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====Terminology====
 
====Terminology====
 
* Tool path - The path that the water jet will follow when cutting out a part. This includes more than just the outline of the part because the water jet must pierce through the material before performing a cut.
 
* Tool path - The path that the water jet will follow when cutting out a part. This includes more than just the outline of the part because the water jet must pierce through the material before performing a cut.
* ProtoMAX - This is the software used to set up a tool path for the water jet and can be found on the laptop that is used with the waterjet.
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* ProtoMAX LAYOUT- This is the software used to set up a tool path for the water jet and can be found on the laptop that is used with the waterjet.
 
* MAKE - This is the software that directly communicates with the waterjet to perform a cut from a tool path. It can also be found on the waterjet's laptop.  
 
* MAKE - This is the software that directly communicates with the waterjet to perform a cut from a tool path. It can also be found on the waterjet's laptop.  
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====Overview====
 
====Overview====
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The waterjet cutter is an amazing tool that can be used on a wide variety of materials including 1" steel!  However, it is limited to a 12" by 12" cut area with a 1" thickness being its maximum. Make sure the waterjet cutter is capable of handling your part and your material before going through all of the setup procedures. Like cutting many other two dimensional cutting tools, the cutting process should begin with a DXF file created from Solidworks or a similar software. Once a DXF fie has been created it can then be used to create a tool path using ProtoMAX layout. The detailed steps to do do this can be found in the general procedure but the most important step is to ensure that the water jet pierces the material outside of the part outline. After the tool path is created and the machine has been properly set up, the job can be posted to the MAKE software, which is installed on the water jet's computer , to perform the cut.
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The waterjet cutter is an amazing tool that can be used on a wide variety of materials including 1" steel!  However, it is limited to a 12" by 12" cut area with a 1" thickness being its maximum. Make sure the waterjet cutter is capable of handling your part and your material before going through all of the setup procedures. Like cutting many other two dimensional cutting tools, the cutting process should begin with a DXF file created from Solidworks or a similar software. Once a DXF fie has been created it can then be used to create a tool path using ProtoMAX Layout. The detailed steps to do do this can be found in the general procedure but the most important step is to ensure that the water jet pierces the material outside of the part outline. After the tool path is created and the machine has been properly set up, the job can be posted to the MAKE software, which is installed on the water jet's laptop computer, to perform the cut.
    
====Demonstration====
 
====Demonstration====
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To show competency in the P
    
====General Procedure====
 
====General Procedure====
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'''Part Design in ProtoMAX LAYOUT'''
 
'''Part Design in ProtoMAX LAYOUT'''
# Open ProtoMAX LAYOUT.  Your screen should look something like this. <br /> <figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline>[[File:ProtoMAX_LAYOUT.png|600x600px]]</figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline> <br /> <br />
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# Open ProtoMAX LAYOUT.  Your screen should look something like this. <br /> <figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline>[[File:ProtoMAX_LAYOUT.png|600x600px]]</figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline> <br /> <br />
#Select the "Line" tool from the "Draw" menu on the left of the screen and create a 2" square with a 1" square notch in the top right corner.  To do this, click anywhere on the screen to start the first line.  This will bring a popup "Specify Dimensions" box where you will enter 2 into the "Rise (dy)" box.  This will create a 2" vertical line.  Select the "Line" tool again at the top of the first line and enter 1 into the "Run (dx)" box.  This will create a 1" horizontal line to the right.  Repeat this process until the box looks like this.  The last line at the bottom can by created by selecting both open edges with the "Line" tool. <br /> <figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline>[[File:Basic_shape_of_box.png|600x600px]]</figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline> <br /> <br />
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#Select the "Line" tool from the "Draw" menu on the left of the screen and create a 2" square with a 1" square notch in the top right corner.  To do this, click anywhere on the screen to start the first line.  This will bring a popup "Specify Dimensions" box where you will enter 2 into the "Rise (dy)" box.  This will create a 2" vertical line.  Select the "Line" tool again at the top of the first line and enter 1 into the "Run (dx)" box.  This will create a 1" horizontal line to the right.  Repeat this process until the box looks like this.  The last line at the bottom can by created by selecting both open edges with the "Line" tool. <br /> <figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline>[[File:Basic_shape_of_box.png|600x600px]]</figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline> <br /> <br />
 
# Select the "Circle" tool and choose the intersect option from the bottom of the screen.  Click the top, left corner of the square and enter 0.5 for the diameter of the circle.
 
