Tuesday, 2 June 2026

Should I Buy a CNC Router?

 


Should I Buy a CNC Router?

The most dangerous tool in any workshop is not the saw. It is the exciting new machine catalogue.

There is a particular danger in running a workshop full of useful equipment. Every new machine begins to look less like a luxury and more like the missing piece of the puzzle.

We already have a laser cutter, 3D printer, sewing and embroidery machines, printing equipment, tools for making teaching resources, and enough half-finished ideas to keep a small engineering department busy until retirement — or possibly beyond it. So the question is not, “Would a CNC router be interesting?” Of course it would. The real question is much more serious:

Would a CNC router solve real problems for Philip M Russell Ltd, or would it simply create a new and expensive collection of problems?

That is the question I have been trying to answer.


The Temptation of the Next Machine

Anyone who likes making things knows this feeling.

You start with a simple job: perhaps a sign, a jig, a bracket, a teaching aid, a boat part, or a template. Then you find yourself thinking, “This would be easier if only we had…”

That sentence is dangerous.

It can lead to sensible investment. It can also lead to a large machine arriving in the workshop, followed by six months of learning software, buying accessories, improving dust extraction, reorganising benches, watching tutorials, breaking cutter bits and muttering phrases that should not appear on a company blog.

A CNC router is not just a machine. It is a commitment.

It needs space, software, tooling, extraction, maintenance, materials, time and a stream of suitable projects to justify its existence. But if those projects are real, it could be a very useful addition to the workshop.


What Can a CNC Router Do That a Laser Cutter Cannot?

Our laser cutter is already a very useful tool. It can cut and engrave thin materials with great accuracy. It is excellent for acrylic, plywood, card, labels, signs, templates, display pieces, engraved teaching resources and prototype parts.

But a laser cutter has limits.

It does not like cutting thick timber. It burns edges. It cannot easily carve three-dimensional shapes. It is not designed to remove large amounts of material. It cannot machine a smooth curve into a solid wooden panel, cut a recess to a precise depth, or shape a mould.

A CNC router works differently. Instead of burning through material with a laser beam, it uses a rotating cutter to remove material. That means it can cut, drill, pocket, carve and shape much thicker materials.

A laser cutter is brilliant for flat, thin, precise work.

A CNC router is more like a computer-controlled carpenter, pattern maker and workshop assistant.

Used well, it could open up new possibilities.

Used badly, it could become an extremely accurate way of making expensive firewood.


Cutting Thicker Wood, Panels, Templates and Moulds

One of the most attractive uses of a CNC router would be cutting thicker panels and timber components.

For example, it could be used to make:

  • shaped wooden panels
  • accurate plywood templates
  • curved formers
  • moulds for GRP or composite work
  • replacement backing plates
  • workshop jigs
  • drilling templates
  • storage racks
  • display boards
  • large signs
  • teaching apparatus frames

The advantage is repeatability. Once a design has been created, the same part can be produced again with consistent accuracy.

That matters in a workshop where one-off prototypes often turn into “Could we make three more of those?” projects.

With a CNC router, a design made for one science practical, one camera mount, one jig or one boat part could be improved and repeated rather than reinvented each time.


Possible Boat Restoration Uses

The Champagne restoration project makes the CNC router idea particularly tempting.

Classic boats are full of awkward shapes. They have curves, angles, fittings, backing plates, supports, templates and pieces of timber that rarely come in standard sizes from a DIY store.

For Champagne, a CNC router might help with:

  • making templates for replacement wooden parts
  • cutting shaped backing plates
  • producing neat signage or name boards
  • making supports for storage and transport
  • creating camera mounts for filming the restoration
  • cutting accurate panels for temporary covers or workshop aids
  • making patterns for parts before committing to expensive material
  • producing jigs to help with sanding, drilling or assembly

It could also be useful for other sailing-related work: trophy bases, event signage, engraved plaques, boat display stands, sponsor boards, or even merchandise connected to the A-Rater project.

But here we need to be careful.

A CNC router would not magically restore Champagne. It would not varnish the wood, repair rigging, fix loose fittings or make us better sailors. It might help with some jobs, but only if those jobs are clearly identified.

There is a big difference between buying a machine because we have a use for it and buying one because we hope uses will appear later.

With boats, uses always appear later. Unfortunately, so do bills.


Science Equipment Manufacture

The CNC router might be even more useful in the education side of Philip M Russell Ltd.

A lot of our teaching is practical. We use experiments, demonstrations, models and visual aids to help students understand science rather than just memorise it.

There are many possible classroom and laboratory uses for a CNC router:

  • making wooden frames for apparatus
  • cutting baseboards for practical equipment
  • producing holders for sensors
  • creating models of biological structures
  • making physics demonstration parts
  • producing microscope slide storage trays
  • cutting labelled revision boards
  • creating equipment racks
  • making custom mounts for cameras and lights
  • producing repeatable parts for experiment kits

One particularly useful area would be making strong, tidy, repeatable components for custom practical equipment. A 3D printer is excellent for small plastic parts, and the laser cutter is excellent for thin sheet material, but there are times when a thicker, stronger, machined wooden or plastic part is more appropriate.

A CNC router could fill that gap.

For example, if we were building a model of a leaf structure, a flower model that comes apart in layers, a physics apparatus support, or a custom jig for a required practical, the router could make strong and accurate parts that look professional and survive student use.

That last point matters.

