586,103 active members*
3,557 visitors online*
Register for free
Login

Thread: Lithophane

Page 1 of 2 12
Results 1 to 20 of 21
  1. #1
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Posts
    40

    Lithophane

    Lately I've been machining a few lithophanes out of corian. I've found that it gives a much better finish than white acrylic. but the cost of corian dictate the side of the finished product since i purchase all of my corian off of ebay. I can get almost the same look and effect out of the white acrylic, but the acrylic tends to get to hot and melt back on its self.
    I'm using an engraving tool with a .03 radius with a stepover of .01. and i have compressed air blowing on the tool and acrylic while machining. My question is: Has anyone ever used a cold air gun in any fashion? to keep material cool or even the tool? i was wondering if they are worth the price.

    Again I'm using a engraving tool with a .03 radius, and the feed on the x and y are 3" per sec. and 2" per sec on the z. I guess after proofreading my post i'm really asking has anyone found a way to keep the white acrylic from melting and still attemping to make it profitable?
    Any input would be appreciated.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Posts
    6855
    I would think that liquid would provide the best cooling that air.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Posts
    40
    I think your right that the liquid would disapate the heat better. But I'm worried about the liquid mess or the mist, I have a dust collector also and think that with the cold air guns ( http://vortec.com ) would help keep the tool cool and the air would also help blow the chips away from the tooling allowing the dust collector remove the debree. Has anyone used or made anything like these cold air guns?

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Apr 2003
    Posts
    1079
    Cool air guns should work, but you need a massive compressor to run them. Something like 8.5 SCFM for the small models I think. What about a micro-mister like the Trico micro-drop? No mess with that one. I will be trying the lithophanes on acrylic in the next few weeks with the Trico unit, if you can wait that long, I will let you know how I get on.
    (Note: The opinions expressed in this post are my own and are not necessarily those of CNCzone and its management)

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Posts
    6
    Donald.

    I have bin doing some lithopanes,and i use also white acrilic.
    but you have to get the cast acrilic but not the extruded acrilic.
    I reduce the spindel speed to about 16000 rpm and go as fast as 6000mmpm.

    good luck

    arjen

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Posts
    518
    Quote Originally Posted by Donald
    Again I'm using a engraving tool with a .03 radius, and the feed on the x and y are 3" per sec. and 2" per sec on the z. I guess after proofreading my post i'm really asking has anyone found a way to keep the white acrylic from melting and still attemping to make it profitable?
    Any input would be appreciated.
    Donald,

    Hi. I just collaberated with a fellow doing the same thing. He had to slow the travel down to a crawl to keep from melting and it took forever to run a job. Like you, he ran at a fixed rate on the X & Y. I wrote him a small piece of software that reads his g-code files and adds a feedrate to each line whose value is dependant on the Z depth. He is able to define a curve in the software that relates depth to speed. The output of the software is a separate, updated g-code file. I still have a bug or two to work out, but his feedback to me was that he can run a job with no melting, a better finish, and it's finishing about 30% faster. This may be something you would consider trying.

    Lance
    Evodyne Soft Systems

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Posts
    40
    Hi Lance,
    I'd be interested in knowing more about the software you wrote.
    I have been able to crop my images into any shape that i wish, but it still will machine those invisible corners of the file. How can one just machine the cropped image and not those invisible corners?

  8. #8
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Posts
    63
    Hi, basically most of the finished product is determined by the picture you start out with, your graphic editing program is the most important. Sometimes the picture from your graphic program will look bad but will cut very good, most of the time minor details don't matter at all. Watch out for redeye and glint from the flash, even a small amount can cause a big hole in someones eye.
    Dean

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Posts
    518
    Quote Originally Posted by Donald
    Hi Lance,
    I'd be interested in knowing more about the software you wrote.
    I have been able to crop my images into any shape that i wish, but it still will machine those invisible corners of the file. How can one just machine the cropped image and not those invisible corners?
    Hi Donald. O.K, I need to let you know I've never made one of these myself-just wrote the software to help another fellow out. So I'm short on practical advice as far as the actual machining. BUT if you have correctly cropped the photo the stuff you cut out is gone and just can't be part of your output. So I have to think you are missing something basic.

    First off, are you cropping the photo in a separate "paint" program, then converting it to g-code? Or does your CNC/lithophane software allow you to open a photo, edit it, then run it?. (See I told you I'm pretty ignorant about this stuff). Well, at any rate, I'd try cropping/editing in a separate paint program and make sure you save the modified picture to a different file name, just so you KNOW it's a different version than what you started with. You can check the file sizes of the original and the cropped-if you've done it right the cropped will be smaller as there is less data.

    Incidently, what software do you fellows use to go from picture to g-code? I'm curious.

