Just had a reply from one of the major suppliers of di-noc and they say it should be fine to cut on a laser cutter, which is odd. Not sure what to think now. A part of me is thinking its so thin, surely it can't cause that much trouble, but another part of me is saying no no no, don't even try it.
Gemini offers some laminated material options. I just noticed you are in the UK, maybe there is a comparable source there?Hi all,
I'm looking for a way to laminate acrylic sheets to use as part of house signs. I want to be able to offer wood effect and brushed metal etc like the images attached. Any ideas on the best way to do it? I was thinking some kind of film heat pressed onto it maybe?
Thanks
Scott
Technically I'd agree with the chlorine gas emissions when you laser cut PVC film or board, but it's not like you'll cut 1,5 or 20 jobs with mounted vinyl and kill the laser. Exhaust evacuation, air assist and the quantity of material you're processing will really determine how long it will take to do any damage to the machine. We've definitely cut many jobs (in the hundreds) with PVC vinyl/lam mounted to acrylic in our Boss laser. Did the chlorine emissions get swirled around the interior before they full vented out of the exhaust? - Yes, but we've seen no major or even minor impacts from running these jobs on our laser cutter.I'd be very wary of this advice. It has nothing to do with the thickness of DI-NOC, even a low powered laser can cut it. It's the PVC content that makes it dangerous... the "C" is chlorine which when lasered turns into an extremely toxic gas which will harm humans/animals and hydrochloric acid which will ruin the laser cutter.