Students are wonderful, but any piece of equipment used in teaching must be designed on the assumption that someone will eventually tighten the wrong screw, lean on the wrong part, or ask, “Was this meant to come off?”


Signage, Jigs and Workshop Parts

One of the less glamorous but most important uses of workshop equipment is making the workshop itself work better.

A CNC router could help make:

  • storage racks for tools and materials
  • labelled drawers and holders
  • camera equipment mounts
  • cable guides
  • safety signs
  • wall panels
  • machine templates
  • drilling guides
  • cutting jigs
  • repeatable production fixtures

Jigs are not exciting to most people, but they are often what turns a slow, fiddly job into a reliable process.

A good jig saves time every time it is used. It also reduces mistakes. In teaching equipment manufacture, boat restoration and video production, that could be valuable.

The laser cutter can make some jigs, but a CNC router could make thicker, stronger versions. That could be particularly useful for anything that needs to be clamped, drilled, screwed, sanded or used repeatedly.


The Costs Nobody Mentions in the Exciting Brochure

The cost of a CNC router is not just the price of the CNC router.

That is where many workshop dreams become slightly more complicated.

A realistic budget has to include:

The Machine

There is a wide range of CNC routers, from small desktop machines to larger workshop models capable of cutting full sheets. A small machine may be cheaper and easier to house, but may not handle the size of projects we actually want to make.

A larger machine would be more useful, but also more expensive, heavier, louder and harder to fit into the workshop.

Cutter Bits

Router bits are consumables. They wear, break and need replacing. Different materials and jobs need different cutters.

There would need to be a sensible starter set, plus replacements for the ones I will inevitably break while learning. This is not pessimism. This is experience.

Dust Extraction

A CNC router makes dust. Lots of dust.

Unlike the laser cutter, which has smoke extraction, a router produces physical chips and fine dust. Cutting MDF, plywood or hardwood without proper extraction would quickly become unpleasant and possibly unsafe.

Proper dust extraction is not optional. It is part of the machine.

Software

The machine needs design and toolpath software. There may be free or low-cost options, but professional use usually benefits from proper software and a proper workflow.

That means learning time as well as software cost.

Space

A CNC router needs more than the footprint of the machine. It needs working space around it, somewhere for materials, somewhere for extraction, and enough room to load and unload safely.

In any workshop, space is the one thing you never have as much of as you thought you did.

Noise

Routers are not quiet. This matters if the machine is used near teaching spaces, filming areas, or at times when noise would be disruptive.

A laser cutter hums and extracts. A CNC router announces itself.

Time

The biggest hidden cost is time.

There is time to learn the software. Time to test materials. Time to set up jobs. Time to clamp work properly. Time to clean up. Time to troubleshoot. Time to remake the part you confidently cut 3mm too small.

The machine may save time in the long run, but it will not save time on day one.


Would It Complement the Existing Equipment?

This is the central point.

A CNC router would not replace the laser cutter, 3D printer or other equipment. It would complement them.

The laser cutter is ideal for precise flat work, engraving, labels, thin sheet material and quick prototypes.

The 3D printer is excellent for small complex shapes, brackets, holders and prototypes.

The CNC router would sit between those tools and traditional woodworking. It would be useful for larger, stronger, thicker, more structural parts.

In a well-planned workshop, the workflow might look like this:

  • design the part on the computer
  • prototype small details on the 3D printer
  • cut thin templates or labels on the laser cutter
  • machine stronger final parts on the CNC router
  • assemble and finish by hand

That sounds powerful.

It also sounds like another system to learn properly.


The Danger of Buying Possibility Instead of Productivity

This is where I have to be honest with myself.

It is very easy to buy possibility.

A CNC router represents possibility. It says: “Imagine what we could make.”

But a business has to think about productivity. It must ask: “What will we actually make, how often will we make it, and will it justify the cost?”

There are three types of workshop purchase:

  1. Essential tools — things needed to do regular work.
  2. Useful tools — things that save time, improve quality or open up realistic new services.
  3. Fantasy tools — things bought because they are exciting, then mainly used as expensive shelves.

The aim is to make sure a CNC router would fall into category two, not category three.

Before buying one, I need a proper project list.

Not vague ideas. Not “that might be useful one day.” A real list of jobs.


A Sensible Test Before Buying

Before buying a CNC router, it would make sense to create a trial list of potential projects and ask some practical questions.

For each possible project:

  • What exactly would we make?
  • What material would it use?
  • What size would it be?
  • Could the laser cutter already do it?
  • Could the 3D printer already do it?
  • Could it be made more easily by hand?
  • Would we need to make it more than once?
  • Would it save time?
  • Would it improve quality?
  • Would someone pay for it, or would it support the company’s work?

Possible test projects could include:

  • a set of science apparatus baseboards
  • a boat name plaque for Champagne
  • a camera mount for sailing filming
  • a storage rack for the workshop
  • a template for restoration work
  • a teaching model with removable layers
  • a set of branded signs for the classroom or lab
  • a jig for repeat drilling or assembly

If those projects look genuinely useful, the case for a CNC router becomes stronger.

If the list feels forced, the answer may be “not yet.”


Personal Reflection: The Joy and Trap of Making Things

One of the best things about Philip M Russell Ltd is that the business does not sit neatly in one box.

We teach science. We make videos. We build equipment. We restore boats. We create learning resources. We design practical experiments. We produce social media. We photograph, film, edit, print, engrave, repair and occasionally wonder why the workshop floor has disappeared under another pile of useful things.

