laser – Milwaukee Makerspace https://milwaukeemakerspace.org Conceive, Collaborate, Create Mon, 22 Sep 2014 10:54:22 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.4 Updated Design- The phone with the frickin’ laser now has a trigger https://milwaukeemakerspace.org/2014/09/updated-design-the-phone-with-the-frickin-laser-now-has-a-trigger/ https://milwaukeemakerspace.org/2014/09/updated-design-the-phone-with-the-frickin-laser-now-has-a-trigger/#comments Mon, 22 Sep 2014 01:42:22 +0000 http://milwaukeemakerspace.org/?p=7712 I added a trigger and it works beautifully!

You can DL the files here:  http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:454265 and get your pew-pew on!

assembled

 

 

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A phone with a frickin’ laser! https://milwaukeemakerspace.org/2014/09/a-phone-with-a-frickin-laser/ https://milwaukeemakerspace.org/2014/09/a-phone-with-a-frickin-laser/#respond Sat, 13 Sep 2014 02:38:43 +0000 http://milwaukeemakerspace.org/?p=7680 My recent acquisition of a Meade ETX-90 telescope with computer go-to system for locating objects in the sky got me thinking that it would be nice to have a system to locate objects in the sky when you’re looking through binoculars or a telescope that doesn’t have a computer and motors to drive it.  To that end I came up with the idea of mounting a green laser pointer, commonly used by astronomy nutz to point out objects in the sky to noobs, on a cell phone or tablet running a program such as Google SkyMap or Skeye.

sky laser all parts

CAD rendering of the parts

After much thought and a few prototypes I came up with a system that allows a laser to mount on a phone and that assembly to mount on a tripod, a handle, or a telescope.  The tube that holds the laser has adjustment screws to allow the laser to be aligned with the SkyMap on the phone.  It also has to slots that fit over standard gun sight rails.  On one side I have a phone/tablet bracket that has a gunsight rail and slides into the laser tube, and the other side can be used for a rail that mounts on a tripod or a handle.  Extra rails can be mounted on telescope tubes.  I haven’t yet designed a binocular mount, but will soon.

 

IMG_0388

Parts printing on MegaMax

I printed the parts on MegaMax with Octave fluorescent red filament (that’s why the colors vary in the photos- the flash apparently excites the fluorescence in the picture with the handle).   All the parts fit VERY tightly together but I included screw holes for extra security.  The phone/tablet mounts on the bracket using velcro tape.  I think it may be better to print or buy a cheap case to fit the phone than screw it to the phone/tablet bracket.  I’ll be posting the design files to Thingiverse shortly.

IMG_0409

Phone and laser mounted on handle

IMG_0404

Phone and laser on a tripod

 

 

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Woodblock Prints https://milwaukeemakerspace.org/2013/10/woodblock-prints/ https://milwaukeemakerspace.org/2013/10/woodblock-prints/#respond Fri, 25 Oct 2013 02:06:10 +0000 http://milwaukeemakerspace.org/?p=6550 Occasionally back in the day,  I would breakout the linoleum blocks and the speedball cutting tools, and carve out a design to make block prints.  My experience in making prints spans from potato carvings to cardboard stencils, linoleum and wood blocks.  As designs became larger, complex, and multi-color, the time it would take to carve the block plates, made finishing a project difficult at best.

Then, the laser cutter…..

Using the adobe suite of products I created two black and white drawings to be translated to wood blocks.

rooster_redPlate rooster_BlackPlate

Unlike traditional transfer/carving methods, I decided to utilize the 60W laser to etch the images into poplar wood vs. carving.  I chose poplar for its hardness and ability not to warp as easy as pine or other softer woods.  60W laser setting was 100 power, 60%speed, 500 PPI

The image below is a 5″x7″ laser cut of the black plate of the rooster image.

image

Top-Left is the black plate for the left facing rooster.  Bottom-left is the red plate for the left facing, top-right – red plate, bottom right – black plate

image (1)

The following image shows the red left-facing plate printed, and the black plate inked up and ready to be printed

image (2)

The first red/black rooster print, along side the right facing black print.

image (3) image (5)

And of course, if you do one, you have to do many.

Multiprint

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How do you make the BADASS more badass? https://milwaukeemakerspace.org/2012/06/how-do-you-make-the-badass-more-badass/ https://milwaukeemakerspace.org/2012/06/how-do-you-make-the-badass-more-badass/#comments Tue, 12 Jun 2012 03:29:15 +0000 http://milwaukeemakerspace.org/?p=3636 Simple.  Add lasers.

