The Joys of CNC
I was late to the table in accepting 3D printing, and the same goes for CNC machining whether it's for wood or metal. I have always liked woodworking and metalworking (doing it the manual way), but I could kick myself for not automating sooner. I think the big deterrent was that without any 3D modeling skills you can't do much with 3D printing or CNC machining, but the D-Lev project has provided a motivation to make these easier and much more fun to learn.
Case in point, the relatively simple baltic birch carcase for my PIII D-Lev prototype would in the past have been made by routing around accurately-made patterns. The end plates of this enclosure are easy enough to produce with a flush-cutting ball bearing router bit following a thin ply wood pattern. But after making two ends manually and looking at the holes that needed to be drilled I decided to draw it up in Solidworks and try routing the whole thing, holes and all. I found as I was drawing it that I started adding slots and pockets that otherwise would not have been put in due to the setup time to route them manually. And this is one of the huge benefits that I have failed to consider while justifying sticking with the old methods. Not only is it like having an employee fabricating something while I get to work on something else, the level of precision, detail, and added safety are all factors that I never considered.
Anyway, I'm on board now, even though I'm still taking baby steps.
Below are the carcase' base and ends for the PIII enclosure. Granted this is all simple stuff but I am new to all of this - the CAD, the CAM, Solidworks, and the machine control software (Mach3). In the base panel the snap-in power switch pocket and the hex cutout for the power connector nut are things that simply would never have been done by hand, as is the case with the slot in the end panels. The part of the ends that you will see when the acrylic cover is in place will be slightly larger panels made of some choice of hardwood, and I don't see any reason to not use the same process to cut these out too. All of this is making me rethink about having an all-wood sloped case (except for a flat panel) which is a little tedious to make manually.
BTW, the tabs holding the end pieces in the stock are only .060" thick and the parts can be easily removed with an X-acto knife:
[right-click > view image to see a larger picture]