This project was conceived during a chat with Alex where we wished we had a laser cutter and thought we could make one out of an etchasketch. Alex, this instructable is for you. Keep on inspiring me.
--Update: Samuel just built one of these things! He did a much better job t han I did ; P I can't wait for video!--
Here's a video showing the basic setup:
This project demonstrates a simple hack to create a large format laser cutter utilizing all the scrap electronics you may have lying around. If you have a broken scanner or two, the cost can be just about 30 dollars for the entire project.
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Here's the list:
1x Laser diodes Ebay Store $36 dollars for 2
2x Old Scanners Salvation Army $10 Dollars each
2x ULN2003 Electronic Connection $5
1x Prototyping board RadioSchack $2
2x 3/8" Aluminum Rod Home Depot $3 each
1x 3/8" Aluminum Tube Home Depot $3
10x Brass Brackets Home Depot $1
1x 2" cube of wood Home Depot $1
A bushel of Patience
Here is a video showing all the supplies you'll need including the tools:











































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p.s. Wouldn't mind watching a video of you explaining the 4 times electrical tape saved your life. I'm dead serious. Useful info for anyone that thinks it ok to substitute it with other stuff.
Thank you for your time, Eron.
Also, cutting acrylic with laser can be tricky because it's transparent and hence probably won't absorb the laser's energy as well as a black sheet of paper would (it's no surprise that he used black paper as a stencil, after all black absorbs the most light). This means that you might need a stronger laser or adjust the whole setup to account for the considerably longer cutting times. That's just 2 cents though.
yeah, i do cut rocks by hand but this idea would be so much easier and cooler.
any ideas on how powerful a laser must be to cut silica?
Thanx in advance!
Great post thanks.
I suppose I could eat some concrete, harden up and buy USB-Parallel adapters, but I'd much rather run Linux (and port flutterfly to it in the process, shouldn't be too hard - easier to get Linux on one of those than anything other than WinCE) and I'm not sure if the adapters will support Linux, though it would depend on how generic they are. Jaycar has one for AU$40, but it's a lot to blow on something that may not even work for my situation.
Thanks
Great work and great inspiration!!! I'm trying now to reproduce you project, but having a problem figuring out the right laser diode type. So, could you please tell me what kind of laser diode are you using? Actually what I would like to know is the wavelength and the optical output power.
Thanks
Sergiu
Any other option?
Imagine you'd want to create laser-cut plastic stencils for surface mounted PCBs, you're not willing to buy them at $25 each and your room is lacking the floor space required for this otherwise elegant solution.
Would it be possible to create a laser cutting "printer" by converting a B/W inkjet printer by replacing the cartridge with a laser-diode - possibly a blue one?
That way you'd get the X and Y axes from the printer, plus the motors that are obviously precise enough for regular printing so you'd only need to mount the laser and most likely replace the circuits from the printer.
Am I on to something or am I on a wild goose chase?
ps. I'm talking about the thin transparent plastic sheets commonly used for projection on a wall.
Wes
those just 'look cool' and cost alot
get a high-powered red diode, it's cheaper
The same logic goes with laser safety glasses--you have to pick the ones which block the color laser you're using (but then, you can't see the laser either, be prepared for that!). Remember, it this thing can cut even paper, it can hurt your eyes. We use webcams to look at our laser hitting things in my lab, they're cheap and don't get hurt.
A problem I see is that every time the diode and the driver circuit turns off, the capacitor should/needs to be shorted out to protect the diode. Is there a way we can hook it up to the potentiometer so that when it triggers, it switches from low output visible to full 100-200mw. Thinking about this driver. Any thoughts?
how do you keep small bits from getting stuck in mechanisms instead of coming out
and
how will you protect the other parts of the printer from the rest of the laser that shines through
how about adding something that will blow the small parts and push into desired direction and be sucked by sort of small vacuum?
just an idea ;-)
Lithonia Model # L2GT PLTS R5
http://www.homedepot.com/Lighting-Fans/h_d1/N-25ecodZ5yc1vZbvn5/R-100579509/h_d2/ProductDisplay?catalogId=10053&langId=-1&keyword=light+diffuser&storeId=10051#.UJka1mf4J2g
If you use an "ink" trigger, you don't really need to worry as it will only turn the laser on when "ink" would be applied, or, in this case, laser cuts made. It shouldnt be on long enough to put a hole through plastic.
For the first question, hope and prayer?
Or, you try it first. If it doesn't go through the printer correctly, well it won't while lasering.
Screw what I just said. ceramic. non polished finish. Heat cannot kill it.
1.) read this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laser_safety
2.) Get the model number of the laser then contact the manufacture for a data sheet that tells the light spectrum in use by that laser.
3.) Get laser safety glasses for that spectrum.
4.) Even with the glasses don't look directly at the source.
5.) If possible, make a light tight box with a door. Watch your laser work with a camera, even a cheep usb low res camera will be able to tell if your laser is on and hitting the mark.
6.) Put a disconnect switch on the door that cuts power to the laser when opened.
7.) Any questions? ownerbuilderarchitect@yahoo.com