Wesley -- a tip for engraving on your laser -- while air assist is a must for cutting, it tends to hurt engraving quality by blowing the soot right into the engraving. If you have an air valve on your air assist line, turn the air down to ALMOST off when engraving. You still want the slightest amount of air coming out, but just enough to prevent smoke and soot from backing up into the nozzle and dirtying your lens. A good way of testing is to take a small, shallow container (like one of those plastic things you put ketchup in at a fast food restaurant to go) and put some water in it. Turn your air valve all the way off. Place the tip of the nozzle just below the surface and slowly open the valve until just you see some bubbles in the water. A better way to go is an automated sir system that will give you full air flow when cutting and the reduced flow when engraving. LightBurn and RDWorks both have a switch in the layer settings to control the air (the "Air" switch in LB, the "Blowing" switch in RDWorks) which will control an electric air valve. The best option for automating this is Ultimate Air Assist (search that term in Amazon). It gives you all the parts needed to add this to any Ruida controlled laser (your laser has a Ruida controller).
One of the great things about the Thunder Laser machines is they have this built in. There's a high and a low air setting, with adjustable knobs for each. 👍 tinyurl.com/35ha9n28
Absolut großartig. Die Patentbilder sehen richtig gut aus!!! Sowas würde ich mir auch an die Wand hängen, wunderschön. Tolles Video. Die Tests die du gemacht hast sahen sehr spannend aus!
Well now I want to laser etch some patents and also find some cool raygun patents and make prop guns from them. Thanks for adding to my ever growing list of projects Mr.Treat, Jeez.
That toy robot costume is VERY similar to the first Halloween costume I can remember wearing! My dad and I built a costume like that out of cardboard boxes and dryer vent line for the arms and legs. We put a bunch of Christmas lights poking out through the box, and I could turn different strands on and off with light switches inside the main body. We named it the EvaNIAC because I'm Evan and the first digital computer was the ENIAC. Definitely kicked off my life long love of nerd puns with that one!
Suggestion: Apply 3 or 4 coats to the substrata, layering various colors like red, green, blue and black, and use the laser power and speed settings to pare away the layers creating vivid color renditions like an old comic book 4 color image. There would be color blending on the edges... but, I think it could make some interesting art.
In this process the laser is ablative and any paint layers would be absurdly thin. For very thin layers like you want it requires a process where maybe he would laser cuz extremely thin sheets of colored plastic and then press and bake them onto a substrate, or just glue them. Or start with thicker layers and use a cnc machine. The first method would be at least able to combine colors naturally as light passes through them.
Thanks for the video. Just found your show. Thumbs up and instant subscribe. Wish I had a workshop like yours. I have been trying to work out of a public Maker Space. The last time I went down there, the guy before me set the laser on fire and torched the lense. I tried to move to the table saw, but someone had triggered the saw-stop and that was out-of-order. I tried to spray paint some metal for testing in the laser, but the Fire Marshal forbids spray paint in the building. I was ready to give up and go home..... but I said.... well... at least I can sand down some boards for laser etching later. I had some small pencil marks to sand off, easy. I flipped them over and sanded the back and when I flipped them over.... the dried blobs of glue on the table gouged the surface of the boards so bad they were unusable.
This was great, the tip for searching patents will come in useful. I do 3d modeling and always wanted to bring back some old toys as 3d prints. Other patents you may want to look into is the 1989 batmobile and batwing are in there
Great idea. Looks like I'm modelling a replica 1950s Smoke Ring Gun. I wonder if the smoke ring mechanism could be recreated with a vape pen or similar device?
Amazing work. The blue paint definitely has a nice blueprint type look to it. Not familiar with the process but wondering if anodizing would be easier than the paint?
That was my thought as soon as I saw the thumbnail. You can get a gorgeous deep metallic blue annodizing on aluminium, and it the laser will burn it away crisply, the results would be stunning.
Anodizing requires dunking the sheet in an alkaline solution to degrease it, dunking it in acid to remove oxides, putting it in an electrolyte bath and applying electricity, boiling in a dye solution, then boiling in water to seal it. So it's a lot more involved process than painting. However, the finish is also a lot more durable. So, depending on what you're going to do with it anodizing might be warranted.
Thank you for this! I was able to replicate this successfully with a 10w laser in 3 passes at 20mm with 100% laser (.5mm height)! It OBVIOUSLY takes forever, but looks gorgeous!
