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Thread: Anyone make their own laser pin table?

  1. #1

    Anyone make their own laser pin table?

    Just wondering if anyone has made their own laser pin table to hold things up off the table while vector cutting so that that don't get any splash back? If so, what did you use and how did you go about making it?
    Keith Upton
    Aerodrome Accessories
    Epilog Mini 24 - 60w

  2. #2
    Hello,

    Take a look to this thread.
    Fred (France) with an Universal 50W

  3. #3
    Thanks Fred, I'll give that a read. I used the site search and a site specific search on Google and that thread did not turn up... weird.
    Keith Upton
    Aerodrome Accessories
    Epilog Mini 24 - 60w

  4. #4
    I used 1/4" aluminum plate and 1/8" pop rivets for mine. super-glued the rivets to the popper(?) and ground them all to the same length, about 1 1/4" long.
    Dave

  5. #5
    Thanks Dave. What do you typically cut on that table and do you get any flashback from the aluminum base as that distance?
    Keith Upton
    Aerodrome Accessories
    Epilog Mini 24 - 60w

  6. #6
    pinbed2.JPG

    DSCF1011.JPG

    I used to make them

    On the base Keith, sandblast or sandpaper the surface to prevent back scatter.

    cheers

    Dave
    You did what !

  7. #7
    That looks really interesting Dave, did you machine those pins your self?

    I will mainly be doing production runs of the same products over and over out of 1/8 clear acrylic, so I was thinking about making some fixed layout pin tables. Since the size and shape will not change, I'm think I could make some cheap ones out of 3/4 MDF with a thin aluminum or steel sheet on top (to protect it) and those wooden furniture dowels. The parts are large enough that the 1/4 dowels will not be an issue and since I can place them in a single spot and leave them forever, being made of wood is not an issue. I've read a couple of times here that the base warping could be an issue with consent reheating, but I never actually found a post where someone experienced this in practice. Plus, I think the metal sheet would guard against this?


    Am I missing anything in my thought process?
    Keith Upton
    Aerodrome Accessories
    Epilog Mini 24 - 60w

  8. #8
    Join Date
    May 2013
    Location
    Twin Cities, Minnesota
    Posts
    243
    That's a really cool table Dave!

  9. #9
    Thanks guys, the pins took about 9 months to develop as they had to prevent backscatter even when the beam struck them direct. I used to make them for sale but having to deal with big cutting orders every day I stopped doing the tables after about a year. (I have a couple of bar fed cnc's)

    I'd go with a 6mm to 10mm thick aluminium plate Keith, that will move the heat away from the cutting point very quickly, one of the easiest pins will be an upturned golf tee, stick it down with hot glue and even if the beam strikes it you won't get any backscatter (just make sure the pins aren't PVC)

    Make sure you sandblast or sand the top surface to eliminate any backscatter.

    cheers

    Dave
    You did what !

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Sep 2010
    Location
    Finger Lakes NY
    Posts
    72
    I made a vector cutting table from hex comb honey comb aluminum. The aluminum is a little thicker than aluminum foil, and it has a fence along the right side and back so I can push material in the corner just like a regular flat table. If anybody wants to see it I will post pictures.

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Oct 2013
    Location
    Seattle, WA
    Posts
    1,664
    Blog Entries
    1
    Would love to see your approach Ernest! Thanks!

    And thanks for sharing that design Mr Sheldrake!!

    Dave
    900x600 80watt EFR Tube laser from Liaocheng Ray Fine Tech LTD. Also a 900x600 2.5kw spindle CNC from Ray Fine. And my main tool, a well used and loved Jet 1642 Woodlathe with an outboard toolrest that helps me work from 36 inch diameters down to reallllllly tiny stuff.

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Location
    Glen Burnie, MD
    Posts
    74
    I've used wooden goft tees inverted and glued to 1/8 plywood. Since the tees are wood, no problem with laser hitting. Use pegboard and feed them through in the pattern you like. Apply glue to the tops of the tees and place a piece of thin plywood on top. Once the glue dries you can remove the pegboard and you have a custom pin table.
    Scott Woodson
    EPILOG 45 Watt Mini
    CorelSuite X5, Photograv 3.0, BoxIT Suite
    WoodWrite mini lathe, Shopsmith Mark V (1980), Hegner 18" scrollsaw
    Ricoh GXe 7700N sublimation printer
    DC16 Digital Combo Heat Press
    CAMEO Silhouette 12" vinyl cutter

  13. #13
    I don't do all that much cutting, but when I need a "pin table", I have a shotglass-sized tupperware cup full of 10/32 sized SS lockwashers. I just pour a bunch out, take about 1 or 2 minutes to space them out for what I need, and they work great. The way they're cut only a tiny bit of the raised split touches what it's holding up, and since a whole lot aren't really needed, it's rare that the laser ever hits one anyway. The rise at the split measures .075", which is enough space to keep the bottom of what I'm cutting clean, but low enough that it doesn't render my 1/8" thick ruler-stops useless.

    !DSC02841.JPG
    Last edited by Kev Williams; 01-29-2014 at 9:22 PM.
    ========================================
    ELEVEN - rotary cutter tool machines
    FOUR - CO2 lasers
    THREE- make that FOUR now - fiber lasers
    ONE - vinyl cutter
    CASmate, Corel, Gravostyle


  14. #14
    Hi Keith,
    Did some cutting on 1/4" poplar today, there's no flashback on the underside.
    Dave

  15. #15
    Join Date
    May 2012
    Location
    Wirrina Cove, South Australia
    Posts
    34
    I used an pre-made air con ducting grille which are usually square or honeycomb grid and relatively inexpensive.
    Redsail X700 Laser, Creation P-Cut Vinyl Cutter, CNC Mill

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