A laser welder is often one of the top item’s on a jeweler’s wish list. So if I owned a store, I’d make sure I had one, because it laser welders offer benefits every jeweler can take advantage of.
The laser welder has never been intended as a replacement for a torch, but it does eliminate a lot of pre-and post-work necessary to complete a job. A torch is a contact device – it comes into contact with the piece you’re working on as a whole – so it leaves fire scales, scorching oxidation, and you have to clean those up. You also have to remove heat-sensitive items from a piece before using a torch on it. A laser welder is non-contact, so it eliminates many of those steps. It’s also easier to learn. You can learn to use a laser welder in eight to 12 hours. After another 20 hours of practice, you’ll be proficient at laser welding. Conversely, teaching somebody to use a torch is a fairly intensive process without much room for error.
Because of that it has become key to have a laser welder if you want to hire fresh talent on the bench. All the jewelry training schools now have laser welders, so students are graduating and saying to jewelers, “Where’s your LaserStar?”
If I wanted to get creative with my laser welder, I could market my laser-welding services to eye doctors. I’d tell them to send people with broken eyeglass frames my way. It’s a tremendous tool in other industries, too: tool and die manufactures, medical device makers, prototyping work. If I were looking for extra revenue, I could contact people in those fields and offer to rent them my time on the laser welder for $50 an hour during my off-hours.
This article was published in the February 2012 Issue of Instore Magazine.