Raster passes
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Raster passes refer to the most basic of all machining strategies for the finishing or semi-finishing of a part during computer-aided manufacturing (CAM). In raster passes machining the milling cutter moves along curves on the cutter location surface (CL surface) obtained by intersecting the CL surface with vertical, parallel planes. Many CAM systems implement this strategy by sampling points on these curves by calculating intersection points of the CL surface and as many vertical lines as needed to approximate the curve to the desired accuracy.
[edit] Links to sites outlining this strategy
There has never been a standardization of terminology used in the industry for the different machining strategies, so it is known by many different names, often with poor illustrations in the brochure because it's so basic, users are supposed to know already what it is.
- planar finishing - WorkNC [1]
- planar finishing - OneCNC[2]
- raster finishing - machining Strategist
- raster finishing - Depocam [3]
- parallel lace - Edgecam [4]
- axis-parallel finishing - Tebis [5]
- raster finishing - Powermill [6]
- parallel finishing - Mastercam [7]
- illustrated but not named in Surfcam [8]
- plane finishing - sprutcam [9]
- parallel lace - VX [10]