
An Insight into the Four Main Techniques of Laser Cutting
With the current competition in business, entrepreneurs are looking for ways to make their products stand out on store shelves. The conventional technique of ensuring products stand out is the use of eye-catching labels. These might have actualized returns in the past but not anymore. The best way to stand out now is to include exceptional designs on your product rather than its packaging. This option will also negate the need for bulky packaging and reduce your production costs.
Tombstone and mug engraving are the typical things you might visualize when you hear of including an elaborate design on your products. Engraving using modern laser cutting techniques is the ideal technology for the inclusion of almost any design on all wooden, metallic, glass and stone materials. This is a form of non-contact cutting that will use a dense, and high energy light beam focused on one spot to cut material. Here are the cutting techniques you can employ using laser engravers to get a design that will ensure your products stand out.
This uses very high heat levels to make keyhole cuts. The surface temperature of your product’s material will be increased to a boiling point so fast such that the material will avoid the melting generated by heat conduction. A portion of your material will vaporize while the rest is blown using an auxiliary gas flow leaving a cut. Vaporization cutting is used for materials that will not melt like wood and carbon.
Fusion Cutting
In this technique, your material will be partially melted, then the molten material will be ejected using airflow. The laser beam used in fusion cutting is combined with a pure inert cutting gas that will cause the molten material to flow out of the slots. The cutting speed of your process will be increased with an increase in the laser power and reduced when cutting very thick plates and materials with high melting temperatures. Fusion cutting is generally used on metals.Vaporization Cutting
