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Hot wire cutter from scraps

Hot wire cutter from scraps

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Look, it doesn't matter where it started... this is what it's all about.

Tutoring 6
Skill 6
Idea 6
1 Comment

Hot wire cutters are quite expensive.

Well…. relatively expensive. I mean, at least… thirty quid or so, with a cutting table. So not really that expensive. But I guess I’m just a bit stingy. Because I couldn’t justify it to myself, knowing I had everything to make one out of left-over scraps.

Essentially, they’re just a wire with an electric current running through it, which makes it act like a little heater and get really hot.

Look, it doesn't matter where it started... this is what it's all about.

After an hour or so with Inkscape, I had a sort-of idea about how it would work out. A simple table with an adjustable stand for the wire seemed like an acheivable design for a one-day build.

(of course, like @warzan making a 3d HeroQuest board, it was soon to spiral out of control, but a one-day build felt possible at the outset).

Look, it doesn't matter where it started... this is what it's all about.

My own laser cutter is knocking on a bit now, and probably in need of a new tube, so I popped along to my local hackspace (BuildBrighton) and used their large-format laser cutter to make a frame to hold the hot wire.

After gluing it all together and leaving for a few hours, I ran some wires inside the three layered construction and clamped them to the rings at each end using M3 bolts and washers.

Look, it doesn't matter where it started... this is what it's all about.

At this stage, I was tempted to just connect the wires up to a 9v/12v power source and see how hot the wire got. But I was using some relatively thin 32AWG vape coil wire and had no idea how hot it could get before breaking.

I thought it prudent to knock together a quick power-controller, to be able to vary the voltage through the wire (so I could quickly kill the power if the wire got too hot!)

Using an Arduino, an LCD and a linear potentiometer, I made a variable controller using an IRF640 power FET and PWM output on one of the pins.

Amazingly, the cutter worked first time!

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alfonsothetraitor
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This is an amazing foam cutter you made here , well done.

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