Material | Speed | Power | Current | Passes | Notes These vector settings are just starting suggestions. Always test on a scrap first. |
1/4" plywood | 20 | 100 | 100 | 2 | Lot's of popping, but faster / lower current causes very burnt edges. Try multiple passes? Note 1 |
1/8" / 3mm plywood | 25 | 100 | 100 | 1 | |
plywood etch | 50 | 100 | n/a | 1 | |
Luan door sheet | 50 | 100 | 100 | 1 | |
1/4" Acrylic, Clear | 30 | 100 | 100 | 2 | Colored materials are easier to cut. Try 1 pass at 80 and another at 25. Note 2 |
1/8" Acrylic, Clear | 50 | 100 | 100 | 1 | Colored materials are easier to cut. Note 2 |
PET (Polyethylene) | Nearly impossible to cut as it just melts back together instantly. The foams cut easily. | ||||
1/8" Corian / Avonite | 10 | 100 | 100 | 2 | |
Delrin | 50 | 100 | 100 | ||
1/8" Leather | 30 | 100 | 100 | ||
HDPE (Milk Bottles) | 20 | 20 | many | Melts / burns. Can catch fire easily. Keep power very very low and make multiple passes. | |
Mylar | ? | ||||
Carbon Fiber | 5 | 100 | 100 | many | Must be UNcoated (coatings will emit noxios fumes). Very thin sheats might cut at low speed, high power. |
Polycarbonate / Lexan | Burns, emits nasty yellow smoke with stringy black tar. | ||||
Cardboard | 100 | 80 | 80 | 1 | Note 1 |
Corrigated Cardboard | 60 | 100 | 100 | 1 | Note 1 |
Paper | 100 | 10 | 10 | 1 | Almost impossible to cut things out without the paper being blown out of position. You an use cardboard or cardstock over paper so that the weight holds the paper in place, and bump up the power accordingly. A sheet of glass might also work. |
PolyStyrene / Poly Propylene Foams | DON'T USE! Catches fire at any setting and will melt hard flaming drips which are very difficult to clean off the bed. | ||||
PVC (Poly Vynil Chloride) / Vinyl, Records, Pleather, Artificial Leather | NEVER USE! Chlorine gas is emitted which will destroy the machine AND CAN KILL YOU! | ||||
ABS (Acrylonitrile Butadine Styrene) | NEVER USE! Catches fire, and emits hydrogen cyanide which will destroy the machine AND CAN KILL YOU! | ||||
Polyurethane | NEVER USE! Known respiratory toxin! | ||||
Fiberglass / Anything with Epoxy | NEVER USE! Emits toxic fumes and will damage the machine. | ||||
Anything with glue (including any of the above) | NEVER USE! The glue will vaporize, stick to the lenses, and cause them to heat and crack. There is no way to clean them off. | ||||
unknown | NEVER USE! MAY destroy the machine AND MAY KILL YOU! | ||||
"Power" Controls the frequency of laser pulses. "Current" controls the strength of each pulse, but is only active during vector cutting since the laser is modulated by the pixel darkness during raster operations.
Before cutting:
After cutting, the fan will stay on. If you want to turn it if, it's under the gear icon on the front panel.
Open the lid, and do NOT move the material! Just hold it in place and try to remove a cutout or the outside edge. If it isn't fully cut, close the lid and run the job again, then decrease speed, increase power or passes the next time you that material.
Note 1: Woods and cardboard can catch fire. Always watch and have a fire extinguisher handy. Plywoods can vary because of the changes in the glue used to combine the layers. Individual testing is necessary. The gasses coming off the wood is often still combustible and will causes small explosions or "pops" which can blow up parts into the path of the cutting head.
Note 2: Setting the current to 10 will lightly mark the surface which will then allow you to verify the size and position without making super obvious marks on the part.
Note 3: On thicker materials, focus is critical to ensure a straight edge during the cut. Even with perfect focus, the edge will be slightly angled.
The web based RetinaEngrave 2.0 software has issues (which may or may not affect the Windows program version^ but it can not be used with the Muse):
Most of these issues have been fixed in version 3 of the software.
Engraving requires some space to either side of the picture for the head to reach the correct speed before turning on the laser. Otherwise, the burn would be greater at the edges. This means that you can NOT engrave all the way to the edge of the workable area. Decreasing the speed (and power to compensate) of the settings for engraving can help to decrease this, but it is still significant.
Silk Screens: By setting a light fill color, and an even lighter stroke color on thin lines around each fill, you can produce an SVG or other graphic which will "Half-Tone Dither" to burn tiny holes in a thin plastic or other durable material. This can then be used as a silk screen or stencil. Fills with a saturation of 25 or less and strokes (line color) of 20 or less seem to work well at 250x250 DPI, with Blur Filter Raius at 7, Edge Enhance Threshold at 30 and Intensity Correction at 0. PET plastic lids from candy containers work ok, but are a bit thick for the paint. Manila folders produce a very nice screen, but are not very durable.
Solder Paste Stencils: Lower speeds allow sharper, more accurate fine details. Using laser transparency film at a speed of 10 and a power and current of 25 produces a Printed Circuit Board stencil that is usable down to about 0805 or perhaps 0603. Rows of very fine pins will not reproduce, but can be cut out in blocks and the pins will automatically align during reflow if the solder mask is good.
Maintenance:
See also:
file: /Techref/lasercutters.htm, 13KB, , updated: 2022/7/12 17:00, local time: 2024/11/24 06:40,
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