Thank you, Roger, for this video about cutting aluminium metal using a fibre laser. I noticed that when you operate the laser, you must protect yourself by wearing a very appropriate pair of glass to avoid flexions of the beam into your eyes, and you have to put a special surface under your plate of metal far enough to reduce the reflections of the laser beam (the structured surface is used for where it is painted in black color and grooved in order to keep reflections on its area) .
Thank you for the video Roger. I will soon receive a fiberlaser myself and while watching the video I noticed the wood under the aluminium catch fire/flare up and it made me wonder what is the best/safest underlaying material for when you operate the laser to reduce the risk of fire/damage and not reflecting the beam back to the lens(?).
Did you use the wobble settings for the outline & twin ring ? interesting non the less & the point is more about cutting out intricate shapes not just basic holes
Hey! Mr. Roger, great video. Watching the first test where you "rough out" the entire area of the circle, I wonder if you could make a small aluminum mold for plastic injection, for instance of a small Minecraft sword, 1.5 mm thick?
@Roger Webb yes you did! So sorry! Commented before the end!!! Do you think the small taper on the fibre beam may the time simillar or perhaps it was the quantum slit effect difusing the beam?
fiber laser is on my wish list
Thank you, Roger, for this video about cutting aluminium metal using a fibre laser. I noticed that when you operate the laser, you must protect yourself by wearing a very appropriate pair of glass to avoid flexions of the beam into your eyes, and you have to put a special surface under your plate of metal far enough to reduce the reflections of the laser beam (the structured surface is used for where it is painted in black color and grooved in order to keep reflections on its area) .
My bad!
Thank you for the video Roger. I will soon receive a fiberlaser myself and while watching the video I noticed the wood under the aluminium catch fire/flare up and it made me wonder what is the best/safest underlaying material for when you operate the laser to reduce the risk of fire/damage and not reflecting the beam back to the lens(?).
Did you use the wobble settings for the outline & twin ring ? interesting non the less & the point is more about cutting out intricate shapes not just basic holes
Hey! Mr. Roger, great video. Watching the first test where you "rough out" the entire area of the circle, I wonder if you could make a small aluminum mold for plastic injection, for instance of a small Minecraft sword, 1.5 mm thick?
awesome video, what size lens do you have in for 30W ?
110mm
@@rogerwebb9600 no wonder your focal length is so low, i have same machine but 300mm lense my focal length is much higher
May be faster to drill but much more man to do it with a laser!
Только в совсем безвыходной ситуации так можно делать...
Could you just cut the outline?
I did!
@Roger Webb yes you did! So sorry! Commented before the end!!! Do you think the small taper on the fibre beam may the time simillar or perhaps it was the quantum slit effect difusing the beam?