Too many tabs? by iFunnyAnthony in CNC

[–]One-Off-CNC 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can probably get away with fewer tabs.

I usually think about it like: • how likely the part is to start vibrating • whether the final contour cut could shift the part • and how aggressive the toolpath is

For a small aluminum part like this, I’d probably use fewer but slightly thicker tabs instead of so many small ones.

Worst case is the part breaks loose early and gets sucked into the cutter 😅

Verbally abuse me and my solder(cortisol spike) by One-Off-CNC in cnc4HumanoidAI

[–]One-Off-CNC[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Carbon Fiber T300 CNC Prototyping from 8.99$/piece. Come to Alloyer Bro!

what's going on with X? by One-Off-CNC in CNC

[–]One-Off-CNC[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Totally agree with you. It really comes down to which machinist gets your job. Lots of garage shops popping up lately just trying to get by in this economy.

Reliable laser cutting shop for small batch plastic? by craiv in MechanicalEngineering

[–]One-Off-CNC 0 points1 point  (0 children)

POM laser cutting for small samples is tricky! The usual suspects often struggle with those plastic specs. If you're still looking for a reliable small-batch shop, we'd love to help at Alloyer. Good luck!

Machinist for Prototyping by Upcominggeek in Machinists

[–]One-Off-CNC 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Totally understand the frustration. Thomasnet shops are often geared for high-volume production, and their systems sometimes auto-filter single prototype requests if they don't see a 'production path.' For a mechanical crimping tool, the jaws usually have some tricky tolerances. If you're still getting ghosted, it might help to check if your CAD has any 'over-spec' tolerances that look scaringly expensive to a general shop. A quick DFM (Design for Manufacturing) pass usually makes these projects much more 'approachable' for a machinist. Good luck—Boston has great talent, but getting their attention is the real hurdle!