Going from pencil sketch to computerized laser cut

   / Going from pencil sketch to computerized laser cut #1  

jmc

Elite Member
Joined
Jul 21, 2003
Messages
3,110
Location
SW Indiana
Tractor
Ford 1920 4x4 (traded in on Kubota). Case 480F TLB w/4 in 1 bucket, 4x4. Gehl CTL60 tracked loader, Kubota L4330 GST
Say you have a detailed line sketch you want to feed to a computerized laser cutter that accepts dxf and dwg files. So after you scan the sketch, what keeps the laser from making multiple passes in sections where the line width was a little to wide on the sketch? (The original sketch is detailed enough you wouldn't want to go back an manually adjust the wide segments.)
 
   / Going from pencil sketch to computerized laser cut #2  
There is probably a tolerance setting in the software otherwise anything that is in math will be recognized by the machine.

<font color="blue"> (The original sketch is detailed enough you wouldn't want to go back an manually adjust the wide segments.) </font>

Then the final part should be detailed enough no?
 
   / Going from pencil sketch to computerized laser cut #3  
The hand sketch will be scanned in as a raster file, similar to a bitmap format. The DXF and DWG formats are vector files. There is software you can use to conver raster files to vector files, but if the raster lines are too wide in areas, the conversion can potentially make the end points of the different vectors segments discontinuous during conversion. Most good software packages would compensate for this I assume, but I don't convert rasters to vectors often. Mostly I just export dxf's and pdf's from Pro/ENGINEER native drawing format.

How hard would it be to just draw the sketch into a cad station and export a dxf?
 
   / Going from pencil sketch to computerized laser cut #4  
Another ProE user! Whoa. I now use UG and it is not as good as Pro!.

We have rasters at my work place that scans them in pretty **** good. At least my Kubota symbol came out nice...till IT deleted it!

You should be able to sketch the dwg better in ProE, UG, Cadam, Cadra, Catia, Autocad whatever and be cleaner.
 
   / Going from pencil sketch to computerized laser cut #5  
Scan and import into your CAD program then redraw over it in a different layer. For the laser you'll need to make sure all the lines intersect properly /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif
 
   / Going from pencil sketch to computerized laser cut
  • Thread Starter
#6  
Everyone,

Thanks for the replies. A little better description:

This is an art project about 3 ft square completely covered in freehanded curves. The artist says that he cannot draw with a mouse/stylus like he can with a pencil so directly entering his work on the computer is not negotiable as far as he's concerned.

Anyway, following up on Jared 's lead on raster to vector file conversions, I found some companies who do this- $28.00 for a 12 x 18 inch scan. (scaleable to any size) And as Steve suggested, there are tolerance settings to avoid multiple parallel vectors covering the same (wide) line segment. The company tailors their settings according to what you want to do with the vector file.

If anyone is interested in how this turns out, let me know and I'll post a followup.

Thanks,

John
 
   / Going from pencil sketch to computerized laser cut #7  
The company I work for uses Pro/E here in the US. I actually run the US based mechanical engineering dept. My UK co-workers all use IDEAS, but are looking at going to UG instead. If they go to UG, I'll probably end up with that too, but I can't get rid of Pro/E because of legacy products. I've released 16 new products in the last two years all in Pro/E. We have released even more Pro/E based stuff prior to that.

John, it sounds like you found a decent place to do the scanning and conversion for you. Post a picture when it's all done. I have a couple vendors down here in Fort Lauderdale who have laser cutters and a water jet cutter. I'm actually farming out some BX23 components to them. You may want to ask your laser cut vendor if he wants a rev 12 or rev 13 or rev 14 dxf or dwg file. Both my vendors can take Autocad rev 12 formats, but they can't use rev 13 or 14. They both bought thier machines many years ago.
 
   / Going from pencil sketch to computerized laser cut #8  
I'm interested in how it comes out. I use AutoCAD all day and if stored as a .dwg file, the lines can be stored as having no width, or any width value you want to give them.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

2019 John Deere 5090R Tractor (A52384)
2019 John Deere...
2023 Komatsu D61PXL-24 Crawler Dozer (A51573)
2023 Komatsu...
2013 UTILITY VS2RA 53FT REEFER TRAILER (A52141)
2013 UTILITY VS2RA...
2019 Krause 8005-30 Excelerator - High Speed Vertical Tillage - 30 FT Working Width (A53472)
2019 Krause...
JOHN DEERE 1705/6700 LOT IDENTIFIER 20 (A53084)
JOHN DEERE...
20314 (A51694)
20314 (A51694)
 
Top