Difference between revisions of "Understanding CNC Bender Rotation Directions"

From ATTWiki
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 16: Line 16:
  
 
[[image:bobcad_righthand_rule.png|400px]]
 
[[image:bobcad_righthand_rule.png|400px]]
 +
 +
<br><br>
 +
In this illustration, you are standing in the front of the bending looking toward the back. The thumb of your right hand is pointing toward your face, and the curl of the fingers show the direction of a positive rotation.

Revision as of 01:12, 30 March 2021

Cncbender logo.jpg

Positive direction rotations in benders are NOT standardized. It is important to understand how to determine rotation directions to avoid confusion through mirror-imaging.


  1. Regardless of which way a bender bends (left or right), the direction of the negative and positive rotations stay the same when the controls are the same type. Any control that changes direction based on bend-hand does not follow the most-used approach for rotation directions (See Note 1 below). So the "hand" of the bender shouldn't matter.

  2. The direction of rotation can be safely indicated with a CW or CCW direction of rotation from a common viewpoint relative to the bender. The most common viewpoint is from standing in front of the bender and looking into the collet. (See Note 2.)

  3. When a bender collet rotates CCW to rotate positive, then it uses the American industry standard, the standard for our software.

CNC Bender Software can be setup with POSITIVE rotating either CW or CCW. However, by default, all CNC Benders leave SMT setup with CCW being the positive direction.


Note 1: It isn't logical because the bend programs written on either hand bender would then be incompatible with the opposite hand benders (left to right and right to left).

Note 2: The robotics and engineering community uses a simple right-hand or left-hand rule to designate which way an axis spins positive. For example, this is an image from the Bobcad-CAM site:

Bobcad righthand rule.png



In this illustration, you are standing in the front of the bending looking toward the back. The thumb of your right hand is pointing toward your face, and the curl of the fingers show the direction of a positive rotation.