I had a spare hour yesterday and thought it would be a good idea to get some hands-on experience with the laser cutter, ahead of producing a moving gift for some friends!
Someone posted a link to a logbook style journal of their project progress and that has inspired me to give a little insight into the mistakes I made yesterday while playing around.
Goal of the session:
- Become more comfortable using the laser cutter unsupervised
Notable lessons:
- Cleaning the laser before isn’t as daunting as I anticipated, it’s very intuitive
- You can only be logged into Ruby on one device at a time (I was uploading designs from my laptop)
- While Ruby does give a design feature, it’s not great and if you change text it will probably lose the font
- Every time you create a job from a design you must re-select the material. every. time. I used 3mm ply, and 3 out of 5 jobs were executed with the wrong 3mm material selected (the middle dog tag didn’t cut all the way through, one of my “cut” layers was engraved rather than cut)
- You don’t need to crop the design in inkscape to the “page” size, Ruby does that for you
- If you want the design cut out of the sheet at the end, you better remember to put a bounding rectangle around the design. But you should make sure that the rectangle isn’t outside the page (whoops)
- It’s really important to clean the machine after use, especially if you’ve been using it for several jobs
Outcome:
- I made two dog tags, one for my cockapoo Albie, and one for his “cousin” Jackson
- I made a mess on my ply of the prototype design
Next Steps:
- Clean up the SVG layers and be more deliberate about the colours
- Run a speed / power test to experiment with different styles within my design
- Put a bounding rectangle around the design
- Keep practising