Laser Cutting

For our group assignment, we determined the kerf (material thickness + width of burned laser cut lines) as well as the settings that work best for a smooth cut.
Configuration:
Thickness: 4.0-4.3mm
Speed: 2.2-2.5
Power: 100
PPI: 200

laser characteristics

Vinyl Cutting

I explored different materials (traditional vinyl and mylar). Mylar failed the first time because it didn't have a rigid backing, which is good to know!

kodama
mylar

Final Product: GeoDome

I explored many ideas and wanted to challenge myself to utilize living hinges in the assembly. In the end, I decided to make a construction kit for a spherical tetrahedron, but it is a bit hard to grasp mentally. So I decided to test on paper first before moving to cardboard and the laser cutter. Once I have grasped the concept, I created the design in Fusion 360.

paper sketch
tetra CAD

I tested with one hinged arc to see whether the joints and slots work and they fit snuggly. I also accidently created some brutalist artwork when I laser cut the little joint pieces. Hashtag accidental brutalist.

laser trial
brutal joints

I would like to create an auxetic mesh that can be the skin of my spherical tetrahedron. Here is a parametric sketch I made in Fusion.

auxetic

Assembly time! The littel triangle pieces connected via joints and slots but the mesh skin has to be taped to the cardboard. I made a critical mistake not considering that the wax paper is super hard to glue on but little glue dots worked super well (thanks glue dot).

assembly1
assembly2

assembly3
assembly4

assembly5
assembly6

assembly7
detail

Lastly, Jack and I did a little photoshoot session. It wasn't meant to be a helmet but it looks kinda funky which I like. And GeoDome disco ball! (see video)

profile
helmet