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I've done it recently although in a rather crude way and not likely applicable to T scale. Did a warbonnet and "Santa Fe" lettering on the side of an N scale test shell using Tamiya tape. I lasered the stencil on the model because 1) I was just testing a concept, 2) wanted to do it quickly to see if it was even worth pursuing, 3) the shell was a throw-away 3D print I had done earlier - I have tons of fails laying around for just this type of abuse and 4) "on the model" because I didn't have time to think of a clever way to actually transfer the stencil from point A to the shell without wrecking the whole thing. Results were decent but I'd really like a way to do them independent of the model, then apply later because aligning the shell w/the laser is a giant pain. So my findings are the concept will work, just need to find a way to refine it. Will have to look into frisket film to see if that's the direction I need to go...Cheers -Mike
I've always been curious to try this for masking DPM windows.
Couldn't you cut it with one of those Cricut machines?
I've done it recently although in a rather crude way and not likely applicable to T scale. .. So my findings are the concept will work, just need to find a way to refine it. Will have to look into frisket film to see if that's the direction I need to go...
On a side note, one wonders how powerful a laser would need to be to cut through .015mm brass sheet.... probably pretty powerful (expensive) --but this would make a nice alternative to chemical etching..
I think the frisket is definitely the way to go, then just apply the masking. I'm curious if you can post a close-up photo of the edges on a piece of paper or Tamiya tape--how "crisp" of a cut does the laser make? That's the critical factor for me. There's one out there (brand name "Wainlux" that claims .05 mm accuracy but it still only uses JPG or PNG bitmap files for input so this will inherently have "fuzzy" edges. The Cricut looks interesting, although the proprietary software and web-enabled interface again makes me go ..eh maybe not.Hummm maybe I can 3D print a thin layer of a flexible/rubbery resin material on a carrier attached to the build plate.. (although slicer files are also also layers of bitmaps)..