As this thread still gets a lot of views I thought I would post a little update on the CO2 laser project after some 15 years down the line. I am now on my 5th laser tube and although I have not kept a record of the total hours, each had a (perhaps optimistic) life expectancy of 10,000 hours. Replacing the RECI tubes (which cost around £200 to £300 each) together with alignment, flushing and replacing coolant takes about half a day and could perhaps be considered quite a costly process. All my mirrors and lenses were sourced from II-VI (Coherent) and although initially expensive none have had to be replaced over the years so buying quality sure beats buying cheap optics.
Everything had been running exactly as expected until last week when the coolant circulating pump failed. Well, it did not exactly fail it just started drawing excess current from the 12V supply. An exact replacement was readily available from an online supplier, having UK stock, which was quickly fitted and the CO2 laser was back up and running as usual. The original coolant circulating pump, of Chinese origin, certainly performed sterling service for a great many hours over the years so +1 for its design and quality of manufacture.
Technology marches on and in 2023, for experimental purposes, I purchased a couple of UV laser multi-diode heads (of Chinese origin) at less than £100 each. These heads contain 4 x 5W diodes with precise optics to align each of the 0.08mm x 0.02mm focussed beams, stacked one above the other, to produce a focussed squarcle <0.08mm x 0.08mm. The heads are extremely easy to fit to any existing CNC machine and are way cheap enough to be considered consumables. Unfortunately their operational wavelength is unsuitable for cutting clear acrylic but, so far, I have found that they are ideal for working with wood and anodized aluminium for which I have a current requirement.
Just for fun I have been experimenting with raster engraving 3D optical illusions and although not yet perfect I am improving my technique and thought you may like to see an early example.
Tweakie.