Make a Working Playable Tortilla Record With a Laser Cutter

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Intro: Make a Working Playable Tortilla Record With a Laser Cutter

They say that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.

Without further ado, an actual record made from a tortilla playing "The Mexican Hat Dance" also known as "Jarabe Tapatío".

Why do this?

A while ago there was a satirical video featuring a tortilla jammed on top of a record player spindle.

In a way, it mocks the emerging trend and resurgence of vinyl and Record Store Day's tendency to release limited-run, colored records which are often resold for a much higher price by scalpers.

The video went viral and I wanted to see if I could actually make a tortilla record work without merely piping in some music in the background.

I was already familiar with cutting records on acrylic with a laser cutter for use in mechanical gramophones at 78 rpm, outlined in my instructable here.

https://www.instructables.com/id/Make-a-Playable-La...

It was in turn, modified from Amanda Ghassaei's instructable which was intended for 33 and 45 rpm on wood, paper, and acrylic.

https://www.instructables.com/id/Laser-Cut-Record/

STEP 1: Choosing Your Tortilla

In most grocery stores, there's a section of shelving dedicated to tortillas, usually categorized near the meat section.

Most of them will be cooked and either corn or flour.

Corn is a bit too lumpy for this purpose cooked or uncooked.

I found that the cooked tortillas tended to shred a bit when the outer cooked layer peels away from the inner less-cooked core.

Also, the cooked flour tortillas have uneven lumps as well from the cooking process.

I settled with uncooked flour tortillas made by Canasta which is found in most groceries. They are very soft, however, so try to get the ones that are as flat as possible near the bottom. The kind that are made without lard seem to keep the best at room temperature as well.

Unfortunately, Canasta seem to be the only brand of uncooked tortilla available in most groceries. They come in roughly 9" sizes.

The tracks on the outer edge of a record sound better because they are less compressed than those closer to the center. Therefore, the tortilla should be as large as possible. I could only get the tortilla to consistently make 7" records, the same as a 45.

I have heard that Costco sells Porkyland uncooked tortillas in 12" size. But I was only able to find them in the frozen section. The temperature difference may cause unwanted condensation when thawing out. In addition, they are not recommended to be stored at room temperature.

STEP 2: Prepping Your Music Files

You can use any audio editing program for this. I am using Audacity.

First you need to make sure your file is stereo. If it is in mono, you can duplicate the tracks and merge them into a stereo track.

Project rate should be 44100Hz.

Trim your track to around 30-40 seconds.

Then select Effect > Equalization. Under Select Curve, choose RIAA. Hit Invert and OK.

Your track will now sound very tinny.

If you 've ever taken a regular vinyl record and played it without turning on the speakers, you can heard the needle of the record player vibrating. The song however is very tinny as well.

The RIAA equalization standard was developed so that the needle wouldn't move so much and damage the groove walls when attempting to track bass frequencies. The record itself plays with boosted treble and dampened bass, hence "tinny".

Record players and pre-amplifiers automatically apply the RIAA equalization standard so that playback will sound with boosted bass and lessened treble, reducing the "tinniness" and restoring the recording to its original sound.

Applying an inverted RIAA curve will imitate how records are made and will help the laser cutter avoid vibrating too much.

Export the stereo file as a .wav and you should be done for this step.

STEP 3: Generating the Cut Files

I would either recommend reading either my instructable

https://www.instructables.com/id/Make-a-Playable-La...

or Amanda Ghassaei's instructable

https://www.instructables.com/id/Laser-Cut-Record/

for this step.

I have also uploaded the .PDFs for "The Mexican Hat Dance" for 78 RPM on a 7" record.

There are two steps needed here:

1) Running the sound file through python to create a text file with the sound data
2) Using Processing to convert the text file into a set of vector pdfs with the grooves

Get the code in the attachements.

The Python file only requires you to replace the filename.wav with your own file.

The Processing file modifies some of the variables for 78 RPM. (and of course replace filename.txt with the generated .txt file from the Python script.

