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Making Your CAM Journey Easier with Fusion 360

You're reading from  Making Your CAM Journey Easier with Fusion 360

Product type Book
Published in Mar 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804612576
Pages 464 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
Author (1):
Fabrizio Cimò Fabrizio Cimò
Profile icon Fabrizio Cimò

Table of Contents (26) Chapters

Preface 1. Part 1 – Implementing Turning Operations in Fusion 360
2. Chapter 1: Getting Started with Turning and Its Tools 3. Chapter 2: Handling Part Setup for Turning 4. Chapter 3: Discovering the Tool Library and Custom Tools 5. Chapter 4: Implementing Our First Turning Operation 6. Chapter 5: Discovering More Turning Strategies 7. Part 2 – Milling with Fusion 360
8. Chapter 6: Getting Started with Milling and Its Tools 9. Chapter 7: Optimizing the Shape of Milled Parts to Avoid Design Flaws 10. Chapter 8: Part Handling and Part Setup for Milling 11. Chapter 9: Implementing Our First Milling Operations 12. Chapter 10: Machining the Second Placement 13. Part 3 – Laser Cutting Using Fusion 360
14. Chapter 11: Getting Started with Laser Cutting 15. Chapter 12: Nesting Parts for Laser Cutting 16. Chapter 13: Creating Our First Laser Cutting Operation 17. Part 4 – Using Fusion 360 for Additive Manufacturing
18. Chapter 14: Getting Started with Additive Manufacturing 19. Chapter 15: Managing the Limitations of FDM Printers 20. Chapter 16: Printing Our First Part 21. Chapter 17: Understanding Advanced Printing Settings 22. Part 5 – Testing Our Knowledge
23. Chapter 18: Quiz 24. Index 25. Other Books You May Enjoy

Presenting the model

Since we are about to start creating a printing setup using Fusion 360, we should begin with a 3D model to use as an example part. The part we are about to print is a little bit more advanced than the examples covered in Chapter 15. Here it is:

Figure 16.1: Example model

Figure 16.1: Example model

It’s quite a complex bracket with several mounting holes and multiple section changes. This type of geometry may be a bit challenging for milling, but it is feasible for additive manufacturing.

First, we must check if it can fit inside the print volume of our printer. The overall dimensions of the part are 45x107x45 mm, and I plan to print the part using a printer with a build volume of 230x150x140 mm, so we shouldn’t find any issues with the dimensions.

Now that we have discovered that we can print the part, we also need to understand the forces it will have to sustain. I can tell you that this component is not loaded with any force, so the layer...

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