Epilog 30w Mini 24 Laser Engraver
Owner/Loaner | PS:One |
---|---|
Serial Number | SERIAL NUMBER |
Make/Model | Mini 24 |
Arrival Date | 6/29/2011 |
Usability | yes |
Contact | CNC Area Host |
Where | Shock Shop |
Authorization Needed | yes |
Hackable | no |
Estimated Value | $15,000 |
Host Area | CNC |
Status
Up and running, doing just fine. Uses the inline exhaust fan through the roof; the fume extractor is not currently being used with the laser.
Epilog/Epilog service notes - please note any service, repairs, or adjustments you make to the machine
Top Eight
- Don't use the autofocus, because it could burn out a motor.
- Don't cut materials that will ignite or emit dangerous fumes (any chlorinated plastic like PVC, for example). See section below.
- Always use the exhaust fan/always use the air assist on vector cuts.
- You must stay with the job; don't walk away. Things could catch on fire, that would suck.
- Sometimes it's a pain to get the right driver working.
- Do not attempt to service the machine yourself unless you've cleared it with the CNC Area Host
- Do not touch any settings in the Config menu on the machine itself
- Do not touch any settings in the Maint menu on the machine itself except you may use Maint/1/Return Home to reset the cutting head to the machine's default origin (<.015" inside the top left corner as of 8/8/15)
Authorization
Authorization for the laser is not viral. There are a few authorized trainers, though, and fairly frequent authorizations. Currently (as of Jan 2016) authorizations will appear on the calendar, but are not planned much more than 2 weeks in advance. See below for list of authorized users and link to authorized trainers. Post on the Google Group email list; look for a recent thread about laser authorizations and post there.
General Info
This machine: http://www.epiloglaser.com/mini24_overview.htm
Manual for this machine: http://www.epiloglaser.com/downloads/pdf/mini_helix_4.22.10.pdf
Settings for various materials
Laser Cutter Instructions and Workflow
Cleaning the optics: http://www.epiloglaser.com/tl_clean_optics.htm
Inkscape for newbies: http://blog.ponoko.com/2008/01/21/how-to-inkscape-for-ponoko-newbies-trace-an-image/
Experiment with Laser settings to find the lowest possible power and highest possible speed to get clean vector cuts. The new optics and tube (as of December 2014) can cut many organic materials with a minimum of charring.
Ventilation
Always turn on the exhaust fan using the switch located in the silver box to the left of the machine.
Air assist
Turn on the air assist by turning the silver knob on the regulator located on the red bracket attached to the left of the machine. The pressure regulator has no adjustable settings. It is either on or off.
Air assist is used for vector cutting to have nice traces and avoid your material to burn. However some people like to have it disabled for raster jobs.
Turn air assist off when you've finished and you don't need it while doing your settings.
Check the regulator for accumulated water from time to time. Place a container (and maybe some paper towels) under the regulator and vent accumulated water from the bottom using the small petcock. If too much water accumulates in the regulator, it may flow through the air hose and into the machine, spraying onto the bed/material.
Cleanup
Please leave the machine cleaner than you found it by emptying the crumb tray below the cutting table, picking up cutouts, and vacuuming up any acrylic dust you made.
Troubleshooting
Under construction.
NEVER CUT THESE MATERIALS
- PVC (Poly Vinyl Chloride): Also known as "vinyl" "pleather" or "artificial leather." Most adhesive vinyl shelf paper (e.g. Con-Tact Paper) also is PVC. Emits HCl and nasty chlorinated compounds when cut! Don't ever cut this material as it will ruin the optics, cause the metal of the machine to corrode, and ruin the motion control system.
- Polycarbonate: Also known as "Lexan." Polycarbonate is also often found as flat, sheet material. The case cover window on the laser cutter is made of Polycarbonate because polycarbonate strongly absorbs infrared radiation! This is the frequency of light the laser cutter uses to cut materials, so it is very ineffective at cutting polycarbonate. Polycarbonate can also emit flame and chlorine gas when cut, making it a poor choice for laser cutting.
- HDPE: "milk bottle" plastic. It melts. It gets gooey. It catches on fire. Don't use it.
- PolyStyrene Foam: It catches fire, it melts, and only thin pieces cut. This is the #1 material that causes laser fires!!!
- Fiberglass: The epoxy resin used in fiberglass is bad to cut, the vapor/fumes of the epoxy resin are bad. The fiberglass mat itself, without resin, is safe to cut.
