Building A Bigger, Better Laser Engraver

[Bart] built a giant laser etcher from scratch. One of his first test engravings included the Hackaday skull-and-wrenches on a polished granite floor tile (we love it when people do that). He used an XMOS controller and Mach3 CNC software to handle the device. With just two axes to worry about this seem like an easy project. The difficult bit is controlling, cooling, and focusing the laser.  Oh, and if you screw up, you could be blinded, burned or horribly maimed. But if you start from the beginning you’ll see that [Bart] knows what he’s doing.

14 thoughts on “Building A Bigger, Better Laser Engraver

  1. I’m confused, is it using lasers or axes?

    Maybe it’s both, perhaps it cuts roughs it with the axes and then fine tunes it with the laser?

    Sorry just jesting, I wouldn’t normally pick at spelling, but this one was fun.

    I’ll have to add room for this project to the ever enlarging barn I’m going to have to buy someday to hold the stuff I want to build. Any south east UK hackers want to join me in a hackerspace co-op?

  2. @mike szczys Really? Bloody hell it is, sorry. Bugger, then I’ve been making a horrible mistake in documents for the last couple of years :p Still, no one pointed it out.

    You learn something everyday :)

  3. This is awesome.
    I have access to real CNC mills at work, but they aren’t easy to use for thin parts, since the cutting tools deflect the material.
    I don’t want to build a rep-wrap because i can made 3d things on my mills, so really what I have always wanted is a cheap laser cutter.

    My question is: how much of this costs is the laser?

    I have a feel for how cheaply i could do the table, but I have no idea how much the laser costs.

    If I could at least cut like 1/8″ thick plastic, i could make a lot of neat stuff more easily than my big CNC machines let me.

    Thanks,
    -Taylor

Leave a Reply to markiiCancel reply

Please be kind and respectful to help make the comments section excellent. (Comment Policy)

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.