Ian
Administrator
A few weeks ago I was looking for some advice on a CO2 laser cutter, but in the end I had to reel in my expectations after realising how much import duty and other fees would be. However, I have now found a really affordable K40 laser cutter based in the UK, which means it'll give me something small to start to learn from.
There will be a lot of the time that the laser cutter is left idle, as it'll mainly just be me using it for random projects (or friends that want to borrow it). I read that CO2 tubes have a limited lifespan, but I can't tell if this is based on hours used or the age of the tube (i.e. degradation over time due to chemical interactions or gas exchange). I know that there's an element of them both at play, but I would hate to think that I may only use a tube for 40 hours one year and it's already expired.
Any thoughts on if this may be the case, especially bearing in mind that I'll be getting a cheap-as-chips no-name Chinese CO2 laser that may or may not be 40W (rather than one of those nice tubes with a datasheet!). Getting a better tube would cost more than the entire K40 laser cutter kit .
There will be a lot of the time that the laser cutter is left idle, as it'll mainly just be me using it for random projects (or friends that want to borrow it). I read that CO2 tubes have a limited lifespan, but I can't tell if this is based on hours used or the age of the tube (i.e. degradation over time due to chemical interactions or gas exchange). I know that there's an element of them both at play, but I would hate to think that I may only use a tube for 40 hours one year and it's already expired.
Any thoughts on if this may be the case, especially bearing in mind that I'll be getting a cheap-as-chips no-name Chinese CO2 laser that may or may not be 40W (rather than one of those nice tubes with a datasheet!). Getting a better tube would cost more than the entire K40 laser cutter kit .