Awesome video. The local library has an X-Carve machine and I found this video when wondering what I could do with it. I have no need to make a cabinet but now after watching your video I want to :)
Thank you for the detailed video. I own a woodworking business and thinking about buying the 4x4 X-carve Pro to streamline the process of manufacturing my structural boxes for kitchen cabinetry. I love the idea of the intuitive all-in-one software and the well made compact tool. However after watching your videos and calling the Inventibles customer service I am still unclear about a few important details: I mostly use Euro style frameless cabinet boxes that conform to the True 32 standard. An average base cabinet of this kind has about ninety-two 5 mm holes. In my mind I was thinking that a high quality 5mm compression bit would be able to drill the system holes, cut out the panel and rout a 1/4" dado for the back panel. But after doing some research it looks like CNC machines are not very good at drilling small holes. What would be a realistic workflow for a Xcarve pro in a commercial shop to produce these kind of boxes? Start with a 1/8 upcut bit so the machine can drill all the holes in a spiral motion to be able to eject the debris? Then do a tool change to 1/4 compression bit to cut out the panels and dados? Or is it possible to use an actual drill bit for the holes and then change to a 1/4 compression bit to do the panel cutting? Is the spindle up to the task of drilling a couple thousand 5mm holes in a day?
Great video! Thank you. I think I’m in the mood to make a cabinet now.
Do it!
Awesome video. The local library has an X-Carve machine and I found this video when wondering what I could do with it. I have no need to make a cabinet but now after watching your video I want to :)
Hope it helps!
Thank you for the detailed video. I own a woodworking business and thinking about buying the 4x4 X-carve Pro to streamline the process of manufacturing my structural boxes for kitchen cabinetry. I love the idea of the intuitive all-in-one software and the well made compact tool. However after watching your videos and calling the Inventibles customer service I am still unclear about a few important details: I mostly use Euro style frameless cabinet boxes that conform to the True 32 standard. An average base cabinet of this kind has about ninety-two 5 mm holes. In my mind I was thinking that a high quality 5mm compression bit would be able to drill the system holes, cut out the panel and rout a 1/4" dado for the back panel. But after doing some research it looks like CNC machines are not very good at drilling small holes. What would be a realistic workflow for a Xcarve pro in a commercial shop to produce these kind of boxes? Start with a 1/8 upcut bit so the machine can drill all the holes in a spiral motion to be able to eject the debris? Then do a tool change to 1/4 compression bit to cut out the panels and dados? Or is it possible to use an actual drill bit for the holes and then change to a 1/4 compression bit to do the panel cutting? Is the spindle up to the task of drilling a couple thousand 5mm holes in a day?
Great video! Thanks.
Nice! Great addition to easel! Is the fusion model available anywhere? Nice work.
Is it possible to change cabinet settings after import?
Great video!!!
Thanks!
Can you add custom dados within the app or do you have to design a part from scratch? I.E. if you want the bottom panel to dado into the side panel?
Currently you have to set those manually but there are some BIG updates coming for the cabinet app, so stay tuned!
@@inventables That's fine as long as it's possible. thanks!!!
Stay tuned!
@@inventableswhere are they?
2 changes needed:
Dimensions in MM and Inches
Auto save so you dont lose the info if you accidentally back out.
It is amazing. Can I run Easel from Chrome on iPad Pro please?
Currently, we don't have Easel optimized to work with a tablet.
Will this work with the 1000mm model?
Yes.
Yep! We used the X-Carve Pro as the example, the only change will be in the size of the pieces and how you orient them.