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#1
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| Maybe this has been done b4 but I have never heard or seen it. How many time have you wondered what the actual cutting path on your work piece was going to look like before it was cut? Have you ever had a sheet with a blemish on it in a small place and wanted to make sure you avoided the blemish? Have you ever wanted to know where you could safely screw down you work without driving the router through your screw? Anouncing the "Ynnebulator laser tool path displayer" Well its more a concept than a finished project. If you had a $4 laser diode and a small mirror on an X,Y pivit that was controlled by rapidly moving solinoids ( Similar to DLP video display technology) With the correct driving electronics you could project your tool path directly onto your work. The idea is free to exploit by any talented electronics person. I guess it may need to be worked into a program like Mach2 in order to produce an output to show the tool path. I bet the next post made will be someone telling me its already been done. Last edited by CNCadmin; 07-05-2005 at 10:44 AM. |
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#2
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| Essentially a difficult project in its own right. A very cool idea but is it needed if you do your drawings within a box that shows the working area of your machine and then zero the machine to that box. If I could make such a thing I would build a rapid prototyper with it rather than a collision detecter. Assuming I could find a UV laser |
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#3
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__________________ Gerry Mach3 2010 Screenset http://home.comcast.net/~cncwoodworker/2010.html (Note: The opinions expressed in this post are my own and are not necessarily those of CNCzone and its management) |
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#6
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| I have experience with laser show equipment. If you were to make a laser tool path display on your own, there are two issues: 1) Unless you are prepared to have a very dark room whenever you use it, you would need more than the <5 mW a standard red laser pointer puts out. And this means expensive. 2) The scanners are very expensive if you want any accuracy at all. I actually tried to build a laser scanner using a 5 mW 635 nm (i.e. high visibility red) laser pointer, with first surface mirrors glued to metal axles that turned in ball bearings, driven by (slaughtered) speakers. It worked for simple "moving to the music" displays but were very weak even in a very dark room. Also, no accuracy. You need a closed loop scanner (this is a servo system just like a servo motor/driver) to get positional accuracy. Arvid |
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#7
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#8
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| Benny, it was not my meaning to "cast down" your idea, I'm just sharing my (quite substantial) experience with lasers in display applications. You will need a lot more laser power when you scan a connect-the-dots picture than when just holding the dot stationary. A normal laser pointer is clearly visible indoors in the middle of the day, but even scanning a simple circle on the wall it is difficult to see under the same conditions. When I talk about accuracy here I'm not talking 1/10 of a millimeter. It would be difficult to build scanners that can hold even say +/-5 mm (+/-0.25 inch) at 0.5 meter from the scanner or so. I'm just saying it's a difficult project if you build it yourself, or expensive if you buy it. Feel free to use my knowledge in this area, I'd be glad to help! It is a cool project .Arvid |
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#9
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| Benny, if you are scanning the laser to make the image then it is effectively only at a given position for a very short time that means that you need a bright laser to be able to see the image. If you want the beam to follow the tool path slowly (slower) then that is different. If you just want to have a go then get a pair of steppers and a pair of mirrors. You could use belt drives to increase resolution, some quick calcs should tell you how much you need. You then need to just run the g-code, the problem is that the x,y coordinates in the g-code need to be modified because the angle will be arctan(a/b) where a is the distance in x from the point beneath the laser and b is the height of laser above the bed. Words to that effect anyway. You might be able to write a gcode converter program to do this. It would be fun to make some nice patterns anyway using this technique but without the conversion you will get compression of the tool path in certain areas and stretching in others. Graham |
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