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by 83 799 days ago
The precision of a laser cutter would open up a lot of possibilities. Particularly making things that slot together with tabs - like fabbing my own welding squares and fixtures where a cnc plasma cutter would leave too rough an edge to have them slot together accurately.
1 comments

Can't you buy a CNC mill/router that can cut metal more precisely than a CNC plasma cutter?
You can't cut sharp inside corners using a cnc mill (round bits), as one would want for tabbed fixtures.

Most sheet good are too large to be placed on or moved around by a cnc mill table.

CNC milling is a slow process (unless you can drop six figures on one).

CNC mills take a lot longer to setup and program, and also require more skill to have a successful result (no chatter, not breaking bits, ramping into the cut on interior features).

Good CNC mills that can handle steel are massively heavy and large machines which makes transport and setup difficult for the home machinist.

Not cheaply, which was part of the OP's post.
Yes, for relatively cheaply. I’m not talking about a 5-axis CNC mill, and I’m not saying it’ll be fast. But a laser cutter is not fast either, and even if lasers get more powerful… a really powerful one is unlikely to be “cheap”.
Of course it depends on what you're doing, and what you're comparing to, but in my experience, laser cutting is the fastest option for hobby-level fabrication.
Tormach metal CNCs are $10K+ and take up a lot of floorspace.

A lot of people also cut sheet metal which a CNC tends to be terrible at.

We're talking hobbyist grade stuff here. People mount router bits on $400 CNCs and cut metal all the time.

Not $10k: https://youtu.be/w26DHMccicE?t=637

Even though it's cheap, the cuts still look pretty smooth and precise. I can't speak to the safety, as I would hope a $10k CNC would have more safety features.

They cut aluminum. Generally not well.

This part is actually a typical good result in spite of how bad it is: https://youtu.be/w26DHMccicE?t=731

Deflection is bad. Repeatability is poor. etc.

If you put even mild steel on that, that machine will have no hope.

Okay, but if you’re expecting a magical new diode laser to cut steel any time soon… good luck. That’s what most of this discussion is about. I think starting with a cheap CNC is more likely to work out.
o_O?

The article literally has a video of the laser actually cutting stainless steel (aka the Devil's chewing gum). The title says "melt steel". That was the practically the whole point of making these kinds of laser.

Video link: https://youtu.be/SFXmFNTviRI

Completely different processes for completely different things.
Yes, and a laser cutter is also a completely different process for completely different things... yet you can still do some of the same things, and a CNC mill would be more appropriate for smooth cuts than a CNC plasma cutter.