Yea, exactly. Some of the older machines are now needing a little more support, and I am selling a ton of press brakes, which mostly do not require onsite installs, which in turns lets me stay more available to take support calls, ship out parts for down machines, etc.
fiber lasers like this can only cut metallic products like steel, stainless steel, aluminum brass, titanium, etc. There are other types of lasers like CO2 laser that can cut materials like wood, plastic, etc, then you also have the marking lasers that do a great job at engraving
3:40 is that an E-Link sticking up in the air under the infrared tube heat? 4' is normally considered burn zone on infrared tube..
What kind of business can you get into with these kind of machines? It's so interesting. I love massive machinery
no more laser installs for the year? its only March
Yea, exactly. Some of the older machines are now needing a little more support, and I am selling a ton of press brakes, which mostly do not require onsite installs, which in turns lets me stay more available to take support calls, ship out parts for down machines, etc.
But what am I going to do when I need my 40 - 80 kw? It will probably take a year for the new building and by then they will have 100kw.
@@garyfiler5768I will take care of you when your ready, just can’t take on any new customers
What materials other than metal can be cut with a laser?
fiber lasers like this can only cut metallic products like steel, stainless steel, aluminum brass, titanium, etc. There are other types of lasers like CO2 laser that can cut materials like wood, plastic, etc, then you also have the marking lasers that do a great job at engraving
Cool as always, Colorado Springs is where Dragon Man is, you should of visited him.
Oh Yeah!
I see that's max 3kw power
solid observation