Zeddedhed":3jrkrphm said:
nathandavies":3jrkrphm said:
Don't get me wrong, it's not particularly sophisticated, but I can get my material quantities from it, and all my individual panels etc, but I do have to take the final cutting list into word to produce my stickers. I'm only doing a couple of kitchens a month so I don't need anything more than that.
Nathan
Does it optimise your panels so as to use the minimum number of sheets?
Many moons ago when I had my own shopfitting co. specialising in visual merchandising, IE: display units for retail stores, I'd use Excel for this task. Say we had to quote on 300 display units of a given size and shape, I'd use Excel with a whole bunch of sheet material sizes and thicknesses, including veneers and laminated boards, each row would have a final formula that is basically the width x length of piece, x sq.m per sheet (2.97 sq.m as I recall) so enter a size of say, 600 x 1200 into two boxes under the "18mm Oak veneered MDF" and the formula would calculate how much of a full sheet that would utilise, x by the cost per sheet, worked really well tbh! it then added on something like 10% for wastage. Enter all the other sizes for materials and the bottom line figure would be the cost per item.
I got used to "reading" a display item in advance, so if for example a unit needed 2 metres of veneered Oak, and the other 400 mm was unusable, I'd account for that in the wastage factor.