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Anyone made their own laser cut enclosures?
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Jasper C.  
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 More options Oct 6 2012, 2:25 am
From: "Jasper C." <jaspern...@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, 5 Oct 2012 23:25:53 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Sat, Oct 6 2012 2:25 am
Subject: Anyone made their own laser cut enclosures?

As the subject line says, I'm looking at going the laser cut path because I
can't find anything appropriate off the shelf, less-than appropriate is
expensive, and it'd probably work out easier...

I was wondering if anyone here had tried it before and had any tips.  
Ponoko offers the service and has a tutorial on the subject, though their
details on tolerances hasn't been updated since 2008<http://blog.ponoko.com/2008/09/11/how-much-material-does-the-laser-bu...>!  
Looks like what I want to do is Sketchup -> Inkscape via converter ->
Ponoko.

Cheers,
JC


 
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Antti Nissinen  
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 More options Oct 8 2012, 5:53 am
From: Antti Nissinen <antti.nissi...@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 8 Oct 2012 12:52:59 +0300
Local: Mon, Oct 8 2012 5:52 am
Subject: Re: [HackerspaceSG] Anyone made their own laser cut enclosures?

Hi Jasper, I have made a few laser cut enclosures and I still keep doing
it, it's often very good mix of design, electronics and plain handcrafts, I
love it.

I've learned that lasercutting is very similar to 3D printing in a way that
the machines are a bit unique and there are few tips and tricks for all of
them, ponoko's tutorials work well for their cutters and probably for the
rest big expensive machines, but not so much for the 900$ chinese CO2 cutter
(obviously) anyway, there are good basics which should get you going with
all of them.

There's also quite many choices how you want to build your box together and
how it affects your design and the strength of the joints.

*the handcraft style:*
The easiest path I often tend to follow is using acrylic glue, I make my
design using very simple big box joint for the edges. This is a very fast
and good way to get your project done, but it's very easy to get messy with
glue. Acrylic glue is very strong when you let it cure properly. I would
avoid this method with wood (the simple joints), finger joints or a mix of
glue and bolts is better option.

*Finger joints:*
I think the hardest method (and often best looking) is using the finger
joints like this:
http://support.ponoko.com/entries/491205-use-google-sketchup-inkscape...
it's a bit easier with wood using glue, but with acrylic it's very easy to
crack it, if you don't shape your joint's right, I couldn't find the
tutorial for this right now, but basically you should do a little teeth
inside the joints

here's a picture I draw to demonstrate, I don't remember if there should be
a opposite for the teeth as well, but try to find this tutorial if you are
interested about finger joints with acrylic
[image: Inline images 1]

*nut's and bolts:*
I've never done this because I don't like the look, but maybe some day when
I find it handy. It's a good way to join the edges very strong without
glue, it's also a good way to crack your acryl if you don't do the fine
tuning:
http://support.ponoko.com/entries/498833-get-the-best-results-from-in...

http://support.ponoko.com/entries/20344437-laser-cut-project-box-tuto... <-
maybe you've seen this, but here's a good tutorial using sketchup for
modeling, there's also two different techniques used.

Hopefully this helps a bit, or at least to find the right path
--
anacron

On 6 October 2012 09:25, Jasper C. <jaspern...@gmail.com> wrote:

  joints.png
2K Download

 
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ChrisChong  
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 More options Oct 8 2012, 6:19 am
From: ChrisChong <chris.chonghui...@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 8 Oct 2012 03:19:45 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Mon, Oct 8 2012 6:19 am
Subject: Re: [HackerspaceSG] Anyone made their own laser cut enclosures?

Hi Jasper

I've done a few lasercuts in my time as well (plus a lot of fancy joints
thanks to my years in Industrial Design), and Stephan and I are actually
getting one for minor commercial purposes (which should arrive this month).
If you're interested and don't mind the wait, let me know more about your
project and we can arrange to get it done for you - almost definitely
cheaper than Ponoko!

Best regards
Chris


 
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Jasper C.  
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 More options Oct 8 2012, 8:41 am
From: "Jasper C." <jaspern...@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 8 Oct 2012 05:41:48 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Mon, Oct 8 2012 8:41 am
Subject: Re: [HackerspaceSG] Anyone made their own laser cut enclosures?

Hi guys,

I've been looking into it a bit more over the weekend.  Will probably be
going with the nuts and bolts way as I don't need it to look slick and for
this application, strong is good.  Already picked up on the need for
reliefs in internal corners.

