Folder Laser EngravingFiberglass Settings?


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 From:  Vicky (ANDERI)
 To:  ALL
6635.1 

Hey all,

Had a fellow walk in today asking if I could laser engrave some text onto a pool cue. He was told this cue has a wood core with a fiberglass overlay. Does anyone have any settings for rastering fiberglass that I can start with? We'll be filling it with some gold Rub 'N' Buff after lasering, so it doesn't matter what it looks like underneath, as long as it has neat edges.

Thanks!
:-)

 

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 From:  Dave Jones (DAVERJ)
 To:  Vicky (ANDERI) 
6635.2 In reply to 6635.1 

I tried engraving and cutting some circuit board fiberglass, which is a "fire retardent" fiberglass. It was extremely difficult. It flared up and scorched long before getting any depth.

I guess there are a lot of fiberglass resins, so it will depend a lot on the type used in that piece. But be prepared. You might get a lot of flames and char with little depth.

 

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 From:  Mick
 To:  Dave Jones (DAVERJ) 
6635.3 In reply to 6635.2 
Fibreglass resins are usually polyester

Mick
Cactus Equipment & Supplies
www.cactus-equipment.com
800-440-6847

 

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 From:  Dave Jones (DAVERJ)
 To:  Mick 
6635.4 In reply to 6635.3 

The fiberglass I was trying it on was either FR-4 or G-10 circuit board fiberglass. Circuit board fiberglass typically uses epoxy resins, so may give very different results from what the pool cue uses.

What I'm also remembering now about doing it was watching the resin turn liquid long before the cloth was effected, and the cloth scorching much wider than the beam, long before the beam made a dent in it.

That may just be because I was doing it to a circuit board fiberglass, but I suspect no matter what the resin, the power needed to effect the glass cloth is far higher than needed to melt the resin.

 

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 From:  Vicky (ANDERI)
 To:  Vicky (ANDERI) 
6635.5 In reply to 6635.1 
Well, we gave it a shot. Lovely black pool cue. The laser ended up "frosting" the top layer of the finish, I believe. The result was a nice, crisp, white text on a black cue. Bottom line, it worked well, took about 5 minutes including set-up, the customer was thrilled, and I didn't have to replace a $200 cue. :-)
 

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 From:  Hermes (HERMESSANDOVAL)
 To:  Vicky (ANDERI) 
6635.6 In reply to 6635.5 

It's good to hear it came out right. I'm engraving 500+ pieces of kitchen utensils right now and most of them are covered with graphite, like this setup you've just described, it looked like it could go really wrong, but ended up engraved very nice in less than 3 minutes, setup not included.

Keep on experimenting, learning never stops with lasers.

Hermes Sandoval
 

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 From:  Dave Jones (DAVERJ)
 To:  Vicky (ANDERI) 
6635.7 In reply to 6635.5 
Excellent!
 
 
     
 

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