A CNC router fits that world very well.

It is the sort of machine that could support teaching, filming, restoration, signage and product development. It could help turn ideas into physical objects. It could allow us to make stronger prototypes and more professional parts.

But that is also why the decision needs care.

Because when a machine could be used for everything, it is easy to forget to ask whether it will actually be used for enough things.

The excitement is real. The possibilities are real. But so are the costs, dust, noise, learning curve and space requirements.


So, Should We Buy One?

The honest answer is: possibly — but not just because it would be exciting.

A CNC router could be a very sensible addition to the workshop if it clearly complements the existing laser cutter, 3D printer and production equipment. It could help with boat restoration, science apparatus manufacture, signage, jigs, workshop improvements and prototype development.

But the decision should be based on real jobs, not machine envy.

The next step is not to press “buy now.” The next step is to create a proper list of projects, estimate the materials, check the workshop space, research dust extraction, understand the software, and decide what size of machine would actually be useful.

The key question remains:

Would a CNC router solve real problems, or would it simply create new ones?

If it solves enough real problems, then it may earn its place in the workshop.

If not, the most sensible CNC router is the one in the catalogue — admired from a safe distance, with the credit card firmly out of reach.

Monday, 1 June 2026

Laser Etching Ideas: From Boat Signs to Teaching Equipment

 


Laser Etching Ideas: From Boat Signs to Teaching Equipment

A Laser Etcher Is Either a Serious Production Tool…

A laser etcher is either a serious production tool or a very dangerous way to make everything in the workshop look branded.

The moment you realise you can engrave wood, acrylic, card, leather, anodised metal, slate and all sorts of other materials, the imagination starts to wander. Suddenly every plain object looks unfinished. The workshop door needs a sign. The lab benches need labels. The sailing project needs name plates. The tuition equipment needs branding. The shelves need QR codes. The boat needs plaques. The camera cases need identifiers. Even the humble storage box starts to look as if it would be vastly improved by having “Philip M Russell Ltd” burnt tastefully into the lid.

Of course, this is exactly the danger.

A laser etcher can quickly become a machine that produces novelty coasters, unnecessary signs and beautifully engraved things that nobody actually asked for. But used properly, it can become a genuinely useful part of the Philip M Russell Ltd workshop: part teaching resource, part media production tool, part sailing restoration aid, part branding system and part experimental manufacturing process.

So the question is not simply, “What can we engrave?”

The better question is:

What can we make that is useful, durable, professional and worth the time?


From Toy to Tool: Why the Laser Etcher Matters

A laser etcher sits in a fascinating space between craft and engineering.

It is not quite the same as a 3D printer, which builds objects layer by layer. It is not the same as a CNC router, which cuts and shapes material mechanically. A laser works with light, heat and precision. It can cut some materials cleanly and engrave others with a level of detail that would be difficult to achieve by hand.

That makes it ideal for small-batch production, prototypes, labels, teaching aids, signs, branding experiments and one-off custom pieces.

For a company like Philip M Russell Ltd, that matters because so much of what we do sits between education, media, design, science, sailing and practical problem-solving. We are often not trying to manufacture thousands of identical products. We are trying to make one useful thing, test it, improve it, and possibly make a small number more.

That is where workshop equipment becomes powerful.

Not because it replaces commercial manufacturing, but because it gives us the ability to say:

“Surely we could make that ourselves?”

And then actually try.


Champagne Name Plates and Display Signs

One of the most obvious projects is linked to the restoration and promotion of Champagne, our Thames A-Rater.

Champagne is not just a boat. She is becoming a restoration project, a filming project, a social media project, a sailing project and possibly a long-term lesson in how complicated it is to fall in love with an elderly racing boat.

A laser etcher could help create small but important visual details for that project.

Possible ideas include:

Engraved name plates for display boards, workshop walls or boat documentation.

A restoration progress board showing key stages: inspection, repairs, varnishing, rigging, sails, launch and return to racing.

A “Champagne Project” sign for use in videos, photographs and behind-the-scenes workshop updates.

A small presentation plaque explaining what a Thames A-Rater is, suitable for events, open days or display beside the boat.

There is something very satisfying about turning a project from “a boat in need of work” into something visually coherent. A well-designed sign or name plate makes the project feel more real. It gives photographs a focal point. It helps tell the story.

There is also a practical side. When filming restoration work, clear signage helps viewers understand what they are looking at. A simple engraved board saying “Champagne — Thames A-Rater Restoration Project” can instantly set the scene in a video thumbnail, workshop photograph or social media post.

The trick will be not to overdo it. Champagne does not need to be turned into a floating gift shop. But a few carefully designed signs, plaques and labels could add professionalism without losing the character of the project.


Engraved Trophies, Plaques and Presentation Pieces

Another possible use is creating engraved trophies or plaques.

Sailing clubs, schools, workshops and educational events often need small awards, thank-you plaques or presentation items. These do not always need to be expensive. In fact, some of the nicest presentation pieces are simple, personal and carefully made.

A laser etcher could be used to create:

Small wooden trophies for club events or informal competitions.

Thank-you plaques for volunteers, instructors, helpers or students.

Workshop achievement plaques for completed projects.

Commemorative items linked to Champagne, Vanessa or other sailing projects.

Educational awards for students who complete revision courses, practical sessions or exam preparation milestones.