Harvey, of course you need a laser. It's the most fun rabbit hole you'll ever go down. I started with a 5 watt blue diode laser about 4 years ago and upgraded to a 10 watt. Then last year it was up to bigger and better...a 50 watt fiber laser and just last week a Cloudray CR7050 55 watt CO2 laser. ( I tell the wife I use my cigarette money to buy them. I never have smoked). She is actually happy I have this hobby because I make a lot of personalized things for her to give away.
Yep, it's used a lot in the sign industry. I'm looking into it for production. Some paints etch better than others, as I've found, so I've got to test it first. 👍
Love the blue one, looks like an actual blueprint. Wish I could find the original blueprints from 1930 I had for a Java Lake housing development in New York, if I find them then I'll definitely be framing them.
Wes, you might try painting first with a layer of hard epoxy paint in one color followed by a thin layer of a softer paint. I've done this and the result was spectacular. Try a metallic base. Follow up with a coat of clear to make the show-through layer pop!
What a great project! Liked the guns but the robots are more my style. The boxy robot was my favorite. Don't know if there is a copyright but the original Lost in Space robot would be fabulous. Thanks for the great videos! 8-)
Great video! Hope you see this because I was wondering where you got the pedestals you mounted the acrylic sheet on. I don't even know what they are called.
I love your spray glue masking idea with cardboard. The one downside of spray glue is that crap goes everywhere lol. Especially i think it’s super 76 that comes out all stringy. We used it in art class and it was messy af.
Thanks, that would be a great way to use up offcuts etc. About the only thing I dont have is a laser, this application is perfect for that as the printing time would be a hassle. The design looks solid, better than a cone or the like as there is enough area to be able to only use one if the part you want to seperate is small enough.
@@dennisantolovic7169 Yeah, I use them when I'm painting small acrylic letters for signage, so paint doesn't pool around the bottom and the letters don't stick to the surface.
When you have a laser cutter, _everything_ needs to be cut with lasers. (Looks at laser cut tshirt box, laser cut case for retro computer, laser cut charging station) Definitely
Just noticed that the back part of your sled for your table saw kinda has a quarter of your logo cut into the back from the saw going at certain angles... Wonder if it would work with half your logo?
These are amazing!!! I also had no idea patents had their own sdction of google. I wonder if you messed around with the settings enough could you do something similar on acrylic and shine an LED strip light through the side to make the patent glow?
It would be really neat to have that rifle one you mentioned in the video as a larger piece, maybe the width of 2 or 3 of these smaller ones, so that you can arrange them on the wall as a set!
Thanks! They're common in the sign industry. Just search for sign standoffs of standoff screws. You can find some on Amazon, or if you need something specific: mbs-standoffs.com/.
I have done this kind of laser etching on canvas that is painted white and then black on top of that. It's really difficult to get consistent results due to inconsistencies in the painting process. I would love to find some pre-painted aluminum sheets like the ones that you used. Can you tell me where you located yours?
Seeing you with your new laser reminded me of the phrase that "men don't grow up, we just buy more expensive toys"
This is a great project! It's comforting to know that I'm not the only one to spend hours nerding out on the Google patents search.
Old military hardware patents might look cool too.
The large robotic arm panel is beautiful. Wish i had more money. Fingers crossed for a lottery win.
Wesley -- a tip for engraving on your laser -- while air assist is a must for cutting, it tends to hurt engraving quality by blowing the soot right into the engraving. If you have an air valve on your air assist line, turn the air down to ALMOST off when engraving. You still want the slightest amount of air coming out, but just enough to prevent smoke and soot from backing up into the nozzle and dirtying your lens. A good way of testing is to take a small, shallow container (like one of those plastic things you put ketchup in at a fast food restaurant to go) and put some water in it. Turn your air valve all the way off. Place the tip of the nozzle just below the surface and slowly open the valve until just you see some bubbles in the water. A better way to go is an automated sir system that will give you full air flow when cutting and the reduced flow when engraving. LightBurn and RDWorks both have a switch in the layer settings to control the air (the "Air" switch in LB, the "Blowing" switch in RDWorks) which will control an electric air valve. The best option for automating this is Ultimate Air Assist (search that term in Amazon). It gives you all the parts needed to add this to any Ruida controlled laser (your laser has a Ruida controller).