# Select the "Circle" tool and choose the intersect option from the bottom of the screen.  Click the top, left corner of the square and enter 0.5 for the diameter of the circle.
 
# Select the circle using the "Select" tool from the "Edit" menu on the left of the screen (make sure to select the top and bottom of the circle).  Next, select the "Move" tool from the left side of the screen and choose the "Intersect" option from the bottom of the screen.
 
# Select the circle using the "Select" tool from the "Edit" menu on the left of the screen (make sure to select the top and bottom of the circle).  Next, select the "Move" tool from the left side of the screen and choose the "Intersect" option from the bottom of the screen.
#Click on the center of the circle where the corner of the square is and enter 0.5 and -0.5 for the "Run" and "Rise" of the movement.  Your screen should look something like this. <br /> <figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline>[[File:Box_with_circle.png|600x600px]]</figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline> <br /> <br />
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#Click on the center of the circle where the corner of the square is and enter 0.5 and -0.5 for the "Run" and "Rise" of the movement.  Your screen should look something like this. <br /> <figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline>[[File:Box_with_circle.png|600x600px]]</figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline> <br /> <br />
    
'''Tool Paths'''
 
'''Tool Paths'''
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Before showing you how to create a tool path, there are a couple of things that you must keep in mind.  When the water jet cuts, it cuts on the left side of a line from the direction it is moving in.  Because of this, you must control the direction that the nozzle will travel.  For an outside cut, you want it to cut on the outside of the line to preserve the proper dimensions of the part.  For and inside cut, you want the opposite of that.  For a ring, you would want the nozzle to travel clockwise for the outside cut and counter-clockwise for the inside cut.  To control the direction of the nozzle, you place lead-in and lead-out lines.  Its how you specify the start or end of a cut and the cut direction.  Lastly, it is better to cut the inner bits first and then the outer bits last; and if you can help it, don't let the nozzle travel over any holes that were already cut.
 
Before showing you how to create a tool path, there are a couple of things that you must keep in mind.  When the water jet cuts, it cuts on the left side of a line from the direction it is moving in.  Because of this, you must control the direction that the nozzle will travel.  For an outside cut, you want it to cut on the outside of the line to preserve the proper dimensions of the part.  For and inside cut, you want the opposite of that.  For a ring, you would want the nozzle to travel clockwise for the outside cut and counter-clockwise for the inside cut.  To control the direction of the nozzle, you place lead-in and lead-out lines.  Its how you specify the start or end of a cut and the cut direction.  Lastly, it is better to cut the inner bits first and then the outer bits last; and if you can help it, don't let the nozzle travel over any holes that were already cut.
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# Zoom in closer to the circle.  Select the "Lead i/o" tool from the "Draw" menu on the left of the screen.  Select the bottom edge of the circle and move the cursor upwards and click to create a lead in and out from the center of the circle.  This will tell the water jet to cut on the inside of the circle.  Looking at this picture, you can see that one line is longer than the other.  This longer line is the lead-in line.  The nozzle will penetrate the material from the beginning of the long line and work its way down to the bottom of the circle.  Once the nozzle hits the bottom, it will start counter-clockwise because the lead-in line is positioned at a slight angle to make counter-clockwise and easier direction than clockwise.  This is how you tell the nozzle which direction to cut. <br /> <figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline>[[File:Lead i-o.png|600x600px]]</figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline> <br /> <br />
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# Zoom in closer to the circle.  Select the "Lead i/o" tool from the "Draw" menu on the left of the screen.  Select the bottom edge of the circle and move the cursor upwards and click to create a lead in and out from the center of the circle.  This will tell the water jet to cut on the inside of the circle.  Looking at this picture, you can see that one line is longer than the other.  This longer line is the lead-in line.  The nozzle will penetrate the material from the beginning of the long line and work its way down to the bottom of the circle.  Once the nozzle hits the bottom, it will start counter-clockwise because the lead-in line is positioned at a slight angle to make counter-clockwise and easier direction than clockwise.  This is how you tell the nozzle which direction to cut. <br /> <figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline>[[File:Lead i-o.png|600x600px]]</figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline> <br /> <br />
# Next, place a "Lead i/o" near the bottom of the left wall on the square moving your cursor to the left and clicking to tell the machine to cut on the outside of the box. <br /> <figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline>[[File:Lead io2.png|600x600px]]</figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline> <br /> <br />
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# Next, place a "Lead i/o" near the bottom of the left wall on the square moving your cursor to the left and clicking to tell the machine to cut on the outside of the box. <br /> <figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline>[[File:Lead io2.png|600x600px]]</figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline> <br /> <br />
 