There is a fine line here between tasteful and dreadful. We have all seen awards that look as if they were designed by someone who discovered WordArt in 1998 and never recovered.

The aim would be to keep designs clean, simple and professional.

A good plaque does not need twelve fonts, three logos and a dramatic eagle. It needs the right material, good spacing, clear engraving and a reason to exist.


Revision Boards for Students

One of the most interesting educational uses would be laser-etched revision boards.

Most revision resources are paper-based or digital. Both are useful, but physical learning aids can be powerful, especially for students who benefit from seeing key ideas laid out clearly in front of them.

Imagine a small A4 or A3 board engraved with:

Physics equations

Chemistry required practical summaries

Biology key processes

Maths formula reminders

Common exam command words

Graph shapes and transformations

Circuit symbols

Organic chemistry reaction pathways

These could be used in lessons, photographed for social media, or even developed into branded revision tools.

A laser-etched board has a different feel from a printed sheet. It is more permanent. It looks like a proper object rather than another worksheet. For some students, that makes the information feel more important.

For example, a GCSE physics board might show the key electricity equations, circuit symbols and units. A chemistry board might summarise bonding, electrolysis or titration steps. A biology board could show the structure of a leaf, the heart, the digestive system or the stages of mitosis.

The danger, of course, is trying to put too much information on one board. A revision board should not become a textbook engraved onto plywood. It should be selective, visual and useful.

The best boards would probably focus on one topic at a time:

“GCSE Physics: Resistance of a Wire Required Practical”

“A-Level Chemistry: Rate-Determining Steps”

“GCSE Biology: Photosynthesis Summary”

“A-Level Maths: Differentiation Triggers”

Each board could become both a teaching resource and a media prop.


Physics Apparatus Labels

One of the more practical uses is labelling physics apparatus.

In a teaching laboratory, equipment has a habit of becoming mysterious. Leads migrate. Sensors move. Power supplies lose their labels. Boxes acquire random objects. Students ask, “What does this do?” and sometimes the honest answer is, “I labelled it once, but the label fell off in 2017.”

Laser-etched labels could help solve this.

Possible uses include:

Permanent labels for apparatus boxes

Control panel labels

Warning labels

Experiment step labels

Component identification tags

Sensor storage labels

PASCO equipment organisation

Labels for custom-built apparatus

This is especially useful for equipment made in-house. If we design and build our own teaching equipment, clear labelling matters. It helps students understand the apparatus and helps us set up lessons more quickly.

For example, a custom resistance wire experiment could include engraved labels for:

0 cm start point

wire length

power supply

ammeter

voltmeter

jockey contact

safety warning

This does not just make the equipment look better. It improves the teaching.

Students learn more effectively when apparatus is clear, tidy and understandable. A good label can prevent mistakes, reduce setup time and make a practical lesson more focused.

That might not sound glamorous, but in real teaching it matters enormously.


Branded Teaching Equipment

There is also a branding opportunity.

Philip M Russell Ltd already uses a distinctive mixture of teaching, laboratory work, online lessons, video production and practical demonstrations. Branded teaching equipment could help reinforce that identity.

Not in a loud, corporate way. Nobody needs a voltmeter screaming a logo at them.

But subtle branding on custom teaching resources could make the whole operation feel more coherent.

Possible examples include:

Laser-etched logos on wooden demonstration boards

Branded microscope slide boxes

Custom practical trays

Lesson kit boxes

Student revision packs

Display stands for experiments

Camera-friendly apparatus labels

This is particularly useful for video production. When filming educational content, everything visible in the shot contributes to the impression of professionalism.

A neatly labelled, branded experiment tray looks far better than a random collection of wires, crocodile clips and containers. It also helps students follow what is happening on screen.

In online teaching, clarity is everything. A student watching through a camera needs to understand the equipment quickly. Good labelling and consistent branding help create that clarity.


QR Code Plaques Linking to Videos

One of the most exciting ideas is using laser-etched QR codes.

A QR code plaque can connect a physical object to a digital resource. That means a student, visitor or viewer can scan the code and instantly access a video, worksheet, blog post or explanation.

This could be used in several ways:

A QR code on a physics experiment linking to a demonstration video

A QR code beside Champagne linking to her restoration playlist

A QR code on a revision board linking to worked examples

A QR code on workshop equipment linking to safety instructions

A QR code on a display sign linking to a blog article

For example, a small plaque beside the resistance wire apparatus could say:

Scan here to watch the full experiment demonstration.

That connects the physical lesson to the online resource. It also supports students who need to revisit the experiment after the session.

For the Champagne project, a QR code could link to:

The restoration blog

The YouTube playlist

The story of Thames A-Raters

A short video explaining the boat

This is where the laser etcher becomes part of a wider media ecosystem. It is not just making signs. It is helping link workshop, classroom, boat park, website, YouTube and social media together.

The important thing is to test the codes carefully. A beautifully engraved QR code that does not scan is not a technological achievement. It is a decorative square of disappointment.


Safety Signage and Workshop Labels

A workshop needs labels.

This is not the most glamorous use of a laser etcher, but it may be one of the most useful.

The workshop includes tools, materials, electrical equipment, cutting equipment, heating equipment, storage areas and potentially hazardous processes. Clear signage helps prevent mistakes.

