this post was submitted on 19 Jul 2023
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Laser Cutting
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Here is a screenshot of the issue.
At the center of the picture, you can see that fine lines are two lines.
I have not tried on plywood, but the issue will be the same, won't it ?
I... don't know the model of the machine. It's a 10W laser diode on rails. There are different "types" of machines ?
I love burning on cork. I get great results compared to plywood. Plywood is great to cut it.
There is a dithering algorithm on LaserGRBL, but it gives the same results as line to line engraving. The laser is not powerfull enough when engraving fine lines.
Now that I think of it, I have to try another option. Convert my picture into a vectorized picture through Inkscape. Then convert it to a raster picture. Then using LaserGRBL to engrave it line to line. I will try this when I have access to the machine.
Yet, I am still curious about softwares or ways to dynamically convert pictures into smart engraving path. Smarter than Laser GRBL.
Is it both vector and raster engraving? Your description of "adaptive quality" sounds like that is what is happening. Can your software toggle off the vector engraving and leave only raster?
I use a CO2 laser, which has some different cutting properties than a diod laser, so I don't have much experience here, but I think for something with fine detail like that you'd be best to try grayscale
I found this guide for a diod laser so see if that works. https://endurancelasers.com/laser-engraving-of-halftones-how-to-print-beautiful-photos/
The other option I have done when things are just too detailed is go into inkcape and simplify the line work manually.
It's either vector or raster.
I just found this similar discussion : https://inkscape.org/forums/questions/is-there-a-path-to-stroke-function/
Any luck getting it to work?
No but I found this impressive library for Inkscape : https://stadtfabrikanten.org/pages/viewpage.action?pageId=55018881
Ooh nice