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Robert Wilcox

New Member
Hello, I’m wondering if anyone has experience with milling ada Braille signs.
What I want to do is take a piece of plastic and mill around the copy and braille, leaving them raised from the background.
In the attached pictures, I would route the brown areas leaving the white areas raised.
I’m hoping to leave the brown area with a smooth surface for a clean painting.

I don’t want to use the raster Braille idea.

Thank you
 

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MikePro

Active Member
its been done before
if you have experience with a cnc & available router bits and toolpathing, then you should be fine to bog down your machine with this.

....but then painting becomes the hard part, as your toolpathing will reveal itself on the surfaces.
 

MikePro

Active Member
you're welcome to try, some bits may be better than others, but there's a reason you see more processes involving adding braille to surfaces via resin or raster rather than machining it down.
 

tulsagraphics

New Member
So it won’t leave a smooth surface on the panel?
Correct. That's a lot of unnecessary machine time too.

It's better to get a braille drill bit and a bottle of resin braille beads. Dial in your depth and start drilling. Way faster, and way nicer looking. If you're doing a lot of ADA work, consider getting a braille inserter tool to place the beads (or make your own DIY tool like I did)
 

pro-UP

New Member
There are drill bits (New Hermes or Gravotech) specifically for this method. It's an older process, but works. There can be a significant learning curve. We used to be wholesale manufacturers and our primary products were ADA braille & wayfinding signs. Our go to were lasers. Honestly, if you are new to ADA signs it would be better to buy from wholesalers. This will save you a lot of trouble and time. Always get samples - for you, the client, and whoever their designer / architect approval person may be. Make sure to label them. Over time they all kinda look the same. Have you looked into thermoformed or 3D printed signs? Good luck!
 

Robert Wilcox

New Member
its been done before
if you have experience with a cnc & available router bits and toolpathing, then you should be fine to bog down your machine with this.

....but then painting becomes the hard part, as your toolpathing will reveal itself on the surfaces.

There are drill bits (New Hermes or Gravotech) specifically for this method. It's an older process, but works. There can be a significant learning curve. We used to be wholesale manufacturers and our primary products were ADA braille & wayfinding signs. Our go to were lasers. Honestly, if you are new to ADA signs it would be better to buy from wholesalers. This will save you a lot of trouble and time. Always get samples - for you, the client, and whoever their designer / architect approval person may be. Make sure to label them. Over time they all kinda look the same. Have you looked into thermoformed or 3D printed signs? Good luck!
I have experience with ada signs so I’m not completely new. I would be new to manufacturing them though. We currently get thermoformed Ada signs and I have thought about getting unfinished thermoformed signs and starting with that. I was just thinking this milling idea might be good idea too since I will most likely be doing this myself. I figured there would be less steps involved.

I think thermoforming/milling are a good idea because the signs are one piece and nearly impossible to pick off. Whereas the raster beads and uv printing is not tamper proof.

How do you make ada signs with lasers?


Thanks for the information!
 

tulsagraphics

New Member
There are drill bits (New Hermes or Gravotech) specifically for this method. It's an older process, but works. There can be a significant learning curve. We used to be wholesale manufacturers and our primary products were ADA braille & wayfinding signs. Our go to were lasers. Honestly, if you are new to ADA signs it would be better to buy from wholesalers. This will save you a lot of trouble and time. Always get samples - for you, the client, and whoever their designer / architect approval person may be. Make sure to label them. Over time they all kinda look the same. Have you looked into thermoformed or 3D printed signs? Good luck!
I have a nice engraver and tons of materials -- everything dialed in -- but you're not kidding about farmin' stuff out. ADA signs are very involved. It's surprising how much material $$ and labor go into these things (at small scale, anyway). They're not that profitable compared to other products unless you have really good connections and can produce efficiently in bulk.
 

tulsagraphics

New Member
I have experience with ada signs so I’m not completely new. I would be new to manufacturing them though. We currently get thermoformed Ada signs and I have thought about getting unfinished thermoformed signs and starting with that. I was just thinking this milling idea might be good idea too since I will most likely be doing this myself. I figured there would be less steps involved.

I think thermoforming/milling are a good idea because the signs are one piece and nearly impossible to pick off. Whereas the raster beads and uv printing is not tamper proof.

How do you make ada signs with lasers?


Thanks for the information!
Raster beads "aren't" tamper proof? I don't know about your processes, but nobody is getting my beads out unless you drill them out. They are far more resistant to "vandalism" than any other method that could simply be broken off with a hard fingernail. If your beads can be picked out, you're not drilling deep enough, or using the wrong bit.

Lasers don't cut edges perfectly straight -- they leave a slightly beveled edge. By cutting out circles (smaller than the bead) the braille can be added from the back side so they're locked in place by the applique.
 
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