Full Version: Pics of some lamps I made with the laser

From: Rodney Gold (RODNEY_GOLD) [#1]
 13 Aug 2005
To: ALL

Heres some pics of lights I made with the laser. The shades and colours of globes are interchangeable , I can post full drawings and a more detialed explanation of the project is anyone is interested

From: basehorawards [#2]
 13 Aug 2005
To: Rodney Gold (RODNEY_GOLD) [#1] 13 Aug 2005

I am very interested.

Rodney you are amazing.


From: burningskylaser (ROSS711) [#3]
 13 Aug 2005
To: Rodney Gold (RODNEY_GOLD) [#1] 13 Aug 2005

Rodney, I am also very interested! Have you set a consumer price on the finished product yet? By the way, per your recommendation the rotary attachment for my Explorer works great, and the optics upgrade will be arriving soon. Thank you!

Message 1769.4 was deleted


From: Laura (ELLEMD628) [#5]
 13 Aug 2005
To: Rodney Gold (RODNEY_GOLD) [#1] 13 Aug 2005

Very nice! Please add me to the list of those interested. :) 

From: Dixie2 [#6]
 14 Aug 2005
To: Rodney Gold (RODNEY_GOLD) [#1] 14 Aug 2005

Rodney..

Is there anything you DON'T do? I'm in awe.

Dixie


From: Peter [#7]
 14 Aug 2005
To: ALL

Said it once, said it a number of times....
Rodney , you need top touch base with one of the Laser producers and go on a talk circuit in the USA, write a book ( I'll illustrate it ;-) )

Get some backers, you'll make a squillion and they'll beat a path to your every presentation.....!

Hey I'd pay for a 2 day intensive course, DVD or Cd and book..

 

regards

Peter


From: JHayes55 [#8]
 15 Aug 2005
To: Rodney Gold (RODNEY_GOLD) [#1] 15 Aug 2005

Rodney - I would love to see all the detail on how you did it.
I also agree with Peter about you doing a CD or Book, I am sure the ARA would love to have you as a speaker.


From: Nick (KOZASNJZ) [#9]
 15 Aug 2005
To: Rodney Gold (RODNEY_GOLD) [#1] 15 Aug 2005

Wow, those look great. I'd be interested in the drawings as well. What kind of material are you using for the shades and how much of a fire hazard are we talking here?

From: MIKEY (JADEPUTTERS) [#10]
 15 Aug 2005
To: Rodney Gold (RODNEY_GOLD) [#1] 15 Aug 2005

Rodney,

Sounds like there's alot of interest. It would be great if you could post the details.


From: Rodney Gold (RODNEY_GOLD) [#11]
 15 Aug 2005
To: MIKEY (JADEPUTTERS) [#10] 21 Aug 2005

Hiya , I have posted them
http://www.engravingetc.org/forum/messages.php?webtag=EE&msg=1772.1


From: Cody (BOBTNAILER) [#12]
 23 Aug 2005
To: ALL

I've made one of these out of materials that I had in my shop (1/8" clear acrylic and 1/4" birch plywood).

Aside from the base being a little too large, I think it looks great! Wonderful idea, Rodney.

We're going to do a couple of things to take Rodney's creation to the next level.
1) Offer the lamp with a wooden base with names, scriptures, etc. engraved on it. Familiar things like "This little light of mine...", "You are the light of the world...", and "Let your light so shine before men..." immediately come to mind.
2) Offer the lamp as a "do it yourself" kit. We'll have everything pre-cut (and protected, of course), so that all the purchaser has to do is put it together.

By the way, does anyone know where I can buy small amounts of acrylic adhesive to include in the kits? I don't want to have to sell these with anything left out.

Again, great job, Rodney!


Cody

From: Ken D. (KDEVORY) [#13]
 23 Aug 2005
To: Cody (BOBTNAILER) [#12] 23 Aug 2005

quote:
where I can buy small amounts of acrylic adhesive to include in the kits? I don't want to have to sell these with anything left out.

Where is it being used? (You said you're using a wooden base, and if I recall from Rodney's post the shade is held together with threaded rod.)

Having read the MSDS for the acrylic bonder I don't know if I want the liability for kids assembling these. (or some adults for that matter.)

How are your bases held together? You could probably buy a big container of wood glue and fill small lure tipped syringes for applicators. (Type of syringe Laserbits sells, for applying acrylic bonder, without the needle. A 3ml size might work.)

From: Cody (BOBTNAILER) [#14]
 23 Aug 2005
To: Ken D. (KDEVORY) [#13] 23 Aug 2005

The wooden base would (could?) be an option...but the main offering will be the acrylic base.

Would you think I'd be better off to leave the glue (wood or acrylic) out of the kit? I think that might be a better idea than including it...hmmm.

I'm not even sure yet if we want to mess with the kits. We have our annual Fall Festival coming up in mid-September, and we might do a little market test there. ....just a thought...

I'm certainly no legal expert, so I don't know just how liable I could be if I offered these things WITH the adhesive in the kit. Just thinking about that makes me shiver! >.< 


From: Ken D. (KDEVORY) [#15]
 23 Aug 2005
To: Cody (BOBTNAILER) [#14] 24 Aug 2005

If acrylic glue is needed you would probably need to supply it; its not something available at the local store.

Maybe there is an off the shelf glue that would work. If the base is not see-through it can be applied on the inside out of sight. I've seen lots of other glues in little tubes. Some plastics will adhere to many glues, others won't; I don't know about acrylic.

I'm no legal expert either so I can't say what to do. I suspect you can include an off the shelf glue, with complete packaging, and a disclaimer that it's to be applied according to the manufacturer's directions by an adult. - Or you just glue the (5?) pieces yourself.


From: Harvey only (HARVEY-ONLY) [#16]
 23 Aug 2005
To: Cody (BOBTNAILER) [#14] 24 Aug 2005

If still available Duco plastic cement will work wonderfully on opaque plastic. It came in different size tubes and was quite thick to prevent mess.

A guess is that it was dissolved plastic.


From: Cody (BOBTNAILER) [#17]
 24 Aug 2005
To: ALL

I've looked all over our little town for light bulbs like Rodney has in his pics. All I've been able to find so far are similarly-SHAPED bulbs, but none in colors other than white.

Has anyone else seen them around? I'd like to use the same (or similar) color for the bulb as I do for the acrylic diffusers. For now, we'll be doing red, blue, and green.

I have tried 7W and 13W bulbs so far, and I think the lower wattage bulbs look best. We're even considering using 4W night-light bulbs in another set. When we get our "druthers" settled, I'll post a pic.


From: Rodney Gold (RODNEY_GOLD) [#18]
 24 Aug 2005
To: Cody (BOBTNAILER) [#17] 25 Aug 2005

You can actually spray paint the bulbs to get a colour - we did it for this illuminated sign , we needed to use a circular flourescent and getting one in blue is impossible , so we spray painted it. Worked wonderfully (in this case we used an opal front panel to act as a diffusor as we did not take a lot of care spraying the bulb and it was rather mottled , but if you use a few light coats yu do get an even paint coverage )
We made this thing on our lasers too , even the back casing etc , I will post the way we did this (you need a wire bender).
Was a very lucrative job as the run was for 500 and we did a far better job on it than most of the "pro" lighting guys did at a cheaper price.


From: UncleSteve [#19]
 25 Aug 2005
To: Cody (BOBTNAILER) [#17] 25 Aug 2005

Check the Christmas department of almost any store that sells the lights. They should have the colors in the 7 1/2 watt bulbs in both painted and transparent tinted versions.

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