One of the great things about the Thunder Laser machines is they have this built in. There's a high and a low air setting, with adjustable knobs for each. 👍
tinyurl.com/35ha9n28
@@WesleyTreat I have the same problem with Lucite cutting/engraving. Lower IS sometimes better.
Absolut großartig. Die Patentbilder sehen richtig gut aus!!! Sowas würde ich mir auch an die Wand hängen, wunderschön. Tolles Video. Die Tests die du gemacht hast sahen sehr spannend aus!
Those are fantastic laser etched, ray guns 🔫 they look amazing 👍
This may be your funniest video yet, and I don’t say that lightly!
My next video is just me watching old social hygiene films.
I only own a little K40 but this video gave me a plethora of ideas to implement the machine in new ways. Thank you very much.
Your channel is like combining Adam Savage and Matthais Wandel.
LOVE IT!
You've been on binge mode for a while now. Thanks
The blue arm/gun gives it a blueprint look. Excellent!
New toys are always fun and cool especially when they're the workshop kind
Wonderful. Engrossing. Mesmerizing. Fascinating. I think I'm in love with your nerd brain.
In the 22 years I've had my laser, I've not made anything this cool.
just discovered this channel and already infatuated with this mans content
Well now I want to laser etch some patents and also find some cool raygun patents and make prop guns from them. Thanks for adding to my ever growing list of projects Mr.Treat, Jeez.
Yeah, I'm tempted to model up a couple of these now, too.
@@WesleyTreat Sounds like the makings of a good old fashion ray gun duel ;) or maybe just a prop challenge. If we lived closer we could also duel.
Just Brilliant! Thanks for sharing both a great product, as well as inspiration!
Please make your video's longer or make more of them. I love them and your humor!
Great project.
I do like the blue since originally drawings were blue prints before we switched to blue line prints.
That toy robot costume is VERY similar to the first Halloween costume I can remember wearing! My dad and I built a costume like that out of cardboard boxes and dryer vent line for the arms and legs. We put a bunch of Christmas lights poking out through the box, and I could turn different strands on and off with light switches inside the main body. We named it the EvaNIAC because I'm Evan and the first digital computer was the ENIAC. Definitely kicked off my life long love of nerd puns with that one!
I gotta say making ray guns with a laser is pretty meta.
Great job Wesley! I’ve got to try this on my laser
It looks so great 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉❤❤❤❤❤i love it so much
That's a really nice idea.
Really enjoy you recording your process and procedures. Entertaining and inspiring.
I would 100% watch a smoke ring gun build.
Suggestion: Apply 3 or 4 coats to the substrata, layering various colors like red, green, blue and black, and use the laser power and speed settings to pare away the layers creating vivid color renditions like an old comic book 4 color image. There would be color blending on the edges... but, I think it could make some interesting art.
Tried that once on canvas with 2 colors and did non work out well, maybe because the color layers were too thin. Maybe I’ll try it again
In this process the laser is ablative and any paint layers would be absurdly thin. For very thin layers like you want it requires a process where maybe he would laser cuz extremely thin sheets of colored plastic and then press and bake them onto a substrate, or just glue them.
Or start with thicker layers and use a cnc machine.
The first method would be at least able to combine colors naturally as light passes through them.
You should try etching them straight into the acrylic and side light them.
TAKE MY MONEY!
Thanks for the video!
Have a great week!
these are awesome! they look so great, the testing was so worth it. the piece up for auction is SO cool.
They look great,
Excellent idea! I’m glad you kept the idea going for so long!
Wesley, these are incredible! They certainly tickle my Sci-Fi nerd gene!
Ok, I think this is the coolest thing I've seen all week! Thanks for the video!
Thanks for the video. Just found your show. Thumbs up and instant subscribe. Wish I had a workshop like yours. I have been trying to work out of a public Maker Space. The last time I went down there, the guy before me set the laser on fire and torched the lense. I tried to move to the table saw, but someone had triggered the saw-stop and that was out-of-order. I tried to spray paint some metal for testing in the laser, but the Fire Marshal forbids spray paint in the building. I was ready to give up and go home..... but I said.... well... at least I can sand down some boards for laser etching later. I had some small pencil marks to sand off, easy. I flipped them over and sanded the back and when I flipped them over.... the dried blobs of glue on the table gouged the surface of the boards so bad they were unusable.
Just keeps getting better 👍😎👍
This was great, the tip for searching patents will come in useful. I do 3d modeling and always wanted to bring back some old toys as 3d prints.
