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#1
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Laser Cutter And FRC
I recently got a membership to TechShop in the Bay Area, a hackerspace that has a fairly extensive shop. One of the many machines they offer for members to use is the Epilog Laser Engraver. I was wondering what experiences people have had with this machine in specific, and with laser engravers in general for FRC use. Were there any cool or innovative uses you found for this tool? What kind of parts did you use it to make, and how did they perform?
The first specific use that came to my mind was using this machine to make plastic gearbox plates, out of either polycarb or ABS. Has anyone tried this? What kind of tolerances can this type of machine hold? Is this a good/bad idea? If I do end up trying to make plates like this, I'll be sure to share the results with the community. |
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#2
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Re: Laser Cutter And FRC
I've used their laser cutters for a few things, I wouldn't suggest using them for transmission plates. I haven't tried any decent tolerance parts on it, but from visual inspection of other 1/4" things I've done, taper is gonna be a issue. Also the kerf does not always appear to be constant, as at the speeds slow enough to cut 1/4" delrin, heat will build up in non consistent ways. Overall I think your going to have pretty big issues cutting transmission plates with reasonable tolerances. I'd suggest just using their router instead, as that should give you no issues holding tolerances. Good Luck
EDIT: Also you can't cut polycarbonate on those laser cutters, as they do not have adequate filtration to handle the toxic gases they create. |
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#3
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Re: Laser Cutter And FRC
Pretty sure they won't let you cut polycarb due to fumes.
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#4
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Re: Laser Cutter And FRC
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My general decision on laser cutting VS Milling/watterjet: Does it need to be done fast? Is Acrylic/Delrin/Wood okay? Are the tolerances okay? Typically, a gearbox plate has a no in all three of those questions! That being said, I'm uploading pictures now of entire robots I've made on a laser cutter for WPILib as well as classes. |
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#5
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Re: Laser Cutter And FRC
Quote:
-Mihir Iyer |
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#6
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Re: Laser Cutter And FRC
We have a Versalaser that is handy for all sorts of things. It sees very little use for the FRC robot itself, but we use it for small mini-sumo robots for class projects and for engraving giveaways. We have done 1/4" ABS on it but it did not turn out great. Right now I have a problem where the laser is weak and struggling to cut 1/8" acrylic. Need to check it out and get it fixed.
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#7
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Re: Laser Cutter And FRC
We've used a laser cutter from my college for many things over the past few years.
Don't expect to use it for major structural components, or to do the kind of work a sheet metal shop would, but it's great for a lot of little things. Good tool to have in your back pocket. They make cool small robots as well. Last edited by Joe G. : 30-05-2013 at 10:34. |
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#8
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Re: Laser Cutter And FRC
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#9
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Re: Laser Cutter And FRC
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#10
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Re: Laser Cutter And FRC
It sounds like Delrin and ABS are the two goto materials. Is there a reason to pick one over the other? Are there specific advantages for certain applications?
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#11
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Re: Laser Cutter And FRC
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#12
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Re: Laser Cutter And FRC
One great use for a laser like an Epilog is to make templates. You use the laser to cut a small X where the center of a hole is to be located in paper, tape the paper to your metal, and center punch almost perfectly. Also great for cutting templates, just follow the dark line...
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#13
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Re: Laser Cutter And FRC
Quote:
------------------------------ We love our laser cutter. We use it for tons of stuff, mainly with ABS. Our team considered ABS gearbox plates, although we did not actually do it because we were using supershifters for the first time and did not want to take the risk. We still believe that it would work out, though. We did use ABS for other things on our robot this year. All of our sprockets were made using it, and worked really well. Plus they were lightweight. We had linear actuators consisting of a double pulley moving up and down aluminum c-channel. The entire pulley module was made out of ABS, and although we had problems with them, the problems did not stem from our choice to use ABS. We then created an ABS template which we used to lay it on top of all the layers of our wood and polycarb arm and drilled in all of the holes. Without the template, it would have been nearly impossible to manually sketch out the dimensions of each and every hole. Our frisbees traveled down a curved path on our arm. We used stacks of .25in ABS as rails to guide the frisbees. There is absolutely no other way in our capabilities that we could have machined such a thing. Our wrist was 75% ABS. Besides increased machining capabilities, this also allowed us to have a lightweight wrist. Finally, we lasercut our "daisy" floor pickups using rubber. What the rubber basically did was whack the frisbee into the arm. In sum, we basically used the laser cutter and ABS for 2 main reasons: to give our low resource team machining capabilities comparable to high resource teams and to create lightweight components. Next year, we have even bigger plans for this amazing machine. |
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#14
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Re: Laser Cutter And FRC
Cutting polycarb on a laser is messy (toxic fumes) and with many thicknesses doesn't always leave a clean cut. It can be... melty. I wouldn't really consider it.
I would not make any competition robotics parts out of acrylic, which is the material most plastic laser cutters are used to cut. There is nothing good that can come out of acrylic on an FRC robot. I don't know a lot about ABS / delrin laser cutting, but it's much more doable than polycarbonate. I don't think lasering a gearbox plate on this machine is going to be the best idea. If you're at a good hackerspace, they have higher precision equipment (e.g. a decent router / mill) for this purpose. |
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#15
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Re: Laser Cutter And FRC
Besides making things for your robots there is a lot you can do for spirit and for sponsors. Our team personally does not have a laser but some of our friend teams do. This year they made us key chains with our name and number as well as little name tags for all our kids. They also made us plaques to give out to our sponsors. Each plaque was engraved with the sponsor, their level (depending on how much they donated), a little sentence about thank you and our logo. The sponsors loved them! They really like having something that they can hang up in their office and show off to everyone that comes in.
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