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Learning GibbsCam - connect/disconnect?

AHC

Aluminum
Joined
Aug 5, 2011
Location
NJ USA
I'm having trouble understanding how this works. I'm thinking it is easier to draw in Solidworks and import the file.
Can someone give me an tricks or secrets to getting this into my head?
Thanks.
 
Im 8 months in teaching myself gibbs, while it is diffirent from anything ive ever come in contact with, once you are use to it, its pretty quick.

As far as connect, are you just talking about connecting IE joning IE chaining together two lines / arc's splines etc?

Ctr-Click both lines right click, hit connect. if its an arc you usualy get the option of where to join on the arc, click the one you want, hit space or the ok on geometry pallet and your done.

If you have a online.gibbscam account, the basic tutorials are very helpfull at getting you going

-Jacob
 
Like was said, very quick once you get the hang of it. If it is simple I prefer Gibbscam, however if I have a complicated part I do usually go to Solidworks to model it.
 
One of the frustrations I had learning Gibbs, was that you could end up with several points stacked up on top of each other, often enough, causing a failure to connect.

Pull down the View menu, click Labels (iirc) (maybe Draw Points, too)and each point or line's number will show. when you have several stacked up, you see the label as a blurry mess, and you can start deleting points there, until it cleans up. If you didn't know that, anyway.

Keep in mind that you are drawing lines and points, you are drawing geometry, not a part. Sometimes you use the part shape as the geometry, sometimes not. If that didn't make sense, sit down and draw a straight line, with a terminator at each end, and see how many different shapes and sizes of cut path you can create. By the time you play with the offsets and various cut path strategies, the options are huge. Whether you find a use fr all of them... gonna depend what you are making.

Cheers
Trev
 
Like was said, very quick once you get the hang of it. If it is simple I prefer Gibbscam, however if I have a complicated part I do usually go to Solidworks to model it.


SolidWorks is so damn fast why waste your time in any of the CAM software's CAD side of things and since Gibbs is a CAM partner of SW if you change the model in SW it should warn you!!

I setup everything in SW from material to sketches that can be used for containment of toolpathes.......:soapbox::Ithankyou::stirthepot:
 
One of the frustrations I had learning Gibbs, was that you could end up with several points stacked up on top of each other, often enough, causing a failure to connect.

Pull down the View menu, click Labels (iirc) (maybe Draw Points, too)and each point or line's number will show. when you have several stacked up, you see the label as a blurry mess, and you can start deleting points there, until it cleans up. If you didn't know that, anyway.

Keep in mind that you are drawing lines and points, you are drawing geometry, not a part. Sometimes you use the part shape as the geometry, sometimes not. If that didn't make sense, sit down and draw a straight line, with a terminator at each end, and see how many different shapes and sizes of cut path you can create. By the time you play with the offsets and various cut path strategies, the options are huge. Whether you find a use fr all of them... gonna depend what you are making.

Cheers
Trev

I think this is what is baffling. I am used to drawing the part and applying toolpath to it. I started using the tutorials. SW is so easy though, I'm going to need self control to not give up on creating geometry in Gibbs.
 
Gibbs is fine as CAM software but in my opinion, for CAD work of any kind, almost any free CAD program is better. Of all the CAD software I have ever used Gibbs is completely backward.
 
It is really very simple. In someways simpler than SW. Go through a couple of tutorials.

Really??? How is that, most CAM software I've worked with the CAD side is kind of crappy.

Guess you don't use SW enough.

Sketch just you do with a pencil and paper in SW, doesn't get any easier than that!
 
I think this is what is baffling. I am used to drawing the part and applying toolpath to it. I started using the tutorials. SW is so easy though, I'm going to need self control to not give up on creating geometry in Gibbs.

Never had the opportunity to get serious with any of the parametric solid modelling softwares. Was chucked in the deep end of the pool, programming and running a milling machine with Gibbs, and no previous background with CNC or Gcode. It was a little brutal, but I bludgeoned my way through, tore out some hair, and asked a lot of dumb questions on several different forums. The manuals were a big help too (whooda thunkit?)

All my machining was 2 1/2 axis, so that is where I come from. Onesy-twosy parts, mostly, rather than production, but high enough value parts that sitting at the computer on the shop floor was time well spent, even as slow as I was.

Yeah. I think there is a lot of stuff in Gibbs that is ass backwards. I figured it for relics of it's origins as an Apple based software, that had become 'how we do things around here'.

Everything is easy when you know how, eh!

One of the things all the guys I worked with commented upon, was that it was pretty easy to pic it back up, if they had been away for a while. Once you can get around the backwards bits, it moves pretty quickly. The ability to dry run all the programming (Cut Part Simulation) saved us a lot of time and tooling, too. No idea what the other SW's offer in that respect though.

Cheers
Trev
 
Really??? How is that, most CAM software I've worked with the CAD side is kind of crappy.

Guess you don't use SW enough.

Sketch just you do with a pencil and paper in SW, doesn't get any easier than that!

If it is a simple bushing or shaft I use geometry expert in Gibbscam and go. It really is not worth my time to sketch it in SW and import over to Gibbs when I can in a minute sketch it in Gibbs and keep programming. I would have to open up SW and then save the SW file. Like I said, a little more complex part is definitiely worth it.
 
I am a mill guy and the only time I use SW is to creat complex turned stock, or if I am doing surfacing. Sometimes it is very conveinent to create a fixture holding the part in SW. Most burn outs or simple turned parts I will create the stock in Gibbs. I will ask for ParaSolid XT files from customers. They seem to be the easiest to work with.
 
Here is what you guy's don't think about, if you start to create everything in SW you are now making a library of all sorts of things, easy to change, add, subtract, use again and again.

just don't make it an forget it, thats where the power lies! If you are not on the latest version then yes it may be one more step because no file open SW.

I have used SW since 97 and I set up everything in it I have even modeled my pin and threaded sub-plate and drop the parts on that, no need to even set the X,Y zero because the plate is indicated in on the machine, drop the part and go......mostly but you get my drift.
 
Because the Gibbs side that works with solid works cost $20,000. Many only have the 3 axis version and it doesn’t have all the options you would likely use with solid works even in a 2.5 environment. Heck the basic Gibbs doesn’t even connect z depth you have to program the cam and if you want to machine diagonally in Z you have to shell out another $2,500 or so just for the option. Gibbs in itself for the majority of 3 axis work is fine and will suffice 75% of the time without spending $5,000 or whatever solid works cost. Now if he has inventor there is a plug-in and that’s far more cost efficient if he prefers modeling parts instead of snapping geometry together. Gibbs does have a contour trace plug in and it’s super fast once your lines and geometry are in place. In fact it’s much faster than modeling. Where modeling seems to shine for myself is in lathe work especially when you need to model a stepped cylinder with live tool features.
 








 
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