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I plan to do some more experiments tomorrow. I'll report results as soon as I have some.
The question: if I cut something this long, do I need a backer mat of the same length? Or can I just cut a sheet of .010 or .020 styrene and feed it through the rollers?
Going back to my wanting to scratchbuild some DS6-4-1500s, how do y'all think acetel (Delrin) will work? Would it be too hard? And do y'all think that the resultant part would be precise enough?
Do you have a source for sheet Delrin that would be suitable? The thinnest I can find in a quick Google search is .031"+/-.003" thick, and a 12-inch square of it costs over ten bucks.I know they use Delrin for handrails because it's tough and flexible, but what advantage does it have over styrene for the body?
Just a quick thought. Has anyone tried painting sheet styrene brick red and using the cutter to scrape in mortar lines?
I'm afraid I made khaki-colored bricks instead of red, since that's what I had on hand. Is that okay?
I'm surprised given how quickly the taper on that harbor freight scribe flares wide, that it cuts with the same precision as the much narrower blade that comes with the Silhouette SD. Would be interesting to view the two outputs under a loupe or with a macro lens to see if the harbor freight scribe is just scribing a wider path and making the mortar lines visually look better.
The only problem I see with my getting a SD when my financial horizon clears is that Illustrator costs more than the darn machine. What file formats can the SD handle? I'm wondering if I can get away with increasing my depth of knowledge (from beginner) with Inkscape and using it instead.
.dxf (AutoCAD, Desktop Cutting Plotters). Inkscape provides two distinct DXF export routines. The first is geared toward CAD uses and the second toward desktop cutting plotters....There is one option that targets Craft ROBO Desktop plotters that require an even simpler file format.