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Thread: Engraving speed

  1. #1

    Engraving speed

    Stared this because of other thread that sorta got into this subject.
    Its been said many times here that over 80 watts in a Chinese machine was not advisable for engraving, because it was hard to dial down the power to get a good engraving.
    BUT!! if your speed was faster wouldn't the extra power make up for it.?
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  2. #2
    I would think so too. I engrave almost daily with 400 watts and it still works well
    Epilog Helix 60 watt, Epilog 36EXT 75 watt, 2 Rotary Attachments, 3 Jaw Chuck Rotary Attachment, Kern 52x100 400 watt putting out 580 watts, Photobrasive Laser Mask, Rayzist 1924 Blast Cabinet, ikonics blast cabinet, SR3000 Resist, Epson 1400 Printer, 1 Paragon Glass Kiln, Covington Wet Belt Sander/Polisher, 2 JDS Air Filtration Units, 14" Stone Saw, and A Few Other Things I Forgot About!

  3. #3
    Join Date
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    Like I said in the other post, you don't have the quality machine to be able to handle high speeds with any kind of accuracy. Plus, all I read about glass tubes is that they don't turn on and off fast enough to keep up with higher speeds. So, no, a faster machine won't mean you can take advantage of higher power. You can put a ferrari engine in a volkswagon but that doesn't mean it will go as fast as a ferrari.

  4. #4
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    I thought it had to do with a larger dot size on the more power machines?
    Retired Guy- Central Iowa.HVAC/R , Cloudray Galvo Fiber , -Windows 10

  5. #5
    Join Date
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    That may be part of it but I think that is a minor issue. One other part is power control. If you have a 120 watt machine then every percent you change is a higher value than the same percentage change on a 30 watt machine - eg 10% power on a 120 is 12 watts, on a 30 it is 3 - that's a big difference! Plus, glass tubes don't seem to want to work below a certain percentage, so if you can't get to a low enough number then you will overpower the substrate.

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