If successful the void in the paint could then be used to electrochemically etch the holes in the shaft encoder.
While not an instructable that's immediately accessible to a lot of people, hopefully you'll find the end result attractive and some of the instructions on prepping and painting metal useful. This instructable will hopefully serve as an introduction to several projects I'd like to publish over the next month.
Since shaft encoders are a bit boring, I also etched a graphic by HiddenPower, gmjhowe's logo and the hackaday logo to see how solid images looked as well as to give me a more interesting title image. I think they turned out great!
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Signing UpStep 1: Tools & Materials
- laser cutter
- bead blaster (optional, bead blaster not sand blaster since it's finer)
- something to cut the metal with (bandsaw, hacksaw, tin snips, guilotine)
Materials:
- stainless steel sheet (I used 0.6mm)
- Plasti-Kote Woodstove Black
- acetone (or other cleaner/degreaser... IPA, Flash, Limonene)
- emery paper (if you don't have a bead blaster)
Sorry, there's no picture of all the tools in one place, getting the bead blaster, laser cutter and all the other bits in one place would be impossible! Instead, here is a picture of PKM, gmjhowe, Kiteman and Lemonie crowded around our laser cutter.
























![FY8SGDIGB3W26ZF.LARGE[1].jpg](/files/deriv/FS1/ZZ2M/GCXWVXDB/FS1ZZ2MGCXWVXDB.LARGE.jpg)

















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Yes, you'd have gear shaped holes.
The laser cutter I'm using is a 40W HPC Laser Cutter. The tube by itself costs 195GBP.
http://hpclaser.co.uk/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=2&products_id=25
Me thinks this could also be useful to create all types of prototype parts from sheet steel using a laser etcher that isn't powerful enough to be a laser cutter.
You are painting the large area, and then blasting away large open areas to create designs. While that makes great HaD logos, it's a large area to electrochemically etch away.
Oh, and in the PDF, he's making a reed valve for a pulse jet engine, not a rotary shaft encoder.
It looks like you haven't started on the actual etching part yet, I thought the technique would be useful.
The fact is that it's an obscure reference, and I don't think anyone has picked up the ball and ran with it beside you.
I've had the idea of making full moon clips for a S&W 610. It would be cool to actually scribe the design with a laser cutter first.
I also think this instructable needs a note somewhere explaining that while you are using a laser cutter, it can't cut through items like stainless steel because it's too reflective (I assume that is the reason why)
Scrappy is good -- makes it look like somebody actually uses the thing, instead of leaving it in the lobby to impress clients ;-> As for not telling Steve, I'm afraid it's probably too late, subscriptions and all, you know.
The laser claims it has 0.01mm step size. Not sure how truthful that is, perhaps that should be a future ible, testing/confirming CNC devices claimed accuracy.
You could even theoretically etch and then plate with the same mask, and then sand to the same level to get a more uniform surface.
(And, dang, it was a surprise to see the photo in step 1...)