Video of Vectorized Laser PCB Fabrication

The next generation BADASS board was too big to fit through the card laminator, so I figured I’d try my hand at Tom’s laser etching method.  By using the trace program included with CorelDraw I was able to make a vectorized path for the board.  One pass takes about 5 min at 50% speed.

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Gradient Reference for the 25 Watt Laser Cutter https://milwaukeemakerspace.org/2012/05/gradient-reference-for-the-25-watt-laser-cutter/ https://milwaukeemakerspace.org/2012/05/gradient-reference-for-the-25-watt-laser-cutter/#comments Mon, 21 May 2012 05:54:49 +0000 http://milwaukeemakerspace.org/?p=3536 A map of how deep and/or dark the laser cutter etches based on the percentage of power and percentage of speed.

So, I was just getting in to the ‘Space when Jason G. and I started talking about the laser cutter.  I had planned on doing some simple tests to determine the level of shading that I could get for an as-yet unnamed project when he mentioned that he (and others) were talking about doing a full map of different settings and the results.

I thought that I might as well give it a shot.  The set up was interesting.  I created a grid of rectangles in CorelDraw (oh, how I hate you!) and then used the preferences dialogue in the laser cutter driver to adjust the speed and power for each little square.

I should explain that the driver recognizes 8 colors and for each color in your image you can assign different settings.  It was a little trying given that the grid is 10×10 but, eight at a time, I assigned the appropriate colors, then settings and let it cut.

After the charring became significant on the low speed/high power settings, I decided to omit the rest of them because, honestly, who wants their project to turn into charcoal?  If you can’t read the Olde English font, it says, “Here Be Fire! (not suitable for etching).”

As you can see, there is a very nice gradient that results from many of these settings used in conjunction with one another.  I also left the tar/smoke-damage on because I wanted people to know what their project would look like immediately after using these settings.  I suspect that most of that can simply be sanded off.

I had forgotten my camera, but a big thanks to Kevin B. for taking a few shots and emailing them to me via his phone.

Next, a cutting template similar to this one.  Oh, and a gradient rainbow.  Yeah, a monochromatic, smells-like-a-forest-fire rainbow should do the trick.  Maybe I’ll even make it a double. :)

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BoxMaker https://milwaukeemakerspace.org/2012/01/boxmaker/ https://milwaukeemakerspace.org/2012/01/boxmaker/#comments Fri, 13 Jan 2012 19:47:36 +0000 http://milwaukeemakerspace.org/?p=2767 We’ve got a Laser Cutter! We can cut things… like boxes. So head on over to BoxMaker and make a box!

As far as materials, that’s a little trickier. I tried wood, but currently the laser cutter can’t handle cutting your standard 1/4″ plywood. (Update: 3mm Baltic Birch plywood works great though!) Here you can see the results of me trying.

Wood

No matter… I moved on to acrylic, since we’ve got a lot of acrylic scrap to play with…

Acrylic

That worked much better! Hopefully once we do some laser maintenance (cleaning and what not) it might be able to cut wood. Of course you could always use BoxMaker to create your box and cut it on the CNC Router instead.

So here’s my laser-cut acrylic box. Notice anything? The tabs are way too big! In my frustration of not being able to cut wood, I switched to the acrylic, but didn’t measure the thickness and create a new file, and since it was not as thick as the wood, I got the tabs all wrong.

Box

Still, BoxMaker is an awesome tool, and I look forward to getting the cutting part right next time.

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Laser Logo https://milwaukeemakerspace.org/2011/12/laser-logo/ https://milwaukeemakerspace.org/2011/12/laser-logo/#respond Mon, 05 Dec 2011 03:21:27 +0000 http://milwaukeemakerspace.org/?p=2521 Milwaukee Makerspace

Here’s our logo as a digital file. It’s an SVG file in Inkscape. The width of the lines are 1 single pixel.

Milwaukee Makerspace

Here’s our logo etched into a piece of wood using the Laser Cutter. It’s totally awesome.

Yes, at some point I’d like to see our logo created using every process / machine / material we have available at the space…

…and once that’s done, we’ll show ’em off. :)

I think it would be a great way to showcase the capabilities the Makerspace has to offer.

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