Nesting (process)

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A set of 8 L-shaped objects is laid out as two rows of four, with each in the same orientation
Simple rectangular nesting
A set of 12 L-shaped objects is laid out as two rows of three sets, where each set contains two L-shapes, with the second of each set rotated a half turn
Improved nesting with rotated parts
A set of 12 L-shaped objects and 12 pill-shaped objects is laid out as two rows of three sets, where each set is bordered by two L-shapes and contains two pill-shapes in the gap within.
Minimizing waste by mixing different parts

In manufacturing industry, nesting is the process of laying out cutting patterns to minimize the raw material waste.[1] Examples include manufacturing parts from flat raw material such as sheet metal, glass sheets, cloth rolls, cutting parts from steel bars, etc.

Such process can also be applied to additive manufacturing, such as 3D printing. Here the advantages sought can include minimizing tool movement that is not producing product, or maximizing how many pieces can be fabricated in one build session. One difference from nesting of cut pieces is that 3D parts often have a cross section that changes with height, which can cause interference between adjacent parts as they are built up.

The nesting process differs for different types of parts:

  • 1D nesting – for cutting optimization of one-dimensional parts such as bars, trusses, wires, pipes, rails
  • 2D nesting – for cutting optimization of flat parts such as sheet metal, cloth, glass, paper, leather
    • nesting of rectangular shapes vs. nesting of multiple freeform 2D shapes (optionally with holes/isles)
    • nesting from fixed sheets vs. nesting from infinite rolls
  • 3D nesting – for packing optimization of 3D parts such as boxes, shipping containers, 3D printed parts
    • nesting/packing of freeform 3D objects

Process

See also

References

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