
the crosshair laser units are very cheap both eBay and Amazon sell them, I use +5 volts from my PC for power and a small toggle to turn it on/off when needed. I reassigned a button in Mach for this.
https://youtu.be/0oiemc9ZUfg
robertspark wrote: Tue Jan 29, 2019 11:03 am suggestion....
what about placing a crosshair laser on you gantry in a suitable position that works for you
Then use a macro / macro button to run a macro that offsets the work co-ordinates to the laser and move the laser to align where the torch was..
Jog around, and then use a macro button to offset the work co-ordinates back to the torch offset.
Something similar is used for the scribe {but in scheetcam, this would be via macro / button code}
2nd suggestion..... have you looked at a red laser crosshair with 3 or 5 shade glasses on? The red does not look so clear.... if you flip to a green laser it will show up clearly in shade 3 or even 5 green protective glasses...
I use a laser pointer and did exactly what you said. Have a button with a macro that moves to the laser offset then zeros the position.robertspark wrote: Tue Jan 29, 2019 11:03 am suggestion....
what about placing a crosshair laser on you gantry in a suitable position that works for you
Then use a macro / macro button to run a macro that offsets the work co-ordinates to the laser and move the laser to align where the torch was..
Jog around, and then use a macro button to offset the work co-ordinates back to the torch offset.
Something similar is used for the scribe {but in scheetcam, this would be via macro / button code}
2nd suggestion..... have you looked at a red laser crosshair with 3 or 5 shade glasses on? The red does not look so clear.... if you flip to a green laser it will show up clearly in shade 3 or even 5 green protective glasses...
UCCNC, ex mach3.
Was this fairly easy to setup? We have the same table and electronics, I am thinking of ordering one.motoguy wrote: Tue Jan 29, 2019 10:44 am I use these. I started with cutting my own mounts, from the drawings here. Then I went to a 3-d printed version, because my cut/welded one wasn't perfectly true. Then I went with this one, which seals the lasers away from the plasma dust, and has removable covers for the laser lenses (I've already replaced one, after piercing some 3/4" material). Pricey at ~$200, but works great. Also, due to it's design, the "x" stays on center, regardless of the torch height. That's one reason I never liked the single diode arrangements (dots or x pattern). With the single diode, it's always height dependent (or so it seems).
https://torchmate.com/products/accessor ... crosshairs
My mistake. The Dynatorch is the one I have. I did buy it new, it was $200, I love it. BTW, I checked an old quote I got from TM when I was looking at the laser providers...their quote was $350 at the time. Sounds like their prices have jumped a lot!tylerd wrote: Thu May 16, 2019 11:29 am Wow that was quick, did you buy that new? I just got a quote for one and it was 650.00, I would do a couple hundred but damn, that is too much for me! He said they only had 3 left and are discontinuing it, the new one will be made of metal and be out in a few months. I see trick tools has it for 430..but still pretty pricey!
I've got one. It's still sitting on top of the tool box, where it went a few days after it arrived. That's when I decided to quit farting around, and just ordered the Dynatorch unit (mentioned above). The ProCut unit is 3d-printed. That's fine, but I didn't like the battery-operated/push button setup. I wanted to be able to switch it on/off with my pendant. I removed the battery diode, and ran wired diodes.tylerd wrote: Thu May 16, 2019 11:43 am Anyone ever try one of these? pretty cheap, don't know much about these I guess the accuracy depends on how high they are mounted on the torch, and that changes with raising or lowering the Z axis?
https://procutcnc.com/product/laser-crosshair/