- Coated Carbon Fiber: Thin carbon fiber mat can be cut, with some fraying. However, once coated with epoxy it will emit noxious fumes.
- Silhouette magnet paper (sold by Inventables by example): it likely contains chlorine. Emits HCl and nasty chlorinated compounds when cut! Don't ever cut this material as it will ruin the optics, cause the metal of the machine to corrode, and ruin the motion control system.
- PTFE:, also known as Teflon or any fluorinated polymer it will releases nasty fluorinated compounds (bad for you) and sublimate then deposit on the lenses (likely destroying them).
- Gator foam: foam core gets burned and eaten away compared to the top and bottom hard paper shell. Not a fantastic thing to cut, but it can be cut if watched. And the MSDS sheet says it may produce hydrogen bromide and hydrogen chloride known to degrade the optics and mechanic of the cutter
- Any other plastic with "Chlor" or "Fluor" in the name, for the same reasons as PVC and PTFE above.
Test for material
Some people came up with an easy protocol to help identify unknown polymers: Nyc Resistor - how to identify polymers with burnination. We don't know how reliable it is. And we can't but recommend to do that under good ventilation (outside?)
Use Caution With These Materials
- ABS: ABS does not cut well in a laser cutter. It tends to melt rather than vaporize, and has a higher chance of catching on fire and leaving behind melted gooey deposits on the vector cutting grid. It also does not engrave well (again, tends to melt). ABS emits hydogen cyanide when burned. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acrylonitrile_butadiene_styrene
Safe Materials
The laser can cut or etch. The materials that the laser can cut materials like wood, paper, cork, and some kinds of plastics. Etching can be done on almost anything, wood, cardboard, anodized aluminum, plastic, marble, stone, tile, and glass.
- Cutting
- Many woods up to 1/4" thick. Engineered woods like MDF are okay to use but may experience a higher amount of charring when cut. Be very careful about cutting oily woods, or very resinous woods as they also may catch fire. Natural wood can be cut or engraved, but varies in density in a single piece; results will vary across the workpiece.
- Paper cuts very very well on the laser cutter, and also very quickly. Thin paper and single layer card stock and cardboard are perfectly OK. Thicker cardboard, carton, and other papers also cut very well but need to be watched to make sure they don't catch fire.
- Cork cuts nicely, but the quality of the cut depends on the thickness and quality of the cork. Engineered cork has a lot of glue in it, and may not cut as well. Cork thicker than 1/4" should be avoided.
- Cast acrylic (also known as Lucite, Plexiglas, PMMA) cuts extremely well on the laser cutter, leaving a beautifully polished edge. With care, acrylic material up to 1/2" thick can be cut on the laser cutter. Extruded acrylic cuts less well and etches even worse. It tends to melt and puddle rather than vaporize.
- Delrin (POM) in thin sheets cuts and engraves very well. Delrin comes in a number of shore strengths (hardness) and the harder delrin tends to work better. Great for gears! It is possible to deeply engrave Delrin to make dies for embossing paper and leather.
- Kapton tape (Polyimide) : Works well, in thin sheets and strips like tape. 1/16" thick is about as thick as you can cut reliably.
- Mylar : Works well if it's thin. Once you get too far past 1/16" thick mylar has a tendency to warp, bubble, and curl. Gold coated mylar will not work.
- Solid Styrene : Smokes a lot when cut, but can be cut. Keep it thin (1/16")
- Depron foam: Used a lot for hobby, RC aircraft, architectural models, and toys. 1/4" cuts nicely, with a smooth edge. Must be constantly monitored when cutting.
- Cloth (leather, suede, felt, hemp, cotton, polyester, but NEVER vinyl or pleather-- see above) They all cut well. Leather is very hard to cut, but can be if it's thinner than a belt (call it 1/8")
- Magnetic Sheet material cuts beautifully (make SURE it does NOT contain chlorine, see above)
- NON-CHLORINE containing rubber is fine for cutting. Natural rubber engraves but leaves a dark sticky residue that doesn't affect stamps if the piece is engraved deeply enough.
- Carbon fiber mats/weave that has not yet had epoxy applied can be cut, very slowly. You must not cut carbon fiber that has been coated!!
- Etching: all the above can be etched, in some cases very deeply. In addition, you can etch:
- Glass (green seems to work best) .. looks sandblasted. Only FLAT GLASS can be engraved in our cutter. No round or cylindrical items.