    The guy I worked with ended up with g-code that ran at one travel rate no matter what the depth of the cut. He was fine at shallow depths, but had melting issues on deep cuts. I wrote a program that looked at each line of his source gcode, read the Z value, and used a curve to to get the appropriate feedrate. I added the feedrate to each line of the g-code and saved it to a new file. The curve I made user editable, so you can vary the feedrate in different ways. It's very simple and only does that one thing, but he said it made a noticeable difference for him.

    I wouldn't mind sending you a copy, but first I'd like you to send me one of your g-code files so i can try it here first-just in case there are differences in his generated code and yours. I'd hate to cause wasted material or worse. It's up to you. You can send a file or two to me at [email protected].

    Lance

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Posts
    40
    Lance,
    I'd be glad to send a file. most of my are very very long. Approx 500,000 pluse lines, but I may have a smaller file... I'll look through my stuff this weekend and send it via you email. I have a friend that uses Artcam and I've been attempting to use his software to make my code, but have used a program called Profiler and also the tiff converter that came with the router.

    I just re-read the past sevral posts, ---- The only time I have a problem with melting is in acrylic and I can adjust my feedrate for that. If I can find a way to keep the acrylic cool than I can run faster, possible even to match what I do in Corian which is between 5 and 6 in per sec. It does slow down when it changes its Z height, and thats where I loose time.
    You mentioned,

    "I wrote a program that looked at each line of his source gcode, read the Z value, and used a curve to to get the appropriate feedrate."
    I'm not sure what you mean when you use a curve to get the appropriate feed rate.

    Again I'll look for that file this weekend and try to send it sometime saturday night or sunday.

    Thanks again Lance,

    Don

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Posts
    518
    Donald,

    You may send any size file-I've got Comcast and it is very fast and I've no email size limits.

    Essentially it seemed that to give the most flexibility that the feedrate should vary by the Z depth, but perhaps not linearly. I gave the program an editor screen with a graph of feedrate vs. Z depth. The user can drage a little cursor around and change the shape of the curve. See the attached shots. Remember, the software the gentleman was using did not allow for anything but one speed. If yours already does, this may not be useful. By the way, the program processed a 300,000+ line file in like 10-15 seconds on my PC.

    Lance
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails Shot1.jpg   Shot2.jpg   Shot3.jpg  

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Posts
    42
    Hi Folks!

    As I see many of You make lithophanes into Corian. I still not tried it, can anyone tell me its properties?
    What I used is simple polystyrene, 3mm thick and given fine results. Can I have better lithophane if I use Corian?
    My atemmpt is visible here, with a short video.
    Thank You if share experiences!

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Posts
    292
    I use a software program called MicroCarve V4 for my lithophanes. Works great, not expensive. Very simple to use and I have had good luck with it.

    Attached is a picture of the latest lithophane. My daughters Doberman that she lost earlier this year.

    Don

    software here microcarve V4
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails Vaughn.jpg  

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Posts
    2134
    Awesome lithophanes guys, really great quality!

    Does anyone know how Microcarve compares with Vectrics Photo Vcarve? I vaguelly recall something about Vcarve being based on an earlier Microcarve version, although, don't quote me on that as it's quite possibly wrong?

    cheers,
    Ian
    It's rumoured that everytime someone buys a TB6560 based board, an engineer cries!

  15. #15
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Posts
    292
    Ian, I don't know for sure, but I would guess that is not the case. John (Microcarve here on CNCZone) is the author of Microcarve and it has been around for a while. On it's 4th version right now.

    Don

  16. #16
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Posts
    940
    Here are 2 that I cut the same file but the one on the right is acrylic and the one on the left is Corian the corian looks so much better.
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails IMAG0055.jpg  

  17. #17
    Quote Originally Posted by aarggh View Post
    Awesome lithophanes guys, really great quality!

    Does anyone know how Microcarve compares with Vectrics Photo Vcarve? I vaguelly recall something about Vcarve being based on an earlier Microcarve version, although, don't quote me on that as it's quite possibly wrong?

    cheers,
    Ian
    vcarve isn't based on microcarve . I won't give my opinion of vcarve because I sell microcarve but I will say that the microcarve price is much better and I thought it was a great software right from the first version which was micropath . The best way to compare is to use the demo's , microcarve demo is fully functional and puts out code , the only limitation is that the carving will be watermarked , Microcarve* - Home

    Curt


    .
    A poet knows no boundary yet he is bound to the boundaries of ones own mind !! ........

  18. #18
    Join Date
    Jul 2010
    Posts
    98

    Lightbulb Consider Meshcam too

    Hi,

    You might also consider Meshcam. It works really well for lithos and is good for making parts as well. I posted some of my lithos in the grz software forum if you would like to see some examples.

  19. #19
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Posts
    371
    Old topic but I need to ask what the going rate for doing an image like the one in post #16?

  20. #20
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Posts
    940
    I get about $150 for them they are about 8x10 with a frame that is about 2.5 deep

Page 1 of 2 12

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •