I *REALLY* find it hard to believe that storing the tube without using it
degrades it any faster than using it over the same period of time...or
that a degraded tube would cause arcing...or that your tube has
degraded....or that arcing could have killed your tube. None of those
things fit with my experience with RECI tubes - or with what I've seen
from other Lasersaur owners with the same tubes - or with my general
understanding of the underlying mechanisms of tube degradation.
As I understand it, the mechanism behind tube degradation is that the CO2
inside the laser needs to be really pure - and if it's not, you get a loss
of power. The cheap chinese laser tubes are pre-filled with pure CO2 and
sealed in the factory. But since the seal isn't 100% perfect and perhaps
some of the components inside do a bit of out-gassing, the tube gradually
degrades over time...in part because of age - and in part because of
usage.
I don't see how running it versus leaving it on the shelf would DECREASE
the amount of pollution of the CO2?!? That makes no sense.
I *do* see that running it causes it to gradually lose power, because I've
done just that over several tubes. Our home business has two lasersaurs
and they both run for 2,000 to 3,000 hours per year - we've been in
business since 2012...so I've seen a LOT of laser tubes. We keep spares
on hand and some of those sat on the shelf for a year or two before we
started using them. I have tubes that I've owned for around 3 years now -
and they're still working perfectly.
And what happens is *precisely* what RECI say will happen. The more you
run it at full power, the shorter it's life will be. It says that right
there in the manual! They claim you'll get 10,000 hours out of a tube -
but that's assuming that you're mostly running them at low power. When
you hammer them at full power most of the time, they start to degrade at
about 2,000 hours and they're pretty much down to half of their original
power after maybe 3,000 hours of heavy useage. You can see a brownish
tinge around the electrodes as they age from heavy use. Tubes that have
been in storage for a year look as clear and clean as the day they were
delivered.
Given all of that - I could certainly understand that tubes would degrade
slowly in storage and FASTER in active use - but the other way around
makes no sense.
I also don't see how polluted CO2 could cause the arcing...I've had
several tubes gradually "wear out" from a few thousand hours of use - and
the power output just slowly degrades without the tube ever "dying". I've
certainly never seen any arcing due to a severely worn out tube.
On the other hand, we've had multiple people on this mailing list who
reporting seeing arcing - and in every case, they'd either not connected
the wires up right, had small nicks in the insulation - or (in at least
two cases) they'd left off the acrylic end-cap on the laser tube thinking
it was just some unimportant packaging piece(!). Don't take my word for
it - look back through our archives.
I don't recall the final outcome in those cases - but I don't *think* that
arcing damaged the laser tube. I don't see how it could really...I mean
how does the tube "know" that arcing is going on? All it sees is power
supply variations - and that's what it's designed to do while you're
cutting.
Plus, your "aging" hypothesis doesn't hang with the fact that the laser
DID fire when you used the test button on the power supply a couple of
days ago...if it was working just a few days ago - then what is the
mechanism for it suddenly not working AT ALL today? Even worn-out tubes
with polluted CO2 will fire at the 100% setting - they'll just produce
maybe 50 watts instead of 100 to 120 watts.
What you're saying here just doesn't in any way tie up with what I've seen
in years of working with Lasersaur - or in the thousands of messages from
other lasersaur owners that I've read.
I don't know where you're getting your information - but it certainly
doesn't fit with anything I've seen over about 15,000 hours of laser
cutting with these exact laser tubes! I *could* be wrong about this - I
learn new stuff here all the time - but if this is true then it's entirely
new information that I've never seen anywhere before.
That's why I'm so deeply skeptical at this point!
In your situation - I truly wouldn't spend another $1000 on a new tube
until I was very *VERY* certain that it isn't something else.
My bet is still on wiring or power supply issues. If you have one of the
older power supplies - then I suggest you use that one...at least until we
figure out what all of your problems are.
> 1. On the web interface, a tab/page that indicates the state of all
> limit switches, the chiller etc. A simple open/closed or yes/no would
> aid
> in diagnostics vs plugging and unplugging various limit switches with
> the
> limit patch cable.
> 2. A beam combiner/laser indicator as part of the build.
> 3. Moving the electronics to the side vs the back of the machine -
> effectively separating the laser and its power supply from the control
> circuity. Perhaps an electrical control box that attaches to the
> side.
> 4. A hinged/door back section to extract the laser from the top vs
> bringing it in from the side.
> 5. Optional framing bom/design for legs to make the entire system
> standalone vs needing to build a table for it.
> 6. Air flow venting as part of the base design.
> 7. Photos of the various parts to go along with the 3D representation
>>
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/lasersaur/76a3c160e02e14a303e2c255c36f6bca.squirrel%40webmail.sjbaker.org
>
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/lasersaur/CANY9GwoAE1tHM-58wRT0urq%2BH8K%3DvusX4Y9c%2BJR%3DGCCAvkDDYA%40mail.gmail.com.