In particular:

rpm = 78.6

amplitude = 8 //to reduce skipping

spacing = 50 //increases the spacing between the grooves, the tortilla shrinks if you leave it exposed to the air too long, grooves may run together

STEP 4: Cutting the "Record"

Special thanks for Fab Lab San Diego for the rather liberal use of their laser cutter.

Their machine is a 40W Epilog Laser Cutter which accepts PDF files. You may have to adjust these steps for other machines.

First, make sure that the owner of the laser cutter is okay with cutting tortillas.

Focus the laser by raising the cutting bed so that the tortilla is just under the focusing guide.

Place a sheet of paper on the cutting bed to avoid getting grease on the grid and tape it down.

Run the Cut Only PDF to quickly trace the outline of the record to ensure the tortilla is positioned properly. No actual cutting should take place at this time

The print settings are as follows:

Speed: 95

Power: 20

Frequency: 5000

Send the file to the laser cutter. It may take a couple seconds to send them. Each file should take around 8 minutes to etch.

The spindle hole and the outside diameter should be cut separately with:

Speed: 20

Power: 100

Frequency: 5000

STEP 5: 45 RPM Vs. 78 RPM

I copied these equations from my original 78 RPM records instructable. If you can get more data passing by the needle per second, you'll have better sound.

From amandaghassaei's instructable:
"Sampling rate is the amount of samples per second in a song. Usually the sampling rate is 44.1kHz (or 44,100 samples a second). When the sampling rate drops below about 40kHz the higher frequencies of a song start losing their detail, but depending on the song you can go down to 20 or even 10kHz sampling rate without too much of a problem." Ideally, 78 rpm should be able to provide a higher possible sampling rate with better sound.

At 78 RPM
(78.26 rpm for 60Hz countries, 78.92 for 50Hz countries)

revolutions per second = (revolutions per minute)/(seconds per minute)

revolutions per second = 78.26/60 = 1.30

inches per revolution = 2*pi*(radius of needle)max inches per revolution = 2*pi*5.75 =~ 36

minimum inches per revolution = 2*pi*2.35 =~ 15

sampling frequency = (resolution per inch)*(inches per revolution)*(revolutions per second)

maximum sampling frequency at 78 rpm = 1200*36*1.30 =~ 56200 = 56.2kHz

minimum sampling frequency at 78 rpm = 1200*15*1.30 =~ 23400 = 23.4kHz

At 45 RPM

max sampling frequency at 45 rpm = 1200*36*0.75 =~ 32400 = 32.4kHz

min sampling frequency at 45 rpm = 1200*15*0.75 =~ 13500 = 13.5kHz

At 33 RPM (inaudible in sample tests)

max sampling frequency at 33 rpm = 1200*36*0.5 =~ 21600 = 21.6kHz

min sampling frequency at 33 rpm = 1200*15*0.5 =~ 9000 = 9kHz


78 RPM

Advantages

  • Inherently sounds better since more data is passing by the needle per second.

Disadvantages

  • More grooves are needed to play the same length of song / Longer cut times, more files
  • More grooves have to get closer to the center, leading to inner groove distortion
  • Need a turntable that can play at 78 RPM


45 RPM

Advantages

  • Soundwaves are compressed together allowing for more grooves to fit on one side / Shorter cut times, fewer files
  • Most grooves can be arranged nearer to the edge.
  • More record players are able to play at 45 RPM (33 RPM is nearly inaudible)

Disadvantages

  • Inherently sounds worse or inaudible since the sound waves are compressed past the point the laser is accurately able to resolve them onto the surface of the tortilla.

With a 7" record, you can only fit around 30-40 seconds of audio before the grooves start to run together as the tortilla shrinks from moisture loss.

If I could find 12" uncooked flour tortillas that keep at room temperature, I could make better sounding records. However, larger tortillas are damaged more easily when still uncooked and may not lie flat.

