Tweakie:
>>I am really not quite sure why anyone would want to laser engrave a photographic image onto a piece of wood
I got bit by photos in wood many years ago. In fact, Mach3 was born from a discussion
I had with Bob Landry one day in my basement dungeon in 1999. We saw a photo engraved
by router in wood of Marilyn Munroe on Ebay and I commented I thought we could build
a machine to do that. Bob kinda scoffed at first by warmed up to the idea as we perused
the parts we had laying around from old Xray machines we worked on..
We built a small router table from a table saw frame, it had wire ropes on the axis driving encoders and was fed by dc servo motors, all going to a IO card from a medical system plugged into my ISA bus. It ran for about 10 minutes and a few capacitors blew up like firecrackers with bits of paper raining down around us in a cloud of smoke. All this of course led to EZCNC, Master5, Mach1,2 and finally Mach3.
When I retired from Mach and got interested in Lasers, it became more apparent to me
why people struggled with lasers under M3. It was the power control, and I'm really
grateful to the guys at Pokeys, who really stepped forward when I asked if they'd be
willing to add just a bit of code to the 57CNC so I could do some experiments with
power over distance . Auggie is only possible due to their assistance. No
other hardware can control the PWM on command that way except dedicated laser
controllers that typically cost much more.
Laser control for photographic or 3d modeling requires both special hardware
consideration and very special software as well, so until Pokeys said yes, it just
wasn't possible to do what it does.
Auggie is a bit rough as I'm sure you've found. It can do great work and is way
more powerful than it should be, but its unrefined and a bit buggy due to to a low
user base . That having been said, if used for a laser, its pretty good at it as that's
been its primary use here in that same dungeon from 18 years ago. As I find
trouble in my own use, I fix it up.
I'm really happy your finding it useful, I too am pretty happy at its versatility
and the results it turns out. I cant promise it will ever be cleaned up to a high
level, it will likely stay a bit persnickety and cranky, but then its meant for
people like you and me who experiment and play and can get past the warts
and such.
Im still working on a galvo cube to add to my laser, (waiting on a dual dac
board ), and I hope to upgrade Auggie to drive galvo's via Gcode, something
Ive always wanted to try. Its technically a bit complex so its taking me forever
it seems. So if all goes well you can expect more laser functions in future
as I experiment with 3d printing and such if the damn galvos start working
as I hope they will.
Thanks for the compliment , Auggie isn't used by very many , so its good
to hear its doing its thing somewhere. Its like an Author hearing someone
liked his book. I dont wanna write novels anymore, one was enough, but
its nice to hear someone likes one of my short stories.
Art