• Cort
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    17 hours ago

    Sorry, long day, I was the dick there.

    I’m in Autodesk most of the time, but have operated (read: babysat) on occasion, our multi-axis mill.

    My point is that once the full workflow is set up and documented it can be transmitted.

    Maybe I’m thinking about it differently than you in terms of final output. I’m not talking about copying a Glock piece by piece. I’m thinking closer to the type of gun Tetsuya Yamagami used to assassinate Abe. Basic, simple, and repeatable if not reusable. Something so easy it could eliminate moving or flipping the workpiece all together. Silencers could also be fairly simple to automate.

    • Bad_Engineering@fedia.io
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      16 hours ago

      Ok, so you do at least know the machinery. My point was that it wasn’t as simple as someone just loading a workflow onto a mill and pressing go. Workholding, zeroing, probing, tool offsets, and all the little setup stuff. Takes someone with experience to get going. Most times, the first time running, a program doesn’t work, or at least doesn’t work correctly. It is totally possible to setup a machine with a bar feeder and a robot to make finished parts all day long. Getting it to do it correctly and accurately is the trick.

      • bluGill@fedia.io
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        5 hours ago

        Not that you are wrong, but that isn’t hard to teach somebody. Sure they will get a few failed parts, and likely break a few cutters. However all the instructions you need are there, there are plenty of how to machine parts videos on youtube (as always of various quality levels).