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Robert Ray used his laser to cut what looks like brass. I think what he did was just trace over the same pass again and again until it cut all the way through. The results looked a little bit crispy so I doubt it was ideal. Sorry it is a "short" https://www.youtube.com/shorts/3MV3dBSsq4M
I think it is .004" thick Phosphor Bronze using a Chinese Fiber Laser.https://www.trainboard.com/highball/index.php?threads/z-scale-np-style-crossbucks.144961/
This spring I bought a 50W fiber laser to see what I could do with it. I know, you guys think that it's crazy to waste that much hobby money that could be better used buying all kinds of great models "THAT OTHER PEOPLE MADE BECAUSE THEY WANTED THEM", but I model Z.
Not crazy at all... Cutting 0.004" thick Phosphor Bronze with 50W is pretty crazy though! What machine did you buy Ray? I'd be interested in something like that!What are you using for a feed rate? I assume you're using compressed air for a cutting gas? Or are you using O2? I still can't get over that you can cut a copper alloy with 50W! But a Fiber Laser is it a bit different than a Disk or CO2 laser. I'm currently in the beginning stages of testing a 6kW fiber laser here at work. The laser kerf/spot size is quite a bit smaller than the disk lasers we usually use.Jeff
So the fiber laser is a Chinese JPT 50W. It don't have a nozzle and air assist gas because it is a galvo laser instead of a plotter laser. It takes about 7-15 passes at 250 speed. I don't know what that unit of measure is, maybe mm/sec. It is pretty fast. The video Chris linked shows me cutting the .004"Phosphor Bronze in a few seconds. It was cutting out 25 stop sign heads in that video. The kerf is about 45 microns wide with the 175mm lens I have, but I can concentrate it to 20 microns if I use a 70mm field lens.I have cut .030" half hard 260 brass sheet, but it takes about 600-700 passes. I was making a steam tender underframe, and it takes about 2 minutes to cut one out.Surprisingly Copper based metals cut much better than Iron based because it expands from heat less. I can cut stainless steel sheet but it expands and warps really fast. Aluminum engraves and cuts well too, but I have little use for it so far. I have not tried making PC boards yet, but I know I can do it.
Modeling Z means either you are at the mercy of Southern Pacific modelers, "AZL" or you learn to make all your own models.
You say Chinese, but the price tag sure looks American Interesting that they look like a milling machine. What does that vertical arm adjustment do?
I was thinking of ways to do an SP bloody nose or other masking jobs in T scale (bloody small, if you pardon the pun) and thought about all the custom-made masks available to aircraft modelers.