Biesse Cix Start_point Line_ep Endpath Macro Fixed May 2026
But a Biesse cix macro writes: cix start_point=0,0 line_ep=100,50 endpath=lift
cix start_point=10,20 line_ep=1990,20 endpath=soft_stop biesse cix start_point line_ep endpath macro
If the programmer instead needed a sharp corner to continue to a second line, they might use endpath=corner (or a similar flag), which would keep the tool down and simply change vector direction. The beauty of the macro is that it abstracts the low-level acceleration/deceleration logic, allowing the programmer to focus on part geometry and cut strategy. Errors in the cix macro typically arise from misinterpreting start_point . The macro assumes the tool is already at that coordinate and at depth. If the preceding operation ends at a different coordinate, the machine will either throw a soft limit alarm or, worse, rapid into the material. Therefore, disciplined programmers always follow a cix with a matching endpath state and precede it with an explicit positioning move. But a Biesse cix macro writes: cix start_point=0,0
Here, start_point and line_ep define a horizontal line at Y=20 from X=10 to X=1990. The endpath=soft_stop instructs the control to reduce feed rate over the last 5mm and then lift 0.5mm before the next rapid traverse. This prevents "swooping" or tearing the thin veneer at the end of the cut—a common defect in less sophisticated controls. The macro assumes the tool is already at
For the operator standing before a 5-axis Biesse machining center, watching a 12mm compression cutter trace a perfect 4-meter line and lift with surgical precision at the exact end, they are not seeing G-code. They are witnessing a macro—an encapsulated idea of motion—executed flawlessly. The cix macro, in its elegant simplicity, transforms a potentially dangerous series of coordinates into a safe, repeatable, and intelligent cutting event. It is the unsung hero of every clean edge and every precise panel dimension.
Another advanced usage involves variable injection. In parametric programming, one might write: cix start_point=#VX_START, #VY_START line_ep=#VX_END, #VY_END endpath=#V_MODE This allows a single macro to cut any linear feature across a family of parts, from drawer sides to wardrobe backs. The cix start_point line_ep endpath macro is more than a technical specification; it is a reflection of Biesse’s core design ethos: provide structured, safe, and efficient motion primitives . By forcing the programmer to explicitly declare a start point, an end point, and an exit behavior, the macro eliminates ambiguity. It prevents the machine from free-forming motion or assuming unsafe defaults.