
I have Saturday "Mark"ed on the calendarAre you going to Mark Saturday?
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...On a serious note, it might be useful for fast prototyping and making templates for eventual cutting out in metal?
Yes I can etch some metal. I'll research (try) brass.Seems very useful for that kind of role! Heck, if your laser can muster enough energy from your laser to lightly 'etch' the surface of brass, then you've got a highly accurate milling guideline for frames etc...

You've no need to be corrected.Happy to be corrected but I believe you have to coat the metal with a special paint, which when lasered will react with the metal to etch it.
Maybe there is a cheaper solution but the stuff listed by HPC is expensive!
http://hpclaser.co.uk/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=2&products_id=41

Thanks for the info - I'd be very interested, I mean really really interestedI understand the paint makes a dark line and without paint, the lines are much lighter.
Happy to be corrected but I believe you have to coat the metal with a special paint, which when lasered will react with the metal to etch it.
Maybe there is a cheaper solution but the stuff listed by HPC is expensive!
http://hpclaser.co.uk/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=2&products_id=41
Yes I can etch some metal. I'll research (try) brass.![]()
...The coating is about £0.60 per square inch.
There may be some truth in what you say but I suspect for a different reason. As Phil says it's all lens and mirrors anyway because the laser light has to get from the tube to the work surface. So I can't see how reflecting it back through the system would start cutting itself. Where I suspect the expensive consequences are is in the control circuitry for the laser. There must be some sort of control system to excite the laser in the first place, if it is a closed loop system and you start feeding back laser light into the laser tube then it might cause the control system to have "palpitations" and if poorly design could end up with "expensive consequences". I would suggest discussing it with HPC first.Take care. My understanding is that the surface of the metal reflects the laser light straight back into the laser mechanism with expensive consequences as it starts cutting itself.