I'm Scott Moyse. I've been using Fusion since it was an Autodesk Labs experiment called Inventor Fusion, and I've spent the years since helping machine shops across Australia, New Zealand and well beyond get real work out of it. Faster programming, posts that just run, and someone to call when it misbehaves. That's what's on offer here.
The long version is on LinkedIn if you want to check my homework.
The business literally wouldn't have happened without you guys.
Erik couldn't machine the ports on his muzzle brakes with the setup he had. A custom post and training got his barrel tuners to market.
Erik CortinaCortina Precision, USA
That's massive for me with a small shop like mine.
A custom post gave Ariel's 4-axis machines 5-axis capability, removed a manual operation and saved an hour per part.
Ariel BancoCustom Plenum Creations, Australia
Over the years, your input and advice have helped me do a better job. Your depth of manufacturing and CAM knowledge is a huge asset wherever you go.
Craig ChesterPrincipal Product Manager, Fusion Manufacturing, Autodesk
Having Scott sit down with us each day, give us three hours of training and one hour of back and forth, just catapulted us into adoption.
Scott trained Romar's engineers on modelling, 3D surfacing, five-axis CAM and data management. One engineer who'd never touched CAM is now running five-axis work.
Steve MilanoskiHead of Advanced Manufacturing, Romar, Australia
Most CAM training fails the same way. Someone runs through a polished demo on parts you'll never make, you nod along, and a fortnight later you're back to doing it the slow way because nothing in the course connected with your actual work.
The packages here are structured and templated, and that's on purpose. I've been teaching this stuff since before Fusion had a name, presenting at Autodesk University, working with shops across Australia and New Zealand, and what's in these programmes reflects what engineers and machinists actually get stuck on. We work through it the same structured way every time, because that's what makes it stick. If you've got a couple of representative parts you want to bring into a session, we can sometimes work with those. But you're buying a proven programme, not a bespoke curriculum built from scratch for your shop.
Pick the package that fits where you're at right now.
One on one training. For solo operators & anyone getting going.
A focused, two-session programme on one discipline. Pick the one that fits where you're at, work through more than one if you need to. Each comes with supporting documentation and session recordings, so nothing relies on your memory of the day.
$1,000 each
Train up to four people. The core package for a shop building real capability.
Six sessions covering basic CAD, milling and turning, including positional (3+2) milling. We set up a generic post and machine configuration together so you see how the workflow links together, from model to G-code. Full documentation, every session recorded, and your questions answered by email between sessions.
Bring up to four people and the price doesn't change. The whole crew works through the same programme together.
$5,500
Train up to four people. For shops ready to run true simultaneous work.
Four sessions on nothing but simultaneous multi-axis. The strategies, the toolpaths, the CAD hacks and the machine setup that turn an expensive 5-axis machine into the thing you bought it to be. Assumes Foundations-level CAM or equivalent experience, because we don't waste your sessions on basics.
Full documentation, all sessions recorded, email support between sessions.
$4,500
One thing to be clear about: I'm not selling "your operators will be experts after this training," because nobody honest can promise that. I'm selling a structured programme with clear scope, but will need real world application of the acquired knowledge, to gain the experience required to become an expert. Need more sessions after the training is done? Just sign up for another training package.
A dodgy post is a tax on every single job. Hand-editing G-code, babysitting first runs, machinists who don't trust what CAM spits out. It all adds up to hours you never get back and scrap you didn't need to make. A properly built post makes all of that go away. Program it, post it, run it.
I've been building and fixing posts for shops from the USA to Saudi Arabia since 2015. Every job starts with an agreed scope: the machine, the control, the capability set and a clear definition of what a working post looks like. Revisions are capped, so neither of us ends up in an open-ended back-and-forth.
For a post that mostly works but needs sorting.
You've got a post that's nearly there, with a handful of things that bite you on every job. We agree a fix list, I work through it, and your post stops being the thing everyone grumbles about.
$750
One machine, one control, single channel.
A post built and verified for your machine. That covers more ground than you might expect: 3-axis mills, 2-axis lathes, single-channel dual-spindle lathes, straightforward simultaneous 5-axis mills, and the occasional custom 3 or 4 axis machine. Verified against a test file, with a defined capability set and two revision rounds built in.
$1,800
For the machines that keep other post writers up at night.
Multi-channel and synchronised work, multi-head machines, mill-turn with synchronised spindles, probing macro suites, heavily customised output. Anything needing serious bespoke logic. Most jobs at this level get developed and commissioned onsite at your machine, because complexity is simplified in person. Typically, this would include 3 rounds of revisions after the initial post sign off.
Quoted per job. Onsite travel on top where needed.
From $3,500
Worth knowing: each package covers the named machine, control and capability set. A new machine or new capability is a new piece of work, not revision round number seven. You'll never be guessing where the line is, because we will agree on that before we start.
A word on responsibility: every post I build is developed and tested with all care. That said, it is solely the responsibility of the CNC machine operator to verify the output is safe to run before cutting anything. Dry runs, single-block execution, feed hold — you know the drill. Never skip them.
Forums and Facebook groups are a lottery and Autodesk tickets are nearly always a frustrating waste of time. When a job's on the machine and something's not right, what you actually want is a straight answer from someone who knows your setup. That's what a retainer gets you: me, already familiar with your shop, your machines and your posts, a known response time away.
A safety net for the shop that mostly runs fine.
Email support with a response inside one business day. Enough cover to get unstuck when something odd crops up, without paying for help you rarely need, but you will periodically get to pick up on tips and tricks from an expert.
3-month minimum commitment.
$350 per month
For shops leaning on Fusion every day.
Same business day response, minor post tweaks included, plus a standing half-hour call every month. That call matters more than it sounds: it's where small issues get caught before they cost you a job.
$950 per month
For shops where machine time is too expensive to wait.
A priority channel with a response inside four business hours, post tweaks and workflow reviews included, and a standing one-hour call every month. The closest thing to having me on staff without having me on staff.
$2,000 per month
A few things worth knowing: support is subject to fair use and isn't a substitute for training. If the questions are really training questions, a training package is the right tool. Excessive use of support per month, will require an upgrade to the next support tier. Post work included in Standard and Priority applies only to posts I've already built for you, not new development. Choose the appropriate post processor service for new post development.
Everything on this page can be delivered onsite. Same package, same price, just compressed into a block of consecutive days at your place instead of sessions spread over weeks. For a lot of shops the speed alone is worth it. Travel time and costs are added on top based on where you are, and they're quoted up front so there are no surprises.
Flick me an email with a rough picture of your shop, your machines and what's slowing you down. We'll have a short call, no charge and no obligation, and I'll tell you straight which package fits. And if none of them do, I'll tell you that too.
Email Scott