Possible signs include:

Eye protection required

Laser in use

Ventilation required

Hot surface

Do not leave unattended

Flammable materials

Acrylic storage

Wood offcuts

3D printer filament

Camera batteries

Chargers

Boat restoration tools

Good workshop signage does two things. It improves safety and it improves efficiency.

When everything has a clear place, you waste less time looking for things. When safety instructions are visible, people are more likely to follow them. When hazardous equipment is clearly marked, visitors and students are less likely to treat the workshop like a craft table at a village fête.

A laser etcher can produce signs that are durable, readable and consistent. That matters in a working environment where paper labels often peel, fade, curl, fall off or acquire mysterious stains.


Merchandise Experiments

Merchandise is another tempting area.

With Champagne, pmrsailing.uk, teaching videos and Philip M Russell Ltd all producing content, there may be opportunities to experiment with small branded items.

Possible merchandise ideas include:

Wooden keyrings

Coasters

Small plaques

Notebook covers

Workshop tokens

Boat-themed signs

Science-themed gifts

A-Rater silhouette designs

Laser-etched Christmas decorations

The key word here is experiments.

It would be very easy to spend days making merchandise nobody asked for. Before producing anything in quantity, it makes sense to test designs, photograph them, share them online and see what attracts interest.

For example, a simple engraved Champagne keyring might be a fun prototype. A Thames A-Rater silhouette on wood or slate might work well as a small product. A science-themed coaster showing a circuit diagram or chemical structure might appeal to students or teachers.

But every product needs a purpose.

Is it for sale?

Is it a giveaway?

Is it a supporter reward?

Is it a prop for videos?

Is it part of a display?

Is it just because the laser etcher was sitting there looking persuasive?

The last reason is not always the best reason, although it is probably the most honest one.


Choosing the Right Materials

One practical question is material choice.

Different materials engrave very differently. Wood can look warm and traditional. Acrylic can look modern and clean. Slate can look impressive for plaques. Card is useful for prototypes. Metal often requires special coatings or suitable anodised surfaces.

For Champagne-related signs, wood may feel more appropriate, especially if the design leans into the heritage of Thames sailing. A clean engraved wooden sign could suit the restoration story far better than bright plastic.

For teaching equipment, acrylic may be useful because it is durable, wipeable and camera-friendly. Clear acrylic labels can look professional on apparatus and display boards.

For workshop signage, durability matters more than romance. The sign needs to survive dust, handling, heat, vibration and being ignored by people who think safety instructions are mainly decorative.

The material should fit the purpose.

That sounds obvious, but it is easy to forget when experimenting. A laser etcher can make many things, but not every material suits every job.


The Design Problem: Less Is Usually Better

The biggest challenge may not be the laser etcher itself.

It may be design discipline.

When you can engrave almost anything, there is a temptation to add more: more text, more logos, more borders, more icons, more decoration. But good design often works because of what has been left out.

A useful sign needs to be readable.

A good plaque needs to be balanced.

A revision board needs clarity.

A QR code plaque needs to scan.

A teaching label needs to help, not distract.

This means designs should be tested before committing to final materials. A paper mock-up or cheap card prototype may reveal problems before wasting wood or acrylic.

Questions to ask before engraving:

Can it be read from the distance it will be used?

Is the text too small?

Does the layout look balanced?

Is the logo necessary?

Does the QR code scan reliably?

Will the material survive its intended use?

Is this genuinely useful, or just another branded object?

That final question may need to be printed and stuck above the laser etcher.

Possibly laser-etched, of course.


Practical Project List: What to Try First

To avoid becoming overwhelmed, it makes sense to start with a small number of useful pilot projects.

1. Champagne Restoration Sign

Create a simple engraved sign for use in photos and videos:

Champagne
Thames A-Rater Restoration Project
Philip M Russell Ltd / pmrsailing.uk

This would be useful immediately for social media, video thumbnails and workshop updates.

2. QR Code Plaque for Champagne

Create a small plaque linking to the Champagne restoration playlist or website page.

This tests QR engraving, design layout and practical usefulness.

3. Physics Apparatus Label Set

Choose one experiment, such as the resistance of a wire practical, and create a complete set of labels.

This directly supports teaching and improves the professional appearance of equipment.

4. GCSE Revision Board Prototype

Create one topic board, such as:

GCSE Physics: Electricity Equations

Test whether students find it useful in lessons.

5. Workshop Safety Sign Set

Produce a small, consistent set of workshop labels and safety signs.

This is practical, useful and hard to argue against.

6. Merchandise Trial

Create three sample items linked to Champagne or pmrsailing.uk, photograph them, and test interest on social media.

Do not make fifty.

Fifty is how cupboards happen.


What This Says About the Company

At first glance, laser etching might seem like a small workshop activity.

But it actually reflects something much wider about Philip M Russell Ltd.

The company does not sit neatly in one box. It is not just tuition. It is not just video production. It is not just science equipment. It is not just sailing media. It is not just restoration, design or R&D.

It is the overlap that makes it interesting.

A laser-etched sign for Champagne is not just a sign. It is part of a story.

A labelled physics apparatus is not just a label. It is part of better teaching.

A QR code plaque is not just a digital link. It is a bridge between the real world and online learning.

A workshop safety sign is not just compliance. It is part of making the workspace more organised and professional.

That is why tools matter. Not because they are shiny or clever, but because they allow ideas to move from the vague stage to the physical stage.

A design on a screen is a possibility.

A finished engraved object is a decision.


