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I was definitely using edge finders (it seems like machining in general would be way way way more work without edge finders) and occasionally Mastercam.

Definitely never used a 5-axis mill or robodrill though.

I guess my main point of comparison was to laser cutters, which really were basically push button automatable in comparison.

Granted the problem is a lot easier (purely 2-D cuts) and the cutter loses a lot of precision for thick material, but any time I got to use a laser cutter I was blown away by easy everything is and kept wondering whether a similar process could ultimately take root for machining.



The forces involved in CNC machining is a large complicating factor, compared to laser (or 3d-printing). In a laser one can just throw the material onto the bed, and the results will be fine - not so on a CNC. And that one is quite inherent to the paradigm.

Other aspects could likely be simplified and automated to a larger degree than today. In many areas solutions exists, but are quite high budget - things like tool changers, material loading and unloading.


Machining can be simpler if you've got a couple precision features that can be clamped to with hard fixturing. It's all about positioning the workpiece accurately so the fixed g-code program can do its thing.




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