@Anonymous wrote:
Easy to lose track in turning code as well, when dealing with complex parts (lots of tools and profiles, detailed face groove work etc). Backplot is always a huge help in complicated programs, lately with a bunch of groove and face-groove turning, we would be lost without the Cimco Backplot. This is mostly due to how terrible HSM is currently with groove cycles, it will often take 5-7 operations to do a single groove properly and even after it looks good in HSM, it will need to be carefully checked in Cimco (we have caught it several times now producing G2/G3 lines which contain errors causing the machine to stop mid-cut). HSM for Inventor has no actual "Simulation", only graphics, so it will not register these faulty lines and they remain unnoticed until A) code expert catches it in review, or B) machine catches it and the machinist plays with code or a programmer/engineer goes out to stare at the control for half an hour trying to interpret the issue.
Another fine example is with aggregate tooling on numerous controls: HSM has no support for this so the programmers must make due in code... try doing that without a backplot eh? Good way to set yourself up for a crash.
To be honest I've not encountered any of the problems you are describing here. I mean there were issues with using R in G2/G3, which is mainly due to the limitation of that kind of code, not so much the toolpaths, but haven't seen G2/G3's error out a machine...
Aggregate tooling? You program that by hand now? And why don't you program it in HSM? I mean the Tool orientation and a good post processor would work fine for that.
I would love the backplot back, let me be clear on that, not trying to argue that.
Laurens Wijnschenk
3DTechDraw
AutoDesk CAM user & Post editor.
René for Legend.
