Back in 2006 the conference was held in Gdansk, and one of the interesting papers was on some work being done by Przemyslaw Borkowski at Koszalin University of Technology, in transferring photographs into inscribed pictures cut into metal. We took that idea and have moved it into a surface textural change that creates the picture as a 3-tone image in metal and rock (hence the "art") but there has been another development that has moved this into commercial availability. Nathan Webers and Carl Olsen of Omax Corporation, has modified the software on their cutting tables so that a controlled depth image can be inserted into a surface from an image. This, for example, is a lizard etched into aluminum.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj5br-hpPnr7nIdrAqSpgBAKdwY2JqWECvQ2GtZfkhOLGZlKEdwJ3OV-WphOE3b2yViYDA2lebB64LICH5kzSJhUZVaBlcZuT1tQAAsyOfSwFQ3MnTNcbR5XftSxKMpqyu4CwDnJHaZOoY/s320/OMAX+lizard.jpg)
The image was about 6 inches across and maybe half-an-inch deep.
It may make life a lot easier for those who have to carve images into stone, though removing a little of the artistic license with which sculptors apply their craft.
Incidentally Przemyslaw gave a talk at this conference on the use of waterjets in crushing coal. If you can take coal down to about 5 microns and mix it with water at 50% (roughly) GE have shown - by running a locomotive for more than 700 hours on the track - that it can replace diesel fuel. Looking at different available coals, it appears that brown coal is a little easier to break to the required size range than bituminous, which were the two varieties that he looked at. Using waterjets to do the crushing can make the process technically simpler and less energy intensive than other methods of getting the coal down to the required size.
0 comments:
Post a Comment