aarongough
Stainless
- Joined
- Oct 27, 2014
- Location
- Toronto, Canada
Hey all!
For the longest time I thought that my 'old' Fadals simply weren't capable of creating really high quality surface finishes, I would always get small inconsistencies in between passes when doing a finishing toolpath, and that would leave divots and so on that I'd have to hand finish out...
However I recently found out Fusion 360 does not create toolpaths directly from the solid model, instead it creates a mesh of the model first and then makes the toolpaths from that. Apparently this is fairly common with CAM software, I just didn't realize that was how it worked...
After that revelation I started paying a lot more attention to the 'tolerance' setting in the Fusion toolpath dialog as it directly impacts how finely the mesh is generated, and found that setting it to very small values (0.00001mm) drastically improved the quality of my surface finishes, at the expense of much longer times for computing the toolpaths.
Just today I found out that Fusion has a bunch of 'hidden' tolerance settings that can be accessed by right-clicking on a toolpath and then choosing 'compare and edit' and filtering the parameters by 'tolerance', which gives you this:
Some of these I understand:
Surface Triangulation Tolerance - Maximum error between generated mesh and solid model
Contour Linearization Tolerance - Maximum error between contour and generated linear segments
Smoothing Tolerance - Maximum error allowed when fitting arcs to generated mesh
However I have no idea what the 'Chaining Tolerance', 'Thinning Tolerance' and 'Calculation Tolerance' settings do, and it seems that they are not documented officially anywhere which is frustrating.
Does anyone have any tips/tricks/experience for utilizing these settings to produce really high quality machined surfaces? My application is similar to mold/die work where I'm hard-milling and need to produce REALLY high quality surfaces with minimal error in order to reduce/eliminate the need for hand/bench work.
I am happy for a toolpath to take hours to generate if that's what it takes to get the results I need!
Any and all input greatly appreciated!
-Aaron
For the longest time I thought that my 'old' Fadals simply weren't capable of creating really high quality surface finishes, I would always get small inconsistencies in between passes when doing a finishing toolpath, and that would leave divots and so on that I'd have to hand finish out...
However I recently found out Fusion 360 does not create toolpaths directly from the solid model, instead it creates a mesh of the model first and then makes the toolpaths from that. Apparently this is fairly common with CAM software, I just didn't realize that was how it worked...
After that revelation I started paying a lot more attention to the 'tolerance' setting in the Fusion toolpath dialog as it directly impacts how finely the mesh is generated, and found that setting it to very small values (0.00001mm) drastically improved the quality of my surface finishes, at the expense of much longer times for computing the toolpaths.
Just today I found out that Fusion has a bunch of 'hidden' tolerance settings that can be accessed by right-clicking on a toolpath and then choosing 'compare and edit' and filtering the parameters by 'tolerance', which gives you this:

Some of these I understand:
Surface Triangulation Tolerance - Maximum error between generated mesh and solid model
Contour Linearization Tolerance - Maximum error between contour and generated linear segments
Smoothing Tolerance - Maximum error allowed when fitting arcs to generated mesh
However I have no idea what the 'Chaining Tolerance', 'Thinning Tolerance' and 'Calculation Tolerance' settings do, and it seems that they are not documented officially anywhere which is frustrating.
Does anyone have any tips/tricks/experience for utilizing these settings to produce really high quality machined surfaces? My application is similar to mold/die work where I'm hard-milling and need to produce REALLY high quality surfaces with minimal error in order to reduce/eliminate the need for hand/bench work.
I am happy for a toolpath to take hours to generate if that's what it takes to get the results I need!
Any and all input greatly appreciated!
-Aaron