- Ceramic tile
- Anodized aluminum ( vaporizes the anodization away )
- Painted/coated metals ( vaporizes the paint away )
- Stone : Marble, Granite, Soapstone, Onyx. Gets a white "textured" look when etched
- Marking
There is an expensive coating called 'cermark'. This marking compound costs $100 for a small bottle, and must be diluted with ethanol and applied to metal (not ceramics or stone) before being etched to leave behind a permanent dark black mark.
Material sources
- Inventables for acrylic
- Abbey Specialties for acrylic in varied sizes, this company is our landlord. They are in the other half of our building and if you ask they can drop off in our shared loading dock.
- Petersen Brother's Plastics Has off-cuts and small pieces for $2/lb. 2929 N Pulaski Rd, Chicago, IL 60641 (773) 286-5666
- Amazon.com good Baltic Birch 1/8" plywood.
- Laser-engravable rubber and polymer, for stamps
- Amazon, laserable rubber for stamps
Strategies and techniques
See main article, Epilog techniques.
Laser settings for various materials.
General references
incredible box maker, with holes and text: http://www.makercase.com/
parametric pdf box creator: http://boxmaker.rahulbotics.com/
parametric svg box creator: http://www.giplt.nl/svg/ (load > construction category > better box)
Ladyada's info on the proper application of laser beams: http://www.ladyada.net/wiki/laserinfo/equipment
Information on materials that can and can't be cut: http://www.pololu.com/docs/0J24/3
paramateric living hinge generator: http://www.ashanan.com/hinges/ (code at: https://github.com/ashanan/hinges)
python svg library written by Toba: https://github.com/eastein/svgcuts
parametric flexbox generator: http://flexbox.herokuapp.com/
http://blog.makezine.com/archive/2008/08/how-to-lasercut-custom-bo.html - Laser cut boxes
Long-ass list of laser designs on Thingiverse
All laser cutter things on Thingiverse
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2321 - Theo Janssen
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2073 - Drill gauge
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:247 - Hex connector toy
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:1960 - 2010 hex desktop calendar
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:2023 - clock
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:1739 - shoe hanger
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:1616 - geneva wheel
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:201 - Square gears
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:1521 - Gyroscope
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:1393 - End mill set holder
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:1203 - 608 bearing wrapper + face
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:952 - Small box
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:981 - cable chain
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:855 - Chess set
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:20 - Chess set
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:3353 - Chess board with compass rose inlay
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:587 - gEarrings
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:3411 - gearcuffs
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:807 - Mystery box
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:516 - tumbler, key, and case
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:409 - Resistor lead tool
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:211 - Planetary gear business card
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:53 - planetary gears
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:3021 - Scale mail
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:5265 - Peristaltic pump
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:5243 - laser cut tetris blocks
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:5076 - Wire spool holder
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:5727 - Settlers of Catan
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:5730 - Teardrop pendant light
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:7796 - Gear coasters
Software Compatibility
Note: this indicates success in using this software with the printer driver, not general capabilities about the software itself.
Software type | Manufacturer | File extensions | Raster (engraving) | Vector (cutting) | Other notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
CorelDraw | Corel | cbr | yes | yes | not available on machine |
Illustrator CC | Adobe | ai, eps, svg, pdf | yes | yes | available on machine |
Photoshop CC | Adobe | psd, eps, pdf | yes | yes | available on machine |
Inkscape | Open Source | yes | yes (only if printed from PDF) | save as PDF (vectors should be stroked .01mm), then print from Acrobat. works for bitmap and vector. |
Notes on Software Compatibility
Adobe Illustrator and the epilog drivers don't always work great together. If you're experiencing any of the following, there is a simple fix:
- Job runs, but it's an empty run. Laser head moves once then completes, even though raster vs vector is correctly configured and stokes are set to 0.072pt.
- Updating the media size in the epilog print driver does not update the size in Illustrator's print dialog, unless you reopen settings and press 'OK' in epilog again another time or two.
- Open pressing print in Illustrator, you get a message about "nothing to print in selected layers" or similar.
- Media size entered in epilog driver is read as the reverse by Illustrator (e.g. 24x12 is seen as 12x24 by Illustrator)
It seems epilog's driver doesn't play nicely with Illustrator, and Illustrator interfaces with the print driver a lot because it micromanages a lot of things. If your document is saved as a .AI with PDF compatibility, simply right-click your AI file and open with Adobe Reader instead of Adobe Illustrator, and print from there.
