great video however there are to many variables with wood materials so having a set number to go by may not work. I know in the Engineering world we don't live with F.E.A.R (false evidence appearing real) each cut from the used material is measured and the kerf is added with a negative or positive reaction. Also with lasers the focus can effect the kerf size as well so if you are cutting something with a positive focus everything changes again.
oh I totally agree with you...when I was metal cutting molds we worked in a computer temp environment because temp and humidity were factors in controlling sizes.. as for our wood projects Ive done a few and when i make my tolerances tight i can push pieces of wood together because the wood does give a bit where as metal does not... again thank you for your comment ...happy lasering
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Excellent video and very informative somewhere a new laser user can start from...thank you for sharing
thank you very much and happy lasering
great video however there are to many variables with wood materials so having a set number to go by may not work. I know in the Engineering world we don't live with F.E.A.R (false evidence appearing real) each cut from the used material is measured and the kerf is added with a negative or positive reaction. Also with lasers the focus can effect the kerf size as well so if you are cutting something with a positive focus everything changes again.
oh I totally agree with you...when I was metal cutting molds we worked in a computer temp environment because temp and humidity were factors in controlling sizes..
as for our wood projects Ive done a few and when i make my tolerances tight i can push pieces of wood together because the wood does give a bit where as metal does not...
again thank you for your comment ...happy lasering
@@JOHNNYLAZERSTUDIO oh for sure with metal only needs 0.007 overfit to be water tight...lol