Other patents you may want to look into is the 1989 batmobile and batwing are in there
Great idea. Looks like I'm modelling a replica 1950s Smoke Ring Gun. I wonder if the smoke ring mechanism could be recreated with a vape pen or similar device?
Great video and a very interesting story.
I said out loud Romulan disruptor and Klingon disruptor as soon as I saw them and LOLed when you mentioned it too.
You never fail to inspire!
Sweet. My inner nerdy geek has been satisfied.
Amazing work. The blue paint definitely has a nice blueprint type look to it. Not familiar with the process but wondering if anodizing would be easier than the paint?
That was my thought as soon as I saw the thumbnail. You can get a gorgeous deep metallic blue annodizing on aluminium, and it the laser will burn it away crisply, the results would be stunning.
Anodizing requires dunking the sheet in an alkaline solution to degrease it, dunking it in acid to remove oxides, putting it in an electrolyte bath and applying electricity, boiling in a dye solution, then boiling in water to seal it. So it's a lot more involved process than painting. However, the finish is also a lot more durable. So, depending on what you're going to do with it anodizing might be warranted.
These are so freaking cool! This is totally my vibe. Now to decide which one I want to get... Thanks for sharing!
Buy the largest and most powerful you can afford. You'll grow into a great one and out of a starter very quickly.
They said it's a CHILDREN'S toy. They never specified what AGE children it was for...
Those are seriously cool
Thank you for this! I was able to replicate this successfully with a 10w laser in 3 passes at 20mm with 100% laser (.5mm height)! It OBVIOUSLY takes forever, but looks gorgeous!
That arm looks very similar to the B-9 Robot from the old Lost in Space show. All the stuff looks awesome.
Those are awesome. I love the retro ray guns.
about time you start building this for the upcoming Halloween
Holy shit that blue blueprint is amazing.
I need to repair my laser, i'm definitely stealing the idea to make for my empty wall.
Never thought I needed a laser cutter... until now😂 awesome execution as always
Harvey, of course you need a laser. It's the most fun rabbit hole you'll ever go down. I started with a 5 watt blue diode laser about 4 years ago and upgraded to a 10 watt. Then last year it was up to bigger and better...a 50 watt fiber laser and just last week a Cloudray CR7050 55 watt CO2 laser. ( I tell the wife I use my cigarette money to buy them. I never have smoked). She is actually happy I have this hobby because I make a lot of personalized things for her to give away.
Oh my gosh! So cool!
Those are awesome!
Very cool!
Thanks! And the Gleam makes those Baltic birch edges look real nice.
Once again, amazing stuff. Love your channel
"10 years ago was 1990" Indeed
I remember the Wham-O Air Blaster gun... it was in the list of patents. sold in 1963
No laser for me, but I might use some bad screen printing tech to emulate this! Really amazing work, as always.
Thanks! Yeah, give it a go!
Way cool project. Good job.
Very cool thank you for sharing new follower keep up the awesome work
There are several companies that sell pre-enameled aluminum sheet material for laser etching with consistent thickness and quality.
Yep, it's used a lot in the sign industry. I'm looking into it for production. Some paints etch better than others, as I've found, so I've got to test it first. 👍
Just ordered mine. Can't wait.
So is the end product better than the old "burning plates" method of making metal etched printing plates?
What a GREAT tool that laser thing is!
Oh and I thought you were going the route of etching them but these are awesome as is.
Hoping Thunder Laser gives me a fiber laser at some point, then I can etch metal, too. 👍
Love the blue one, looks like an actual blueprint. Wish I could find the original blueprints from 1930 I had for a Java Lake housing development in New York, if I find them then I'll definitely be framing them.
Dammit Wesley, you’ve sent me down a rabbit hole there 😀
Can you do a whole video on the illustrator part? Fascinating!
Just came across this channel, did the pillar drill auto reverse as the feed changed. I want one. Great choice of art.
8:11 imagine that you're swimming in the sea enjoying yourself and then you see a SHARK FIN COMING CLOSER BUT IT HAS A GIANT SPINNING SAW BLADE
Soooo great! What the he’ll are the metal off-set thingies called that you install to hold up the acrylic?!? HOW COOL!!!! 🔥
Thanks! They're called standoffs.
Wesley Treat, patent thief extraordinaire 🔫
Уэстли, я всегда с нетерпением жду твоих видео. Выпускай их почаще.
