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Twotrees TTS-55 Grabador Láser de 40W, Placa Base de 32 Bits, Punto Comprimido, Marcado Para Metal, Corte de Madera Contrachapada, Potencia: 5,5W, Área de Trabajo: 300x300mm

Envío gratis en pedidos superiores a Mex $600.00

Mex $4,324.42

Mex $ 1,881 .00 Mex $1,881.00

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1.Tamaño:Twotrees Tts-55


Acerca de este artículo

  • Tecnología láser avanzada: El módulo láser TTS-55 utiliza la última tecnología de punto de compresión LD+FAC+C-Lens, enfoque fijo, la longitud focal es de sólo 23mm, en comparación con otros láseres de enfoque largo, el láser de enfoque corto tiene una capacidad de grabado y corte más fuerte. Precisión de grabado: 0.1mm. Potencia del láser: 5,5W, potencia de salida de la máquina: 40W.
  • Placa base de 32 bits: La placa base adopta un MCU de doble núcleo de 32 bits, que tiene una mayor velocidad de procesamiento, y la velocidad de grabado puede alcanzar 10000mm/min. El láser puede grabar en línea y la tarjeta TF fuera de línea. Debido al módulo WIFI incorporado, también se puede utilizar la App del teléfono móvil y la WEB del ordenador para el grabado.
  • Compatibilidad con el software: Las máquinas de grabado de la serie Twotrees TTS-25/55 son compatibles con la mayoría de los software de grabado. Por ejemplo, el software libre: LaserGRBL (para Windows), software de pago: Lightburn (para Windows, Mac), aplicación móvil: MKSLaser (para sistema Android e IOS), se puede descargar desde la tienda de móviles.
  • Capacidad de grabado y corte: El láser TTS-55 puede grabar madera, plástico, papel, cuero, bambú, papel esponja, alúmina, acero inoxidable, tablero de chevron, acrílico, vidrio, etc. El láser puede cortar hasta 5mm de madera contrachapada, 3mm de tablero acrílico, 3mm de cartón, 0,7mm de cuero, etc. Área de trabajo: 300x300mm.
  • Nuevas actualizaciones: La Twotrees TTS-55 es una versión mejorada de la TT-5.5S. El perfil de aluminio de la TTS-55 ha añadido una balanza digital, y se ha actualizado a una placa base de 32 bits. Añade interruptor de encendido a la placa base. Cubiertas magnéticas de protección del láser, dispositivos de elevación del eje Z del CNC, gestión del cableado mediante fuelles, postes metálicos de posicionamiento multigrado, etc. Si tiene alguna pregunta, póngase en contacto con nosotros.



Descripción del producto

Grabador láser Twotrees TTS-25/TTS-55

1

P1: ¿Cuál es la diferencia entre los Twotrees TTS-25 y TTS-55?

R1: TTS-25 y TTS-55 tienen diferentes módulos láser.

TTS-25, potencia láser: 2,5 W, potencia de salida de la máquina: 20 W, utilizado principalmente para grabar.

(Puede grabar madera, madera contrachapada, acrílico, papel, papel kraft, cuero, aluminio anodizado, MDF, etc. El láser puede cortar madera contrachapada de 2 mm, cuero de 0,7 mm)

TTS-55, potencia láser: 5,5 W (punto comprimido), potencia de salida de la máquina: 40 W, para grabado y corte.

(El láser con punto comprimido tiene una mayor capacidad de grabado y corte, puede grabar acero inoxidable, adoquines, metal pintado. El láser puede cortar madera contrachapada de 5 mm, tablero acrílico de 3 mm. Cuero de 0,7 mm, etc.)

P2: Cómo montar la máquina y el cableado

R2: 60% premontado. Los clientes pueden seguir las instrucciones en esta página del producto o el video de montaje para completar el montaje.

P3: ¿Qué funciones se pueden actualizar con TTS-25 y TTS-55?

R3: Gracias a la potente placa base de 302 bits, TTS-25 y TTS-55 pueden actualizar el interruptor de vibración, sensor de llama, sistema de asistencia de aire, interruptor de límite, funcionamiento de la pantalla. Además, también tenemos un kit de actualización de extrusión de aluminio, que puede actualizar el área de grabado a 420 x 400 mm (los clientes compran el kit por separado)

1

Escudo láser magnético

El escudo láser conectado magnéticamente hace que la extracción sea muy fácil, y la carcasa carmesí protege el 98% del láser para proteger tus ojos.