How strong is the glue solution?  I know chloroform is supposed to work
fantastic for that, especially since capillary action will draw it into
where it should go.  Trouble is getting some, and it's *really* not
something I want to work with.

Chris,

Thanks for the offer.  I'm looking at crafting a case for my router to
which I can add a fan.  Heat is a problem for these cheap-ish things, and
dust is a problem around my place.  Rather than Dremel out the existing
enclosure I figured I'd put together something that I can slap a intake
filter on.  Not sure what timescales you're working with.  It might take me
a bit of time to get the thing sketched out, but I'd be interested to check
out yours when it arrives.

May also do the same for a PSU box - I seem to have this mad proliferation
of 12V devices.  I've already picked up a nicely efficient AC/DC unit and
the connectors I'll need

Cheers,

JC


 
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Jan Detlefsen  
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 More options Oct 8 2012, 8:50 am
From: Jan Detlefsen <lopsta.ecomme...@googlemail.com>
Date: Mon, 8 Oct 2012 19:50:52 +0700
Local: Mon, Oct 8 2012 8:50 am
Subject: Re: [HackerspaceSG] Anyone made their own laser cut enclosures?

there are some scripts to help you design the interlocking box parts:

https://github.com/poundifdef/SVG-Box-Generator
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:1541
http://www.frag-den-spatz.de/index.php?menue=/boxdesigner/menue.htm&p...
http://boxmaker.rahulbotics.com/

On 8 October 2012 19:41, Jasper C. <jaspern...@gmail.com> wrote:


 
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Antti Nissinen  
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 More options Oct 8 2012, 9:07 am
From: Antti Nissinen <antti.nissi...@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 8 Oct 2012 16:06:42 +0300
Local: Mon, Oct 8 2012 9:06 am
Subject: Re: [HackerspaceSG] Anyone made their own laser cut enclosures?

acrylic glue isn't really glue, it's a solvant and you are basically
welding the acrylic parts together so it can be almost as strong as the
cutted parts itself, there's also acrylic cement which is better for rough
edges, but it really is very very strong bond.

--
anacron

On 8 October 2012 15:41, Jasper C. <jaspern...@gmail.com> wrote:


 
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ChrisChong  
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 More options Oct 8 2012, 9:36 am
From: ChrisChong <chris.chonghui...@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, 8 Oct 2012 06:36:16 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Mon, Oct 8 2012 9:36 am
Subject: Re: [HackerspaceSG] Anyone made their own laser cut enclosures?

Actually, my experience with acrylic glue hasn't been so awesome. Then
again, it really depends on the thickness of the acrylic you're 'gluing'
together. If it's thick, no problem. Otherwise, like any two weak joints
stuck together, it's going to fall apart. You don't need chlorofoam btw,
super glue *is* actually acrylic glue. It does the same thing - melts the
plastics together and has some filler to make it hold. You might have to
sand the edges to (ironically) make it rough first though.

What kind of acrylic thickness are you looking at for the housing? If you
have thick acrylic, want really strong and really don't care abt
aesthetics, then get some angled metal brackets and screw them together.
Remember to use (preferably soft) washers tho - Otherwise you're going to
get cracks around the screw areas..

/Chris


 
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Jasper C.  
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 More options Oct 9 2012, 9:54 am
From: "Jasper C." <jaspern...@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 9 Oct 2012 06:54:08 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Tues, Oct 9 2012 9:54 am
Subject: Re: [HackerspaceSG] Anyone made their own laser cut enclosures?

My experience with glues hasn't been great either.  Of course it could also
have been that the cuts weren't that straight which reduced contact area.  
I'm under the impression there are two types of glue, the solvent kind that
melts both surfaces together, and the cement kind (cyanoacrylate).

I was considering 3 mm thick acrylic, though I'm now thinking about 4 mm
(which Ponoko stocks), just to accommodate M3 nuts and bolts better.  
Strong is relative - I'd like stronger than my prior experience with glues,
but it doesn't need metal reinforcement.  Pretty much "does not fall apart
when held tightly".


 
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ChrisChong  
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 More options Oct 10 2012, 3:24 am
From: ChrisChong <chris.chonghui...@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 10 Oct 2012 00:24:05 -0700 (PDT)
Local: Wed, Oct 10 2012 3:24 am
Subject: Re: [HackerspaceSG] Anyone made their own laser cut enclosures?

Actually, if it's just 'hand tight', a proper laser cut box could snap together with no problems, and would withstand quite some damage. You wouldn't need any glue, and could take it apart after. A 3 or 4mm acrylic would work just fine for that :)

Cheers
Chris


 
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