Please reach out to me if you cannot find an answer to your question.
Often, when looking at engineering drawings, the engineers will draw the important bits of whatever part they want you to make. they will normally leave a note to "break all edges" or to chamfer any sharp edges. This is something that machinists will do to ensure that the part isn't sharp, and can cut their customers. it is a sign of quality, and a thought-out product.
I expect every product that goes out the door to be well made, and while they may not always have a chamfer, they will always have a broken edge.
My current primary method of manufacture is with a CNC router. At my day-job, I use very similar (although, admittedly, much more expensive, complicated and better) CNC machines. I program the machine to make the part as accurately as possible. I have a high degree of accuracy and repeatability. The material I work with is just a variable in the work I do, it doesn't define the work.
I am a CNC machinist by trade, and I do just that at my normal job, during regular business hours. This is my very small start up in my garage. I also think these hours are more desirable for customers too. I assume everyone else has a day-job. who has time to contact customer service during normal business hours?
When you take a box, and you chamfer all of the edges, you get some interesting geometry where three of the edges turn into a corner. This was the inspiration for my logo. I got some feedback that it sort of looks like a three-jaw chuck, and honestly that works too.
You bet I do! Please reach out to me via email or social media and we can talk about what you want to see and how much it'll cost!
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