La carcasa de blindaje láser tiene agujeros reservados asistidos por aire.

2

Láser de enfoque fijo

No hay necesidad de ajustar la distancia focal antes del grabado, y la distancia focal es de solo 23 mm. En comparación con otros láseres de enfoque largo, los láseres de enfoque corto tienen capacidades de grabado y corte más fuertes, y la potencia láser de los láseres de enfoque fijo es más estable que la de los láseres de zoom.

3

Diseño de elevación del eje Z

El dispositivo de elevación anodizado CNC es accionado por la guía del eje de la barra, y el enfoque láser se puede realizar ajustando la perilla superior, que es adecuado para ajustar la distancia focal al cortar objetos de diferentes grosores.

Por supuesto, también se puede actualizar a otros módulos láser de mayor potencia

3

Gestión de cables con fuelle

El fuelle gestiona la dirección del cable, lo que hace que sea más seguro para la máquina se mueva sin dañar el cable.

2

Unidad de motor doble eje Y

Los motores dobles síncronos hacen que la transmisión del eje Y sea más suave. (Otras marcas de máquinas que utilizan un solo motor tendrán retraso unilateral al moverse)

La extrusión del eje Y izquierdo y derecho es accionada por 4 ruedas POM, que son silenciosas a alta velocidad, ligeras en peso y pequeñas en inercia, adecuadas para grabado de alta velocidad.

6

Compatible con rodillo giratorio de eje Y

Puedes conectar fácilmente el rodillo giratorio del eje Y al eje Y de la placa principal de la máquina de grabado. Compatible con Lightburn y Lasergrbl. (El rodillo giratorio del eje Y debe comprarse por separado)

4

Agregar marcas digitales de escala

4 perfiles con marcas de escala digital, muy claro y fácil de medir el tamaño del artículo que se está grabando

5

Tensor de eje X

El tensor de eje X puede ajustar la tensión de la correa, haciendo que la precisión de grabado de la máquina sea más alta y las líneas grabadas sean más claras y precisas

4

Columna de enfoque fijo multigrado

Columna de posicionamiento multietapa, más conveniente para ajustar el enfoque al grabar objetos de diferentes grosores

5

Interruptor de alimentación independiente

La placa base ha añadido un interruptor de alimentación independiente, que puede apagar la alimentación en caso de emergencia, lo que puede reducir el daño a la placa base causado por un fallo de alimentación ilegal

Varios métodos de control

7

Twotrees TTS-25/TTS-55 admite la aplicación de teléfono móvil/computadora sin conexión, operación USB en línea.

1. ¿Cómo conectar el ordenador a la máquina de grabado TTS?

R: Instala LaserGRBL o Lightburn, utiliza una conexión USB entre el ordenador y la máquina de grabado e instala el controlador CH340. (Hay software y controladores en la tarjeta TF en el paquete) El controlador CH340 debe instalarse, de lo contrario no se puede conectar al ordenador.

Si no puedes abrir el archivo en la tarjeta SD, puedes descargarlo en línea, como buscar LaserGRBL, Lightburn, controlador CH340, etc.

2. ¿Cómo utilizar la aplicación para controlar la máquina de grabado en el teléfono móvil?

Descarga MKSLaser en el teléfono móvil. Instale el controlador CH340 y la herramienta MKS Laser en el ordenador, obtenga la IP e ingrese la IP en el teléfono móvil MKSLaser para controlar la máquina de grabado. Hay videos de instrucciones en esta página del producto. Puedes completar la configuración de acuerdo con el video.

Si tienes más preguntas, envíanos un mensaje y te ayudaremos.

Zona de tallado 300 x 300 mm
Precisión de grabado 0,1 mm
Velocidad de grabado 10000 mm/min
Longitud de onda láser 445 ± 5 nm
Fuente de alimentación 12 V 4 A CC
Software láser compatible Lightburn, LaserGRBL, MKSLaser, etc
Sistema de soporte Windows, Mac, Android, IOS
Método de grabado USB/ APP/ PC sin conexión
Formatos de archivo NC, DXF, BMP, JPG, PNG, G-CODE, etc.
Tiempo de trabajo continuo ≤24 horas
Modo de grabado grabado gráfico, grabado de archivos, grabado de escaneo, grabado de contornos, grabado de píxeles
Entorno de trabajo Temperatura 5-40 grados Celsius, humedad 20-60 % HR
Material de talla Madera, plástico, papel, cuero, bambú, papel de esponja, alúmina, acero inoxidable, cheurón, acrílico
Peso del embalaje 4,6 kg
Tamaño de la máquina 570 x 510 x 150 mm
Tamaño del embalaje 605 x 225 x 190 mm

