Maybe try having a die made so they can be stamped out with a press?
This is my first post here. I work where we use many small circular aluminum pieces. They have a smaller half circle cut out of one side of it (see attached image). These things are expensive and only available from the manufacturer. They are $700 for a pack of 300 small pieces of aluminum foil. We have been able to find a suitable aluminum foil for our needs. Is there a way to cut aluminum foil with some sort of laser engraver or cutting machine? If so, what would be the best one for my needs? I am new to this world, but I have some working knowledge of a CNC machine.
For clarification, the OD is 37mm and the ID is roughly 32mm.
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Maybe try having a die made so they can be stamped out with a press?
Halfnutz
Hi JMM - As 1/2 nut says a clicking press and a die knife will do a fine job for that part. Otherwise a local laser company would do it easy. What is the foil thickness? If you try to machine it, holding it will be the issue, will need to be a vacuum clamp of some sort. Laser is the go or a die knife. Peter
You can get aluminum foil in stacks of sheets as well as on rolls. An abrasive water-jet cutter could cut that shape out of the whole stack at once, giving you multiple pieces, Nesting the cuts should give you at least $700 worth, for a fraction of the cost.
[FONT=Verdana]Andrew Werby[/FONT]
[URL="http://www.computersculpture.com/"]Website[/URL]
The foil thickness is 0.001" or 25 um. If I were to use a laser, do you know what type of laser, wavelength, and what laser power would be best?
I have not heard of a water-jet cutter. I will look into that. Thanks!
This could not be done as you say, the stacked sheet would have to be held with a pressure pad to be able to cut this with a water jet, laser would be a fail also as it would not have a very good cut finish being .001" thick, so a simple die with a pressure pad built in would be the most efferent way to do this
Mactec54
I agree that a pressure pad would help with the waterjet operation, but that doesn't seem like a big deal to implement. It's more or less standard practice to have some kind of hold-down for anything you're cutting on a waterjet, and a simple frame fixture would probably be sufficient to hold down a stack of foil. The trouble with cutting the stack with a die is that the edges would tend to stick together; peeling them apart would be tedious with a lot of failures where the piece was thin and delicate. I suppose they could be die-cut individually, but that seems like it would take forever.
[FONT=Verdana]Andrew Werby[/FONT]
[URL="http://www.computersculpture.com/"]Website[/URL]
You would not be stacking them with a press operation, it would be faster, cleaner and much less cost, per part to do it with a press operation, a water jet the material normally just sits on the machine, just like a plasma machine and there are no previsions to hold a stack such as foil like this, other industries use water jet to cut out stacks of clothing, these are not the standard water jet machine though, here is one cutting .010" thick material, .001" would be much more difficult to do
Mactec54
Last edited by oneeye; 10-10-2021 at 10:46 AM.
Mactec54
laser engraver cannot cut aluminum. u will need high power laser cutting machine. IPG Laser is the best in my opinion.
That sort of shape gets punched out by the millions, so to speak. Dead cheap once you have the die. You could even make the die yourself for a low volume of aluminium parts. The inside corners would take a little work.
Yes, you could get pressure welding at the edges, which is a right pain.
However, if you interleave paper and foil this should control the problem.
Cheers
Roger