FAQ
Common questions
How much does it really cost to get started with CNC routing?
Budget $800–1500 for a real beginner setup. The machine ($500–900 for hobbyist class), end mills ($50–80), workholding ($40–60), dust collection ($150–250), and safety gear ($40–60). Desktop 3018 machines run $100–300 but are too limited for meaningful wood projects.
Do I need CAD experience to use a CNC router?
No. Carbide Create lets you draw shapes directly with no CAD background. More complex designs benefit from Inkscape (free) or Fusion 360 (free for hobbyists), but you can cut useful things your first week using only Carbide Create's built-in tools.
What's the difference between a CNC router and a laser engraver?
A router physically removes material with a spinning bit. A laser burns or vaporizes a thin surface layer. Routers can cut full depth through stock; lasers engrave and cut thin material. Both are digital fabrication tools, but they're separate skills with different safety requirements.
Is CNC routing safe for a home shop?
Yes, with proper precautions: hearing protection (router spindles are loud), eye protection (chips fly at eye height), and a dust collection setup with N95 respiratory protection for MDF cuts. The machine itself has no exposed blade. The spinning end mill is the hazard, and it's easy to never be near it during a cut.
Shapeoko vs. X-Carve: which should I buy?
Both are excellent hobbyist machines. Shapeoko comes with free CAM software (Carbide Create) and has a larger active community. X-Carve uses Easel (also free) and pairs with the Inventables ecosystem. If you're not already committed to a software ecosystem, Shapeoko's community advantage is real; the forums have seen every beginner problem.
What materials can a hobby CNC router actually cut?
Wood, MDF, plywood, foam, soft plastics (HDPE, UHMW), circuit boards (PCBs), and with care, aluminum (though aluminum requires an aluminum-specific end mill, slower feeds, and ideally a more rigid machine). Hardwood (oak, maple, walnut) cuts fine on hobbyist machines. Stay off steel and cast iron.
How long does it take to learn CNC routing?
First successful cut: 1–2 weekends. Comfortable with feeds, speeds, and workholding: 1–2 months. Designing and cutting complex projects reliably: 6 months. The software learning curve (CAD to CAM to machine) is the bottleneck, not the cutting itself.