If you want an /easy/ way to do this, just buy something like a Roland DXY type plotter off ebay. I bought two, a roland DXY880 and another a roland dxy1280 I think. Both do at 11x17 or bigger I think. Anyway, I was planning on using these as a gantry for another project but it's pretty flismy. The construction is cheap cheap plastic. The drive mechanism is two wire piano wires hooked up to a stepper motor. The nice thing about these things is there is a pen solenoid inside that is 12V. In the best case, you only need to desolder the solenoid and solder the laser power leads from the driver onto the board. In the worst case, there's a 5V ttl signal that goes on whenever the pen down function is activated which can be used to drive a mosfet or other MCU+mosfet. The Roland DXY even has a modern print driver. Just print from any application, say Eagle PCB or Altium. No additional software needed. Would make a cheap laser cutter/stencil maker if the laser is powerful enough. You could probably swap a far infrared laser diode for cutting organics (far infrared seems to absorb into clear plastic very well from my CO2 laser experience) like mylar or kapton film to make stencils also. Since I have two that are sitting in my garage, I'd sell them for whatever I paid for them which was somewhere between $80-150 (need to check my receipt). Excellent condition and works great. I can just use my CO2 laser gantry which I designed a controller for and also already rasterscan engraves so no need for me. Too many projects too little time. Henry On Sat, Nov 14, 2009 at 5:39 AM, Russell Shaw <rjshaw@...>wrote: > > > Adam Seychell wrote: > > Volkan Sahin wrote: > >> > >> > >> Good idea. How to make reliable electrical power and video connection > >> to the laser? > >> > > > > Ok, maybe not such a good idea. Are laser scanners assemblies expensive ? > > > > Some searching revels: > > > > > http://industrial.panasonic.com/www-cgi/jvcr13pz.cgi?E+MT+2+AHA1002+0+4+WW > > http://pdf1.alldatasheet.com/datasheet-pdf/view/40569/SANYO/LB1872.html > > http://projects.uniprecision.com/sc_upload/images/C060_DATASHEET_RAW.pdf > > > > > > Still, cannot find a supplier of these "laser mirror scanner motors". > > This looks like the way to go. > > You can drive the motor in any laser printer scanner head. It's only a > problem > getting motors if you want to build your own head and optics. > > You could pull apart an old hard-disk and mount a mirror on the platter. > Drive the 3-phase motor yourself. At 30k rpm, you'll need to be very good > at balancing/centralizing the mirror, and have it *firmly* stuck down or > it might launch off in to outer space. > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] Making PCB using these new 405nm LASER Diodes
2009-11-14 by Henry Liu
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