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Week 3 Laser Cutters

Final Demo

Hologram demo
Hologram demo

Final Product

front view of my DIY hologram
top view of my DIY hologram

Idea

I came across the following video just a few days ago before I learned how to use the laser cutter. That giant but minimalistic installation creating a fantastic hologram caught my eyes immediately. I decided to DIY a smaller scale hologram with Acrylic using the laser cutter.

Inspiration video
Inspiration image

Prototype

The DIY hologram examples that I found online were very crude: four transparent and thin trapezoid pieces of plastic combined to a pyramid shape with scotch tape (refer to inspiration image above). To design a more elegant and stable hologram, I decided to frame the pyramid with top and bottom covers and supportive structure.

Design sketch

Since the laser cutter is not safe for engraving cardboards, which might cause fire easily, I cut a square hole on each corner to place supportive sticks. I used a digital caliper to measure the width and length of the black Acrylic sticks.

use digital caliper to measure the length
use digital caliper to measure the length

After measuring the height of the pyramid plus top and bottom cardboard, I used band saw to produce 4 segments of the black Acrylic sticks.

Measure height
Cut Acrylic stick with band saw

Finally I laser cut all the pieces and put everything together with blue tapes.

Prototype: laser cut mat board
Prototype: pieces after laser cut
Prototype: put trapezoid pieces together with blue tape
Prototype: put all pieces together

As I took a close look at my prototype, I noticed that on each single trapezoid, there was a tiny hole. I rechecked my design in illustrator and found that I forgot to delete the “center”.

Tiny holes on trapezoid cardboard

Material

6” x 12” x 1/8 ” clear Acrylic board, 0.23” x 0.23” x 12” black Acrylic stick, hot glue gun, and Acrylic cement, and black Acrylic painting.

Implementation

After prototyping with cardboards, I applied some engraving tests on my transparent Acrylic board. The conclusion is that to obtain the depth I wanted, I had to engrave four times. Besides that, since the laser cutter could not engrave straightly but with some angles, I adjusted the length of the side from 0.26” to 0.24” in order to place sticks more stably.

Sketch of engraving test
Test the size of engraved squares
engrave once
engrave four times

Then I went ahead to engrave and cut the Acrylic board.

laser cut acrylic board
pieces after laser cut

The cardboard pyramid turned out to be a great jig for me to glue my acrylic trapezoids together. The Acrylic board is 1/8” thick, so when they tiled to shape a pyramid with a square open on the top, the adjacent pieces only share an extremely thin edge. In that case, instead of using cement specifically for acrylic, I turned to the glue gun. I first used scotch tape to fix the shape by overlapping acrylic pieces on the cardboard prototype. Then I carefully inserted glue between the slots.

pyramid jig
scotch tapes on pyramid
glue pyramid

After finished my pyramid, I came up with another idea. I wanted to make my hologram rotational with gear connections. To achieve that, I searched online to gain more knowledge about how does the gear work.

After some tests on producing gears, I finally obtained one big and three small gears to make the pyramid rotate.

I painted the bottom board black to avoid reflection from it. To make the gear connection more stable, I laser cut several tiny pegs and placed them at the center of each gear.

paint boards black
pegs
glue pegs on the board
pegs and gears on the board

Here two demos that I tested rotation with gears.

gear rotation test
pyramid rotation test

The last step, glue every piece together.

glue pyramid on black square board
clamp on the square borad
glue sticks on the bottom board
clamp on the top board

And here is how it looks finally.

top view of my DIY hologram
font view of my DIY hologram

Appendix

final design sketch
all pieces

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