STEP 6: Further Thoughts

This was a proof of concept to see if I could make an actual working tortilla record. I ran off a couple of other songs for no particular reason except that they were vaguely tortilla-related or were reminiscent of Mexico.

"Yakko's World" - Animaniacs - 78 RPM

Uses the same melody as "The Mexican Hat Dance". The first 30 seconds of the song are the North and South American countries. Vocals are there, but hard to distinguish without subtitles.

"Macarena" - Los del Río - 45 RPM

Latin dance music with strong rhythm. Can be heard distinctly at 45 RPM especially the, "Hey, Macarena"but would probably sound better at 78RPM.

"Putting on the Ritz" - Taco - 78 RPM

Famously syncopated song re-imagined by a curiously food-named artist. Heavy use of synthesizers blurs out the words.

Ideal songs to put on a tortilla

  • Strong Rhythm
  • Modulated voice
  • Words spoken distinctly

Would this be suitable for a restaurant or a commercial ventures?

At the very least, the laser cutter would have to be purchased new even hope to be certified as food-safe.

The tortillas are edible, but taste rather burnt where the laser has to work harder to slice apart the edges. Of course, cooking them removes the possibility of playing them.

All in all, around 30 minutes of cutting time for a 30 second snippet of a song on a tortilla.

39 Comments

Hey just wondering, could you make this out of wood or mdf?
Yes, it should work with any material that is laser cutter safe. It is based on amandaghassaei's instructable which features wood although it only focuses on 45 and 33 rpm instad of 78 rpm.

By any chance is that tortilla certified laser safe, because in the video I see nothing on the bag saying it is. :)

Sat whaaaaat?? Awesome!!

Congrats on your win. This is amazing

Brilliant! Nice mod of amanda's instructable. How many times can you play it before the needle degrades the surface too much to make it unplayable?

Most songs try to cram as much sound as possible into every second. These detailed grooves may last up to around 10 plays before the grooves degrade past noise. This happened with Taco's "Putting on the Ritz". But "Yakko's World" is still audible past 20 plays since he actually pauses to take breaths.

Surprisingly (or perhaps not) The Mexican Hat Dance keeps up the best. The second "verse" has a very strong rhythm with periods of silence interspersed with the beat. This still comes through even if you can't hear the notes.

Of course, the tortilla itself is likely to degrade faster than the song. I luckily chose the variety that had no lard in it which allows the records to keep past 3 weeks at room temperature. I am hesitant about putting them in the refrigerator because the condensation and moisture swells and distorts the grooves because of the temperature flux bringing them in and out.

Eventually, the tortillas become fragile and brittle from moisture loss. They also oxidize and become dark which means that I should go experiment on a fresh package from the grocery

Thanks for the info. It's kind of like making snowman art(like in calvin and hobbes), it's even more beautiful because it's meant to be enjoyed for a short while.

pues si esto se puede grabar con una tortilla........ con una tlayuda oaxaqueña de como 30 cm de diametro que no cabra !! es casi como un lp

Imaginate si intentara esto con un sope! hajaha (porque mi risa tambien ws bilingue!) ;-)

mhh estaria interesante el como reproducirlo...total si no funciona se puede comer !! jajajaj

It should be possible to do a casting of a 78 (or maybe even with an LP) using finely ground cornmeal and/or wheat. The tricky part would be the drying/cooking of the tortilla, which would have to happen while in contact with the mold/record in order to preserve the grooves.

This is the same technique used to make chocolate records. It hardens to a mirror-smooth finish and can take finer impressions of detail.

Early novelty records were made at 78 rpm and played on lightweight tin gramophones. Stollwerck and Eureka manufactured these as early as 1904. It's the same gag of eating the music when you're bored with it.

Some people have recently made chocolate 33s.

I would assume that a chocolate record made this way would sound better since tortillas and grain-based products dry out unevenly.

Of course, this requires a mold to have been made. I am pretty sure I can laser-cut directly onto a chocolate sheet if I can keep it from melting, but I'm not so sure about the sound quality.

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