Adobe Reader has a much more "dumbed down" print dialog that just works with Epilog's driver. You don't have to resave your .AI as .PDF, as Adobe Reader can read .AI files saved in compatibility mode (that's the default).
Rotary Attachment
NB: Always return the machine back to the default configuration with a cutting bed after use.
Installing Attachment
Do not attempt to install the rotary attachment without ensuring that the cutting head AND autofocus plunger will clear it. It is extremely easy to damage the autofocus plunger and/or crash the head in the Y dimension, which will burn the motor out and make a lot of people sad.
- Turn machine on
- Disable X/Y
- Open front cover
- Lower bed almost to the bottom of the machine while still allowing the catch tray to be removed
- Turn machine off
- Flip up rulers and remove cutting bed
- Remove slide out catch tray
- Install the attachment locating it in the 3 holes in the bottom of the bed DO NOT CONNECT PLUG YET
- Make sure the Y axis will clear the top of the attachment, if it will not turn the machine on and lower the bed further making sure to turn it off afterwards
- Connect the attachment cable to the connector in the back of the bed
- Turn the machine on - the machine will zero home over the top of the attachment
Reverse steps to uninstall.
Usage notes
- DO NOT USE AUTO FOCUS
- 0,0 is TOP LEFT
- Y axis is wrapped around the piece
- Set Y size to circumference of piece - measure with soft tape or string/ribbon/etc
- Make sure to set print size in driver to same as art board in illustrator
Known issues
Can't login
The trust relationship between this workstation and the primary domain failed
- main page The trust relationship between this workstation and the primary domain failed
- Might be fixed now
- Occasional workaround: reboot
I was certified a long time ago
You need to
- Be a Current Member
- Have a https://members.pumpingstationone.org account
- Talk to a recommended certifier, The area host, or email [email protected]
You may be asked to get recertified.
Front door interlock broken
The front door interlock has two reed switches. The one on the right isn't being activated by the factory magnet so it currently has an additional magnet on the inside of the machine, right to the left of the switch
List of Currently Certified Users
This list is hugely incomplete because nobody was doing it. Someone should fix that eventually... for now, new certs should go in here. If you are certified and remember who certified you, go ahead and add yourself. Your non-presence on this list is not intended to insult you or your relatives.
Authorizing Users
The laser cutter now has recommended authorizers. Recommended authorizers will periodically conduct authorization sessions for PS:1 members wishing to use the laser engraver. These sessions will be announced on the members' listserv as early as is practicable. A recommended authorizer can follow the instructions on Laser Engraver Certification to enable logins to the laser engraver computer.
Qualified Member | Trained By | |
---|---|---|
Nat Zorach | Will McShane | |
Anthony Sontag | Elizabeth | |
Will McShane | Danger Committee | |
Eric Stein | Will McShane | |
Patrick Schless | Will McShane | |
Laurie Rich | Steve | |
Tom Forajter | Will McShane | |
Colin Parsons | Patrick Swayze (RIP) | |
Andrew Camardella | Colin Parsons | |
Dan Locks | Colin Parsons | |
Mahmoud Al-Qudsi | Colin Parsons | |
Lauren Conroy | Colin Parsons | |
Jesse Seay | Colin Parsons | |
Sai Yamanoor | Colin Parsons | |
Hef | Colin Parsons | |
Adam Talsma | Colin Parsons | |
Josh Cooper | Colin Parsons | |
Bryan Rosendale | Colin Parsons | |
Kevin Caughlin | Colin Parsons | |
Nathan Becka | Colin Parsons | |
Stephen Kamykowski | Colin Parsons | |
Jesse Seay | Colin Parsons | |
Bart Dring | Colin Parsons | |
Mike Morarity | Colin Parsons | |
Tony Dipaolo | Colin Parsons | |
Adrew An | Colin Parsons | |
Dean Anderson | Colin Parsons | |
Francesca Slade | Colin Parsons | |
David Fell | Colin Parsons | |
Ron Olson | Colin Parsons | |
Jay Pee | Elizabeth | |
Peter Borah | Elizabeth | |
April | Elizabeth | |
Ray Doeksen | Elizabeth | |
Jason Shanfield | Will McShane | |
Elizabeth Koprucki | Will McShane | |
George Shaw | Will McShane | |
Andrew Kos | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Derek Bever | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Jason Araujo | Derek Bever | |
Adam Glick | Ray Doeksen | |
Nathan Ellis | Jason Shanfield | |
