<div>Assuming the last few ducks line up, my company will have a 60W epilog legend on which people can rent time. I have a space secured at the Box Shop, and need to pull together the actual laser cutting rig now that I have all the business side lined up. The last hurdle is the most obnoxious one: financing. I'm trying a different tack next week, and will see how that goes (apparently nobody wants to loan startup funds to this sort of a business right now, which makes sense. small business expansion is fundable, but not startup).</div>
<div><br></div><div>My conclusions after the process of (mostly) setting up a laser cutting business:</div><div><ul><li>Setting up a business is the stupidest/tedious-est idea I've ever had</li><li>The equipment is extraordinarily expensive</li>
<li>The equipment is pretty fussy and requires regular, not-cheap maintenance</li></ul><div>FWIW, TechShop requires that you take a safety course, then seriously restricts access to their machines, including making people check in and list what they'll be cutting. Despite this, they still have people cutting inappropriate materials, using options that take the machine offline*, use settings that kill the laser tube, or are flat out irresponsible about what/how they cut and gunk up the optics such that it's a fire hazard.</div>
<div><br></div><div><div>If noisebridge wants to run one of these, we need to be much more comfortable with the idea of access restriction. The equipment itself requires careful use and maintenance, the neglect of which isn't so bad: not being careful means that the laser cutter will regularly be out of commission when people mangle the optical alignment. The bigger concern is that reasonably-sized lasers (40+W) are significant fire hazards, and people using them have to be attentive and responsive during the whole cutting process. 45W seems to be okay, but everyone's eyes get a little big when I say I'm getting a 60W laser cutter, and they tell me a story about someone they've known whose friend had a (50|65|75)W laser cutter and it burned down their ${building} when they left it unattended to watch Jeopardy or use the bathroom or whatever.</div>
<div><br></div><div>The biggest concern for me is one of fire hazard; I'd love NB to have a cutter, however its maintained or kept up. It's a great tool, and will allow people to get hooked, then need to come use my rig for larger production runs =)</div>
<div><br></div><div>Hope this is informative and helpful for people,</div><div>-- </div></div><div>Josh Myer 650.248.3796<br> <a href="mailto:josh@joshisanerd.com">josh@joshisanerd.com</a><br>
</div><div><br></div><div><div><div>* Auto depth finding simply doesn't work on the Legend! Don't try to use it, it'll just take the machine down for a couple days while your helpful Epilog rep works a realignment visit in on his busy maintenance circuit.</div>
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