0:35 - I understood that reference. 😎
They came out so awesome. You should do teslas patent drawings
I like the images, but this also looks like an excellent way to produce control panels.
Wes, you might try painting first with a layer of hard epoxy paint in one color followed by a thin layer of a softer paint. I've done this and the result was spectacular. Try a metallic base.
Follow up with a coat of clear to make the show-through layer pop!
May be do some pistols? Beretta 92fs, Colt 1911, Luger 9mm or even some revolvers. Smith and Wesson 686, Ruger Vaquero, etc.
What a great project! Liked the guns but the robots are more my style. The boxy robot was my favorite. Don't know if there is a copyright but the original Lost in Space robot would be fabulous. Thanks for the great videos! 8-)
I do the same basic thing on glass. Paint the back and etch that with the reverse image.
Great idea!
2:52 That is the robot from Rocky IV ... isn't it? It looks identical!
ruclips.net/video/cku6oPGWW7Q/видео.html it has to be.
Patented by Maris Ambats, the same person who patented "mood-rings" in 1975 🤣
Have tried the diamond drag bit...
Delicious!
Great video! Hope you see this because I was wondering where you got the pedestals you mounted the acrylic sheet on. I don't even know what they are called.
I love your spray glue masking idea with cardboard. The one downside of spray glue is that crap goes everywhere lol. Especially i think it’s super 76 that comes out all stringy. We used it in art class and it was messy af.
Years ago I worked with glass block wondered it this could work on etching glass blocks?
Depends on the type of glass, but yes, you can certainly etch glass with one of these machines
Amazing!, at 8:28 you have some nifty part separators. They look printed, did you design them?
Thanks! Yeah, I laser cut them from acrylic. They're great for painting. I was thinking of selling them.
Thanks, that would be a great way to use up offcuts etc. About the only thing I dont have is a laser, this application is perfect for that as the printing time would be a hassle. The design looks solid, better than a cone or the like as there is enough area to be able to only use one if the part you want to seperate is small enough.
@@dennisantolovic7169 Yeah, I use them when I'm painting small acrylic letters for signage, so paint doesn't pool around the bottom and the letters don't stick to the surface.
When you have a laser cutter, _everything_ needs to be cut with lasers. (Looks at laser cut tshirt box, laser cut case for retro computer, laser cut charging station)
Definitely
The blue one is screaming out for an ACME made Wile E Coyote device.
Awesom.... Lasers....
BRAVO!!! 🎉
Just noticed that the back part of your sled for your table saw kinda has a quarter of your logo cut into the back from the saw going at certain angles... Wonder if it would work with half your logo?
I did something like that with the sled I made for my contractor saw, but I gave that to my brother.
I was thinking the same thing for the sled!
Also hello! ^-^/ Fancy seeing you on this side of the interwebs! 😅
These are amazing!!! I also had no idea patents had their own sdction of google. I wonder if you messed around with the settings enough could you do something similar on acrylic and shine an LED strip light through the side to make the patent glow?
Yep, there are edge-lit standoffs just for that sort of thing: amzn.to/3X2zpVd
@@WesleyTreat your the Hero we need!
3:37 may have been the inspiration for the "money for nothing" video by Dire Straits
Can't believe I didn't think of that.
Where can I find those metal standoffs for mounting the acrylic panel?
It would be really neat to have that rifle one you mentioned in the video as a larger piece, maybe the width of 2 or 3 of these smaller ones, so that you can arrange them on the wall as a set!
It's on the to-do list!
What paintvdo you recommend using?
Wow! You can make some real nice Gonk parts with that laser. LOL ;D #TeamGonk
Entertaining as always. What are those threaded studs that you’re using for the acrylic called? I have a project that I might be able to use those on.
Thanks! They're common in the sign industry. Just search for sign standoffs of standoff screws. You can find some on Amazon, or if you need something specific: mbs-standoffs.com/.
@@WesleyTreat Many thanks sir!
What is the black spray? Or did I just miss that? Is it just black spray primer or something more unusual for lasering?
I have done this kind of laser etching on canvas that is painted white and then black on top of that. It's really difficult to get consistent results due to inconsistencies in the painting process. I would love to find some pre-painted aluminum sheets like the ones that you used. Can you tell me where you located yours?
What are the standoffs being used for holding the glass?
They're just called standoffs. They're used a lot in the sign industry. You can find them on Amazon, or search for MBS's website for more options.