Giant CNC Partners With Powerful Laser Diode

The laser module shown cutting shapes out of a piece of cardboard that's lying on the CNC's work surface

[Jeshua Lacock] from 3DTOPO owns a large-format CNC (4ā€™x8ā€², or 1.2Ɨ2.4 m), that he strongly feels is lacking laser-cutting capabilities. The frame is there, and a 150 W CO2 laser tube has been sitting in a box for ages ā€“ what else could you need? Sadly, at such a scale, aligning the mirrors is a tough and finicky job ā€“ and misalignment can be literally blinding. After reading tales about cutters of such size going out of alignment when someone as much as walked nearby, he dropped the idea ā€“ and equipped the CNC head with a high-power laser diode module instead. Having done mirror adjustment on a few CO2 tube-equipped lasers, we can see where heā€™s coming from.

Typically, the laser modules you see bolted onto CNC heads are firmly under three watts, which is usually only enough for engraving. With a module that provides 5 watts of optical power, [Jeshua] can cut cardboard and thin plywood as well he tells us even 10 W optical power modules are available, just that he didnā€™t go for one. We reckon that 20 W effective power diodes are not that far into our future, which is getting very close to the potential of the blue box ā€œ40 W but actually 35 W but actually way lessā€ K40 laser cutters we cherish. [Joshua]ā€™s cutter is not breaking speed limits, but itā€™s built on whatā€™s already there, and the diode is comparatively inexpensive. Equipped with a small honeycomb surface and what seems to be air assist, itā€™s shown in the video cutting an ornamental piece out of cardboard!

We hackers have been equipping CNCs with laser diodes for a while, but on a way smaller scale and with less powerful diodes ā€“ this is definitely a step up! As a hacker, you should have at least some laser cutting options at your disposal, and this overview of CO2 cutters and their availability can get you started. Weā€™ve also given you detailed breakdowns about different sides of laser cutting, be it the must-have of safety, or the nice-to-have of air assist.



from Blog ā€“ Hackaday https://ift.tt/5alUYzW

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