Conclusion: The Best Tools Make Ideas Real

The real value of the laser etcher will not be measured by how many things we can engrave.

It will be measured by how many useful things we can make.

Some projects will probably fail. Some materials will not engrave as expected. Some QR codes may be too small. Some signs may look wonderful on screen and slightly ridiculous in real life. Some merchandise ideas may quietly return to the drawer from which they should never have escaped.

But that is part of R&D.

The laser etcher gives us another way to test ideas, improve teaching equipment, support the Champagne restoration project, create better workshop organisation and explore small-scale production.

Used wisely, it could become a serious tool.

Used unwisely, everything in the building may soon have a logo on it.

Possibly including the kettle.

And frankly, the kettle should be nervous.

Saturday, 30 May 2026

What Could We Make Next? R&D in the Philip M Russell Ltd Workshop

 


What Could We Make Next? R&D in the Philip M Russell Ltd Workshop

Some of Our Best Ideas Start With: “Surely We Could Make That Ourselves?”

There is a dangerous phrase in the Philip M Russell Ltd workshop.

It usually starts innocently enough.

We are teaching a lesson, filming a demonstration, repairing something, planning a sailing video, or trying to explain a difficult concept to a student, and then someone says:

“Surely we could make that ourselves?”

At that point, the sensible thing would be to stop, make a cup of tea, and ask whether the world really needs another home-made prototype.

Unfortunately, sensible thinking is not always the strongest force in our workshop.

Instead, the sketchbook comes out. The laser cutter is considered. The 3D printer is inspected. A box of leftover fixings appears from somewhere. Someone says, “It only needs to be simple,” which is almost always the beginning of something that is not simple at all.

But this is also where some of our most useful ideas begin.

R&D at Philip M Russell Ltd is not about inventing gadgets for the sake of it. It is about solving real problems that appear in teaching, filming, sailing, photography, and practical science. Sometimes the problem is that commercial equipment is too expensive. Sometimes it is the wrong size. Sometimes it is not visible enough on camera. Sometimes it simply does not exist.

And sometimes, of course, it exists perfectly well — but we still think we can improve it.

The Workshop as a Problem-Solving Space

The Philip M Russell Ltd workshop is not a pristine engineering laboratory with gleaming benches and a white-coated team of technicians. It is much more interesting than that.

It is part classroom support centre, part media production workshop, part science equipment development space, part boat-improvement department, and part “where did I put that 3 mm Allen key?” museum.

The equipment available gives us a wide range of possibilities:

  • laser cutting for accurate flat parts, templates, signs and teaching aids
  • 3D printing for small components, brackets, clips, adaptors and prototypes
  • hand tools for fitting, adjusting and finishing
  • printing and display equipment for classroom materials and visual boards
  • camera and video equipment for testing how things look on screen
  • sailing equipment and boat projects that constantly create new practical problems

That combination is important. We are not designing in isolation. We can make something, test it in a lesson, film it under studio lights, take it to the river, discover it does not quite work, and then bring it back for version two.

In proper engineering language, this is an iterative design process.

In workshop language, it is more like:

“That nearly worked. Now we know what broke.”

Custom Science Practical Equipment

One of the strongest areas for future R&D is custom science practical equipment.

School science equipment has to survive repeated use, limited budgets, hurried lessons, mixed ability groups and the occasional student who believes that “gentle handling” means “hit it slightly less hard than usual”.

For private tuition, especially when teaching online, the demands are slightly different. Equipment must not only work scientifically, it must also be clear, visible and easy to explain on camera.

A practical may be perfectly acceptable in a classroom but almost useless on video if the important part is too small, hidden by a clamp stand, or only visible from one awkward angle.

That gives us an opportunity.

Could we design practical equipment specifically for teaching, filming and revision?

Making Practical Work More Visible

A good science practical should do three things:

It should demonstrate the principle clearly.

It should allow students to collect meaningful results.

It should help students understand the method, not merely follow instructions.

For example, a resistance wire experiment can be done with a metre ruler, wire and crocodile clips. It works, but it can be imprecise. The wire may not start exactly at zero. The crocodile clip may not make contact at the point being measured. The student may record the length from the wrong place.

A small custom-made end stop or measuring guide can solve part of that problem. It does not need to be complicated. It simply needs to make the starting point reliable and repeatable.

That is exactly the sort of R&D we enjoy: a small improvement that makes the practical better, the teaching clearer and the results more reliable.

A Flower Model That Comes Apart

One possible project is a custom model showing the structure of a flower.

Many students can memorise the words:

stamen, anther, filament, stigma, style, ovary, ovule, petal, sepal.

But memorising the words is not the same as understanding the structure.

A layered, take-apart flower model could make this much easier. Instead of a flat diagram in a textbook, students could physically remove each part and see how the flower is organised.

Imagine a large teaching model made from laser-cut and 3D printed parts:

The petals could lift away.

The sepals could form a separate outer layer.

The stamens could be removable, with enlarged anthers to show where pollen is produced.

The carpel could be split into stigma, style and ovary.

The ovary could open to reveal ovules.

Labels could be added magnetically or slotted into place, allowing students to test themselves.

This would be useful for GCSE Biology, but also ideal for video lessons. A camera could look directly down onto the model while the teacher removes each layer and explains its function.

Instead of saying, “This part is the stigma,” we could show it, remove it, replace it, compare it and ask students to identify it again.

That turns a labelled diagram into an interactive learning tool.