Rob Riggs (Colorado Rob) | Elizabeth | |
Arturo Duarte | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
James Porter | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Ryan Kelly | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Sloan Lavery | William McShane | |
Casey Olson | Jason Shanfield | |
Spenser Gilliland | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Jeff McBride | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
David Morton | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Thomas Wright | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Touly Phiachantharath | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Robert Grossman | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Eddie Muela | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Rachel Wallis | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Nick Halderman | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Eric Beauchamp | Jason Shanfield | |
Aaron Mintz | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Matt Makris | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Roger Moore | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Michael Leinartas | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Solomon Hursey | Elizabeth Kopruki | |
Darold Higa | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Curtiss Cooke | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Dubi Kaufmann | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Maria Miller | Derek Bever | |
Andrew Sowa | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Mike Kislovsky | Will McShane | |
Kyle Bieneman | Will McShane | |
Michael Solheim | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Tim Geiser | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Lucas Goossen | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Alec Weege | Jason Shanfield | |
Arjun Wadnerkar | Jason Shanfield | |
Kevin Pulver | Ray Doeksen | |
David Butler | Ray Doeksen | |
Mike Mandrea | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Davis Mazariegos | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
John Farmer | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Knute Martell | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Leon Grossman | Jason Shanfield | |
Tina C | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Benjamin Miller | Jason Shanfield | |
Ryan Taylor | Jason Shanfield | |
Joe Wallace | Jason Shanfield | |
Ryan Neuman | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Scott Little | Ray Doeksen | |
Scott Drane | Ray Doeksen | |
Will Garza | Ray Doeksen | |
Mike Jones | Ray Doeksen | |
Bryan Sills | Ray Doeksen | |
Mike Patton | Ray Doeksen | |
James Huber | Jason Shanfield | |
Doorman Dave | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Simon Pyle | Jason Shanfield | |
Kurt Ziegel | Lyn Cole | |
Ralph Brendler | Jonathan Bisson | |
Robert Caruso | Ray Doeksen | |
(Raj) Joseph Perera | Ray Doeksen | |
Jonathan Bisson | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Burton Kent | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Erik Wessing | Ray Doeksen | |
Matt Crump | Ray Doeksen | |
Eugene Liolumovich | Ray Doeksen | |
Avner Shanan | Ray Doeksen | |
Chinzorig Davaatseren | Ray Doeksen | |
Temuulen Erdenekhvv | Ray Doeksen | |
Krista Benson | Ray Doeksen --Rdoeksen (talk) 16:09, 28 August 2015 (CDT) | |
Bradley Jiminez | Ray Doeksen --Rdoeksen (talk) 16:09, 28 August 2015 (CDT) | |
James Baker | Ray Doeksen | |
Hunter Koerner | Ray Doeksen | |
Tricia Scully | Ray Doeksen | |
Danika Faiola --Rdoeksen (talk) 21:34, 9 September 2015 (CDT) | Ray Doeksen | |
Jim Hartmann | Ray Doeksen | |
Jonathan Levine | Ray Doeksen | |
Keith Hultman | Khoi Nguyen | |
Julia Padvoiskis | Ray Doeksen | |
Erik Funkhouser | Ray Doeksen | |
Steve Kuenstler | Elizabeth Koprucki | |
Shane Kanter 10/18/2015 | Ray Doeksen | |
Andy Larkin 10/20/2015 | Ray Doeksen | |
David Gutowsky | Ray Doeksen | |
Nicholas Hawley | Ray Doeksen | |
Kevin Mitchell | Ray Doeksen | |
David Rubman 11/23/2105 | Ray Doeksen | |
Jeff Smykil | Ray Doeksen | |
Samuel Sion | Ron Olson | |
David O'Brien --Rdoeksen (talk) 22:37, 21 December 2015 (CST) | Ray Doeksen | |
Greg Kudlacz | Ray Doeksen | |
Daya Alexander | Ray Doeksen | |
Andrew Dalesandro | Ray Doeksen | |
An Phan | Jonathan Bisson | |
Connor Sullivan | Tom Judge | 1/22/16 |
Brian Zable | Ray Doeksen | |
Joe Iklov | Ray Doeksen | |
Ashley Matrisciano | Ray Doeksen |