# Select the "Line" tool and connect the long, lead-in line of the box to the short, lead-out line of the circle.  This is a traverse line telling the machine to move from the circle to the box after it has finished cutting the circle.
 
# Select the "Line" tool and connect the long, lead-in line of the box to the short, lead-out line of the circle.  This is a traverse line telling the machine to move from the circle to the box after it has finished cutting the circle.
# Use the line tool and click on the long, lead-in line for the circle.  Place the other end of the line so that it is at least 1/8" past both the left and bottom edge of the part.  This will be the origin for the part and the cut.  It should look something like this. <br /> <figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline>[[File:Design with traverse lines.png|600x600px]]</figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline> <br /> <br />
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# Use the line tool and click on the long, lead-in line for the circle.  Place the other end of the line so that it is at least 1/8" past both the left and bottom edge of the part.  This will be the origin for the part and the cut.  It should look something like this. <br /> <figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline>[[File:Design with traverse lines.png|600x600px]]</figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline> <br /> <br />
# Now you get to decide the quality of each cut.  Select the button at the bottom of your screen labeled "Quality".  You should see a range from 1 to 5, a Traverse, and Lead i/o.  The range of 1 to 5 will change the machines cutting speed.  The higher quality is 5 (slower) and the lowest quality is 1 (faster).  Choose a quality of 5 for the circle by clicking "5" and then selecting every part of the circle.  Do the same for the outer edge but with a quality of 1.  Your part should look like this.  Leave the traverse lines as green.  You don't want them to cut there. <br /> <figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline>[[File:Quality lines.png|600x600px]]</figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline> <br /> <br />
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# Now you get to decide the quality of each cut.  Select the button at the bottom of your screen labeled "Quality".  You should see a range from 1 to 5, a Traverse, and Lead i/o.  The range of 1 to 5 will change the machines cutting speed.  The higher quality is 5 (slower) and the lowest quality is 1 (faster).  Choose a quality of 5 for the circle by clicking "5" and then selecting every part of the circle.  Do the same for the outer edge but with a quality of 1.  Your part should look like this.  Leave the traverse lines as green.  You don't want them to cut there. <br /> <figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline><figure-inline>[[File:Quality lines.png|600x600px]]</figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline></figure-inline> <br /> <br />
 
# Sometimes there are extra points or lines that are unnecessary.  Click "Clean" on the right side of your screen, click "start" on the popup window, and "okay" on the second popup window.  Now your tool path is cleaned.
 
# Sometimes there are extra points or lines that are unnecessary.  Click "Clean" on the right side of your screen, click "start" on the popup window, and "okay" on the second popup window.  Now your tool path is cleaned.
 
# The last step is saving the file to be cut.  Click "Post" on the right of your screen.  This may ask you to save your drawing; do so.  It will then bring you to a window asking you to "Pick Start".  Select end of the traverse line that you defined as the origin.
 
# The last step is saving the file to be cut.  Click "Post" on the right of your screen.  This may ask you to save your drawing; do so.  It will then bring you to a window asking you to "Pick Start".  Select end of the traverse line that you defined as the origin.
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