• I want to thank all the members that have upgraded your accounts. I truly appreciate your support of the site monetarily. Supporting the site keeps this site up and running as a lot of work daily goes on behind the scenes. Click to Support Signs101 ...

Beveling effect on 1/2" black acrylic

GraphicsSource

New Member
Hi,

I've been having trouble cutting 1/2" black acrylic in our GCC laser 120w...i can cut through the material just fine but i keep getting this beveling effect on the face around the edges (see photo). I've tried going faster with more passes, adjusting the power, adjusting the air etc. It is like this on both sides.

Anyone have any idea of the cause and possible solution? Help! Thanks!
 

Attachments

  • Resized_20160714_143606.jpg
    Resized_20160714_143606.jpg
    25.4 KB · Views: 384

V-ENGRAVE

New Member
Most probable cause for bevel effect when cutting thicker materials is due to beam alignment. If the beam is not hitting lens dead on it will cut angled. It will not be noticeable on less than 3/16" material.
 

bjt140

New Member
That's from your heat affected zone. What frequency and power and speed are you cutting at?

The other item that adds more to the ripple is the paper backing. The adhesive makes the ripple worse, try cutting without the top paper and see if it looks better that way.
 

GraphicsSource

New Member
Thanks for the replies. I'm running at 100power at .5% speed and taking 2 passes...I think the issue may be that the 1/2" material is really getting towards the max capabilities of the machine and it just cant cut it fast enough and the heat builds up.
 

GVP

New Member
Refocus the beam half way through? At ½" thick, if you aligned to the top of the material, it will be out of focus by the time it gets to the bottom?
 

rossmosh

New Member
Thanks for the replies. I'm running at 100power at .5% speed and taking 2 passes...I think the issue may be that the 1/2" material is really getting towards the max capabilities of the machine and it just cant cut it fast enough and the heat builds up.

First thing to do is check the actual output of power from the laser. Mahoney makes a $100 analog power gauge that seems to work okay from what I've read.

The next thing you need to do is play with your focus. As GVP said, focusing into the material should help. On 1/2" material, you should probably focus about 1/8" into the material. I'd also try to go in 1 pass. 120W should be able to do 1/2" material in 1 pass.

Last thing you want to is play around with your air assist. Increasing the PSI could make the difference.
 
Top