A Leaf Model Built in Layers

The same idea could work beautifully for the structure of a leaf.

Leaf structure is one of those topics where students often learn the labels without fully appreciating the three-dimensional organisation.

A layered model could show:

  • waxy cuticle
  • upper epidermis
  • palisade mesophyll
  • spongy mesophyll
  • air spaces
  • vascular bundle
  • xylem
  • phloem
  • lower epidermis
  • guard cells and stomata

Each layer could be removed in sequence, showing how the structure relates to function.

The palisade layer could contain upright green cells packed with chloroplasts.

The spongy mesophyll could have visible air spaces to show gas movement.

The vascular bundle could use different colours or removable sections to distinguish xylem and phloem.

The stomata could be enlarged so that guard cells can be opened and closed.

This would be particularly useful because students often confuse the roles of the different tissues. A physical layered model would help them see why the palisade layer is near the top, why the spongy mesophyll has spaces, and how water, glucose, carbon dioxide and oxygen move through the leaf.

It would also look excellent on camera, which matters. A teaching model that works in person and on screen is much more useful for modern tuition.

Laser-Cut Teaching Aids

The laser cutter opens up another set of possibilities.

Laser-cut teaching aids can be made quickly, accurately and repeatedly. They are especially useful when students need to move pieces around, match labels, build diagrams or practise processes.

Possible projects include:

Chemistry bonding kits
Students could build ionic lattices, covalent molecules or giant structures using laser-cut pieces and connectors.

Physics ray diagram boards
Mirrors, lenses, rays and objects could be moved around physically to demonstrate reflection, refraction and image formation.

Biology process cards
Respiration, photosynthesis, digestion, immunity and the menstrual cycle could become sequencing activities rather than static notes.

Maths transformation boards
Shapes could be moved, reflected, rotated and enlarged on a grid.

Exam command word boards
Students could match “describe”, “explain”, “compare”, “evaluate” and “calculate” to the type of answer required.

The great advantage of making these ourselves is that they can be designed around actual student difficulties. If several students make the same mistake, that mistake can become the starting point for a new teaching aid.

That is much more responsive than waiting for a commercial product that may never exist.

3D Printed Components

3D printing is ideal for the awkward little parts that are difficult to buy.

Not everything needs to be a grand invention. Sometimes the most useful object is a small clip, bracket, spacer, adaptor or holder.

Possible 3D printed workshop projects include:

  • sensor holders for practical science investigations
  • clamp adaptors for unusual camera angles
  • cable guides for the studio
  • equipment trays for small practical components
  • mounts for microphones, lights or action cameras
  • replacement knobs, feet, spacers and brackets
  • custom holders for pens, probes, rulers or thermometers
  • safe stands for fragile teaching models

The beauty of 3D printing is that it encourages experimentation. A first version can be rough. It only needs to answer one question:

Does the idea work?

If it does, we improve it. If it does not, we have lost a little filament and gained useful information.

That is not failure. That is prototyping.

Better Camera Mounts for Sailing and the New A-Rater

One of the more exciting R&D areas is camera mounting for sailing films, especially with the arrival of the A-Rater project.

Filming boats is difficult. Filming a classic racing sailing boat is even harder. Filming from the boat while it is moving, heeling, tacking, gybing, vibrating and occasionally being attacked by spray is a proper engineering challenge.

A normal camera mount is rarely enough.

We need mounts that are:

  • strong enough to hold the camera securely
  • gentle enough not to damage the boat
  • quick to fit and remove
  • resistant to vibration
  • safe if knocked by crew
  • positioned to show useful sailing action
  • suitable for wet conditions
  • stable enough for smooth footage

For the A-Rater, this becomes even more important. A Thames A-Rater is not just any sailing boat. It is elegant, historic, dramatic and visually fascinating. The filming needs to show the height of the rig, the movement of the crew, the shape of the sails, the speed through the water and the atmosphere of racing on the Thames.

Possible camera mount projects include:

Mast-facing cockpit mounts
To capture the helm, crew movement and sail handling.

Low bow mounts
To show the boat cutting through the water.

Stern mounts
To film the wake, following boats and the overall sailing position.

Boom or rigging-safe mounts
Designed carefully to avoid interfering with control lines or crew movement.

Removable clamp systems
Using protective pads so the boat is not damaged.

360 camera mounts
Allowing footage to be reframed afterwards, especially useful when the action is unpredictable.

The challenge is not simply holding a camera. The challenge is holding a camera in the right place without creating a new hazard or damaging a boat that deserves respect.

That is where workshop R&D becomes part engineering, part filming, part sailing judgement and part common sense.

Sailing-Specific Parts, Templates and Storage Solutions

Sailing generates endless small problems.

Where should this rope go?

How do we store that without tangling it?

Can we make a template for this fitting?

Can we protect that edge?

Can we label these parts?

Can we make a better way of carrying or organising equipment?

The workshop could help with a wide range of sailing-specific projects:

  • rope and control line organisers
  • labelled storage boards
  • templates for fittings
  • protective pads for camera clamps
  • small tool holders for the boat park
  • laminated rigging checklists
  • sail repair templates
  • varnishing guides and masking templates
  • storage boxes for shackles, split rings and small fittings
  • custom signs or labels for boat equipment

These are not glamorous projects, but they are often the ones that save the most time.

A well-designed storage solution can prevent damage, reduce frustration and make future jobs easier. Anyone who has spent ten minutes looking for the one shackle that was “definitely here yesterday” will understand the value of better organisation.

