Yes sir, its always super fun! Of course I just bring you all the fun highlights, there is a ton of work and messyness that goes on behind the scenes... but we wont talk about that lol
Love all the little refinements you have added to your line of machines since I purchased mine. One being a much larger monitor on the laser in the horizontal not vertical orientation lol. Keep on makin things happen man.
haha, yea about the 10th OREE machine i installed, the customer later sent me a pic of a large monitor with a shop made adapter, so after that I told OREE to start putting a larger monitor mounted horizontal, and same for G/Force. Its just a much nicer experience, no idea why they would do a small vertical monitor, other than looking more sleek, its certainly not functional
Avoiding the demurring process on that many parts will probably pay for the machine over the course of a year. Then add on the savings for labor and I bet he'll have it covered in 6-9 months.
Couldn't you add coolant to the drop trays to control some of the blow through and also protect the parts that will always find there way into the trays ?
its often talked about by various people, but i have yet to see it done. Because of how fast the laser heads most, and the fact that they are not breakaway, you really have to microjoint your parts so they stay relatively flat and do not tip up, easier to loaded/unload, anything in the drop trays is for sure scrap... its really the best overall strategy
Man I wish you could come to the shop I work at. Have been running a laser for about 1.5 years. Using oxygen to cut. Major problem is they keep plate OUTSIDE. It’s driving me crazy constantly changing my settings. Want to pull my hair out of my head
haha, yea for sure... but the bendtech software is really hard to beat for tube chassis work, its much easier to use for this purpose than fusion or solid works... so it may be a tough sell on this one...
So cool, i could watch them for hours.
I kind of love your job.
Bringing happy little (or big) machines and parts to the fabricating world one maker at a time😢
Yes sir, its always super fun! Of course I just bring you all the fun highlights, there is a ton of work and messyness that goes on behind the scenes... but we wont talk about that lol
You've come a long way mate, great to see.
Love all the little refinements you have added to your line of machines since I purchased mine. One being a much larger monitor on the laser in the horizontal not vertical orientation lol. Keep on makin things happen man.
haha, yea about the 10th OREE machine i installed, the customer later sent me a pic of a large monitor with a shop made adapter, so after that I told OREE to start putting a larger monitor mounted horizontal, and same for G/Force. Its just a much nicer experience, no idea why they would do a small vertical monitor, other than looking more sleek, its certainly not functional
@turbocobra yea definitely think it was for a cool sleeker look but I made a bracket right away too to turn it which made it way better.
I’m interested in buying a laser machine, can you help me out ?
Avoiding the demurring process on that many parts will probably pay for the machine over the course of a year. Then add on the savings for labor and I bet he'll have it covered in 6-9 months.
Couldn't you add coolant to the drop trays to control some of the blow through and also protect the parts that will always find there way into the trays ?
its often talked about by various people, but i have yet to see it done. Because of how fast the laser heads most, and the fact that they are not breakaway, you really have to microjoint your parts so they stay relatively flat and do not tip up, easier to loaded/unload, anything in the drop trays is for sure scrap... its really the best overall strategy
Man I wish you could come to the shop I work at. Have been running a laser for about 1.5 years. Using oxygen to cut. Major problem is they keep plate OUTSIDE. It’s driving me crazy constantly changing my settings. Want to pull my hair out of my head
yea i hear ya... its somewhat typical to deal with what your talking about when oxygen cutting.
Is there such a thing as a roller cart welding curtain that is safe in the light spectrum of your laser?
yea they are going to build an enclosure to help with fume extraction eye protection.
“Here is their bendtech dragon, also known as future sidewinder laser”.
haha, yea for sure... but the bendtech software is really hard to beat for tube chassis work, its much easier to use for this purpose than fusion or solid works... so it may be a tough sell on this one...
Hi, sir pls I come your company 🙏🏿🙏🙏🏿🙏🏿