for that bit! Can you expound on the reasons for that, because I did a ring that had a linear ramped top surface, but that issue didn't show up (I'm guessing) because I was over-cutting the surface anyway.
Tex — Crooked Wood Products
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Re: Moulding On Profile Edge
Since you can only cut a moulding toolpath on the outside of a closed vector, that vector has to define the inside of the profile is the simplest way to look at it.
You can usually cut on either side of an open vector by changing the direction of the vector. You might say "Aha! I can cut the closed vector to make it open and change the direction to force it to cut on the inside!" In my experience, if the endpoints overlap then VCarvePro/Aspire is smart enough to figure out that it probably should be closed and will not move the cut to the inside. You have to leave a little gap, which will be visible on the material, unless you make a second toolpath just covering that small gap.
Also, if you cut on the inside of the vector and have sharp corners you will run into another problem which is that VCP/Aspire will not allow a moulding toolpath where the profile overlaps itself.
Easier to just offset the outside vector and use that as the inside of the profile.
You can usually cut on either side of an open vector by changing the direction of the vector. You might say "Aha! I can cut the closed vector to make it open and change the direction to force it to cut on the inside!" In my experience, if the endpoints overlap then VCarvePro/Aspire is smart enough to figure out that it probably should be closed and will not move the cut to the inside. You have to leave a little gap, which will be visible on the material, unless you make a second toolpath just covering that small gap.
Also, if you cut on the inside of the vector and have sharp corners you will run into another problem which is that VCP/Aspire will not allow a moulding toolpath where the profile overlaps itself.
Easier to just offset the outside vector and use that as the inside of the profile.
Steve Godding
Not all who wander (or wonder) are lost
Not all who wander (or wonder) are lost