Golfer & Cart Pen Holder (plasma)
Golfer & Cart Pen Holder (plasma)
Price: $4.50
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THIS 3D PUZZLE IS INCLUDED IN OUR PLASMA PEN HOLDERS VOLUME ONE.

PLEASE NOTE : ALL DOWNLOADABLE PRODUCTS ARE AVAILABLE INSTANTLY AFTER PAYMENT!

Ready to cut downloadable 3D puzzle files for your CNC plasma cutter or metal cutting laser machine in both Imperial sheet steel gauges as well as metric sizes for the global CNC hobbyist.

Files include a full color assembly manual.

Please Note: If you have any issues with your download or miss the red download button available after checkout Email us
 

Golfer & Cart

Golf is a precision club and ball sport, in which golfers use many types of clubs to hit balls into a series of holes on a golf course using the fewest number of strokes. Golf is defined, in the rules of golf, as "playing a ball with a club from the teeing ground into the hole by a stroke or successive strokes in accordance with the Rules."
It is one of the few ball games that does not require a standardized playing area. Instead, the game is played on a "course", generally consisting of an arranged progression of either 9 or 18 "holes". Each hole on the course must contain a "tee box" and a "putting green" with the actual hole, and there are various other standardized forms of terrain in between such as the fairway, rough, and hazards, but each hole on a course and indeed among virtually all courses is unique in its specific layout and arrangement.
Golf competition is generally played for the lowest number of strokes by an individual, known simply as stroke play, or the lowest score on the most individual holes during a complete round by an individual or team, known as match play. Stroke play is the most commonly-seen format at virtually all levels of play, although variations of match play such as "skins" games are also seen in televised events.
While the modern game of golf originated in 15th century Scotland, the game's ancient origins are unclear and much debated. Some historians trace the sport back to the Roman game of paganica, in which participants used a bent stick to hit a stuffed leather ball. One theory asserts that paganica spread throughout Europe as the Romans conquered most of the continent, during the first century BC, and eventually evolved into the modern game. Others cite chuiwan ("chui" means striking and "wan" means small ball) as the progenitor, a Chinese game played between the eighth and 14th centuries. A Ming Dynasty scroll dating back to 1368 entitled "The Autumn Banquet" shows a member of the Chinese Imperial court swinging what appears to be a golf club at a small ball with the aim of sinking it into a hole. The game is thought to have been introduced into Europe during the Middle Ages. Another early game that resembled modern golf was known as cambuca in England and chambot in France.
A golf course consists of a series of holes, each with a teeing ground that is set off by two markers showing the bounds of the legal tee area, fairway, rough and other hazards, and the putting green surrounded by the fringe with the pin, normally a flagstick,and cup.
The levels of grass are varied to increase difficulty, or to allow for putting in the case of the green. While many holes are designed with a direct line-of-sight from the teeing area to the green, some holes may bend either to the left or to the right. This is commonly called a "dogleg", in reference to a dog's knee. The hole is called a "dogleg left" if the hole angles leftwards and "dogleg right" if it bends right. Sometimes, a hole's direction may bend twice; this is called a "double dogleg".
A typical golf course consists of 18 holes, but nine-hole courses are common and can be played twice through for a full round of 18 holes.
Early Scottish golf courses were primarily laid out on links land, soil-covered sand dunes directly inland from beaches.This gave rise to the term "golf links", particularly applied to seaside courses and those built on naturally sandy soil inland.
The first 18-hole golf course in the United States was located on a sheep farm in Downers Grove, Illinois, in 1892. The course is still situated there to this day.
Collect your Golf Pen Holder Today!

High Quality 3D Metal Art from makeCNC.

These Plasma Patterns are not simple copies of our router patterns. They have been redrawn to create new scales and slots especially for plasma.
If you purchase our router patterns you will NOT get the same results if you just scale them up or down in size due to slot sizes being at a different scale factor for metal working.
Includes the following Sheet Steel Gauge slot size patterns in the scales from small to giant size.

DXF File Format

10,12,14 and 16 gauge Small size Model
10,12,14, and 16 gauge Medium size Model

3mm,2.5mm,2mm,1.5mm Small size Model
3mm,2.5mm.2mm.1.5mm Medium size Model


DXF File Format

Please Note: If you have any issues with your download or miss the red download button available after checkout Email us

All our plasma pen patterns come in two scale sizes and will be in the industry standard DXF file format. This is not slot sizes for thickness of material so don't be confused. The slot sizes will start at 12 gauge imperial sheet steel size of .1046 and will go up and down from there. The same will apply as metric equivilants.

The first and smallest model size will be based on our 1/8th inch CNC router and laser patterns. Typically these patterns have parts no larger than 8.5 X 11 inches or 214 mm X 280mm at .1250 inches and the finished model is usually around 12 to 14 inches in length and height. The slots will have scales of 10,12, 14 and 16 Gauge as well as their metric sheet steel equivilants and the smallest size model will come from the 16 gauge and get larger as you go down the gauge scale.

The second size will be based on our .25 or 1/4 inch router/C02 laser patterns. These are typically twice the size of the .1250 patterns so you can double the size from 12 to 14 inch models to 24 X 28 or there abouts BUT this is where plasma is different than wood in that we keep our slot sizes the same as in the small scale models again being 10,12, 14 and 16 gauge and their metric equivilents.


Ready to cut downloadable 3D puzzle files for your CNC plasma cutter or metal cutting laser machine in both Imperial sheet steel gauges as well as metric sizes for the global CNC hobbyist.

Files include a full color assembly manual.

High Quality 3D Metal Art from makeCNC

Includes the following Sheet Steel Gauge slot size patterns in the scales from small to giant size.
All the hard work is done!

Makecnc is excited to bring to the CNC hobbyist a new and ever-expanding library of art and projects made ready-to-cut on your CNC plasma or metal cutting laser machine.You can either sell the cut out projects as your own product or assemble them for your own enjoyment and to give as gifts to your family and friends.

PLEASE READ COPYRIGHT

All downloadable products are copyright makecnc.com and may not be copied or redistributed in any format other than actual material products made from the supplied files.
Assembly PDF files may be sold as printed copies only along with a product made from the supplied files.

Unless otherwise stated in the documentation and product description you may make as many hard products as you like from your files with no royalty to the designer.