David Halfpenny
Western Thunderer
Simon, it's well worth shelling out for 'laserable' MDF that doesn't have as much goo in the glue.If I'm cutting MDF with power tools, it'll be outdoors. The laser obviously isn't but it does extract, that said, the goo that condenses inside the machine is really not very nice at all,
I can get a stack of A3 sheets - near as dammit the bed size of my enclosed (and extracted) indoor laser - for a very reasonable price.
On the other hand, I'll carry on using ordinary DIY-shed sheets for my big open-frame laser, that I intend only ever to use outdoors.
Similar considerations for plywood of course.Having hunted down - and driven all the way to - a specialist timber yard advertising 1/32" birch ply, I was disappointed to find big variations between sheets. One especially gooey sheet reduced me to using the laser purely for marking outlines, that I then sawed and sanded to size by mediaeval means. Next time, I'll pay the extra for a delivery of Laser Ply.
Incidentally, anyone who wants laser-accuracy woodwork without the bother can get pretty close with an ordinary ink-jet printer.
Stick a paper print to the material, using peelable spray-mount to avoid wet glue stretching the paper.
Or:
- Print a fine high-contrast Reversed outline onto a Laser transparency sheet (not an inkjet sheet ! ).
- Swiftly but carefully, lay the still-wet sheet ink-down onto the material.
- Rub / roller down the ink without slipping or smudging.
- Peel off the sheet and cut round the outline.