Display Boards for Tuition

The workshop can also support the tuition side of the company through display boards and visual teaching resources.

Even in a digital age, physical display boards still matter. They help students see connections between ideas. They provide quick reference points. They make the learning space feel purposeful.

Possible display boards include:

GCSE Physics equation boards
Grouped by topic, with units and rearrangement prompts.

Chemistry reaction boards
Showing key reactions, tests for ions and required practical summaries.

Biology process boards
Photosynthesis, respiration, immunity, digestion, hormones and inheritance.

Maths method boards
Algebraic manipulation, graph transformations, trigonometry, indices and surds.

Exam technique boards
Command words, common errors, calculation structure and how to show working.

These boards could be printed, mounted, laminated or made modular so that parts can be changed.

They would support in-person lessons but could also appear in the background of videos, reinforcing the idea that Philip M Russell Ltd is a practical, visual and highly prepared learning environment.

From Problem to Prototype

The most important part of R&D is not the equipment. It is the thinking process.

A good prototype usually follows a simple route:

1. Notice the Problem

The best ideas often come from irritation.

A camera angle does not work.

A student misunderstands a diagram.

A practical gives inconsistent results.

A piece of equipment is awkward to use.

A boat part needs a better storage solution.

Instead of ignoring the problem, we ask whether it can be improved.

2. Sketch the Idea

A sketch does not need to be beautiful. It simply needs to capture the idea before it disappears.

This might be a rough drawing on paper, a digital layout, a cardboard mock-up or a few measurements scribbled beside a cup of tea.

3. Build a Simple Version

The first version should not be perfect. In fact, it probably should not try to be.

A prototype exists to test the idea.

Does it fit?

Does it hold?

Does it explain the concept?

Does it survive being used?

Can it be seen clearly on camera?

4. Test It Properly

This is where reality gets a vote.

The object may work beautifully on the bench and fail completely in the classroom, studio or boat park.

That is useful. The test reveals what the sketch could not.

5. Improve It

Version two is almost always better.

The mount becomes stronger.

The model becomes clearer.

The teaching aid becomes easier to use.

The storage box gains a handle.

The label moves to where people can actually read it.

Good R&D is not magic. It is patient improvement.

Why This Matters for Teaching

At first glance, workshop R&D might seem separate from tuition.

It is not.

The best teaching often depends on making difficult ideas visible, memorable and practical. Students do not all learn in the same way. Some need words. Some need diagrams. Some need worked examples. Some need to hold the model, move the pieces and see the process happen.

A custom model of a flower or leaf is not just a nice object. It is a way of helping students understand structure and function.

A better practical apparatus is not just a technical improvement. It is a way of helping students produce better results and understand experimental accuracy.

A display board is not just decoration. It is a revision tool.

A filmed demonstration is not just a video. It is a resource that can help students beyond the lesson.

The workshop supports the classroom because both are trying to solve the same problem:

How do we help students understand things more clearly?

Why This Matters for Media Production

The same is true for filming.

Good video production often depends on small pieces of equipment that viewers never notice.

A camera mount.

A cable guide.

A lighting bracket.

A labelled battery tray.

A safe way of attaching an action camera to a boat.

A display stand for a science demonstration.

When these things work, nobody comments on them. The video simply looks better.

When they do not work, everything becomes harder.

Workshop R&D helps us build the tools that allow filming to happen more smoothly, especially when the filming environment is not a controlled studio but a river, a sailing boat, a laboratory bench or a practical lesson.

The Joy of Making Useful Things

There is also a simple pleasure in making something useful.

Not everything has to become a product. Not every prototype has to be sold. Some things are worth making because they solve one real problem well.

There is satisfaction in taking an idea from a rough sketch to a physical object. There is even more satisfaction when that object helps a student, improves a lesson, supports a video or makes a boat project easier.

Of course, not every idea works.

Some prototypes are too flimsy.

Some are too complicated.

Some solve a problem that, on reflection, did not really need solving.

Some go into the “interesting but not quite” box, which is an essential part of any workshop.

But even those are useful. They teach us what not to do next time.

What Could We Make Next?

So what could we make next?

A layered flower model?

A take-apart leaf structure?

A new camera mount for the A-Rater?

Laser-cut revision tools?

3D printed sensor holders?

Display boards for tuition?

Sailing storage templates?

A better way to film practical science experiments?

The honest answer is probably: several of them.

The workshop works best when it connects different parts of the company. A design idea from sailing may help with filming. A filming problem may inspire a 3D printed bracket. A teaching problem may become a laser-cut resource. A science practical may lead to a new piece of equipment.

That crossover is where the interesting ideas live.

Conclusion: R&D Is Really Just Curiosity With Tools

Research and development sounds grand, but in practice it often begins with curiosity.

Why does this not work better?

Could this be clearer?

Could we make this cheaper?

Could we make it stronger?

Could we make it easier to film?

Could we make it easier for a student to understand?

At Philip M Russell Ltd, the workshop gives us a way to answer those questions physically. We can sketch, cut, print, test, adjust and try again.

Some of our best ideas really do start with the phrase:

“Surely we could make that ourselves?”

And while that phrase can be dangerous, it is also one of the reasons the workshop exists.

Because sometimes the thing you need is not waiting in a catalogue.

Sometimes it is waiting on the workbench.

All I need is time.