Jorge G.
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 24 de marzo de 2025
Amazing love it easy to assble and use have mostly used on wood and the results are really good the price is awesome
Jorge G.
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 24 de marzo de 2025
Amazing love it easy to assble and use have mostly used on wood and the results are really good the price is awesome
Jorge G.
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 24 de marzo de 2025
Amazing love it easy to assble and use have mostly used on wood and the results are really good the price is awesome
Jorge G.
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 24 de marzo de 2025
Amazing love it easy to assble and use have mostly used on wood and the results are really good the price is awesome
Jorge G.
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 24 de marzo de 2025
Amazing love it easy to assble and use have mostly used on wood and the results are really good the price is awesome
Jorge G.
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 24 de marzo de 2025
Amazing love it easy to assble and use have mostly used on wood and the results are really good the price is awesome
Jorge G.
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 24 de marzo de 2025
Amazing love it easy to assble and use have mostly used on wood and the results are really good the price is awesome
Jorge G.
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 24 de marzo de 2025
Amazing love it easy to assble and use have mostly used on wood and the results are really good the price is awesome
Javier Ramírez García
Comentado en México el 30 de agosto de 2024
Inicialmente el producto trabajo bien. Buenas instrucciones de ensamble, facil operacion. Pero luego de menos deun mes de uso (62 horas en total) el laser empezo a fallar. Notifique el problema y la atencion fue rapida y efectiva. Yo pensaba solo que me cambiaran el laser pero no existe esa opcion y tuve que regresar toda la maquina y luego del reembolso comprar otra diferente porque la que habia comprado ya habia aumentado mucho de precio. Eso es algo que deben de revisar y considerar ya que con el puro cambio de la unidad laser hubiera sido mas que suficiente.
Javier Ramírez García
Comentado en México el 30 de agosto de 2024
Inicialmente el producto trabajo bien. Buenas instrucciones de ensamble, facil operacion. Pero luego de menos deun mes de uso (62 horas en total) el laser empezo a fallar. Notifique el problema y la atencion fue rapida y efectiva. Yo pensaba solo que me cambiaran el laser pero no existe esa opcion y tuve que regresar toda la maquina y luego del reembolso comprar otra diferente porque la que habia comprado ya habia aumentado mucho de precio. Eso es algo que deben de revisar y considerar ya que con el puro cambio de la unidad laser hubiera sido mas que suficiente.
Javier Ramírez García
Comentado en México el 30 de agosto de 2024
Inicialmente el producto trabajo bien. Buenas instrucciones de ensamble, facil operacion. Pero luego de menos deun mes de uso (62 horas en total) el laser empezo a fallar. Notifique el problema y la atencion fue rapida y efectiva. Yo pensaba solo que me cambiaran el laser pero no existe esa opcion y tuve que regresar toda la maquina y luego del reembolso comprar otra diferente porque la que habia comprado ya habia aumentado mucho de precio. Eso es algo que deben de revisar y considerar ya que con el puro cambio de la unidad laser hubiera sido mas que suficiente.
Javier Ramírez García
Comentado en México el 30 de agosto de 2024
Inicialmente el producto trabajo bien. Buenas instrucciones de ensamble, facil operacion. Pero luego de menos deun mes de uso (62 horas en total) el laser empezo a fallar. Notifique el problema y la atencion fue rapida y efectiva. Yo pensaba solo que me cambiaran el laser pero no existe esa opcion y tuve que regresar toda la maquina y luego del reembolso comprar otra diferente porque la que habia comprado ya habia aumentado mucho de precio. Eso es algo que deben de revisar y considerar ya que con el puro cambio de la unidad laser hubiera sido mas que suficiente.
Javier Ramírez García
Comentado en México el 30 de agosto de 2024
Inicialmente el producto trabajo bien. Buenas instrucciones de ensamble, facil operacion. Pero luego de menos deun mes de uso (62 horas en total) el laser empezo a fallar. Notifique el problema y la atencion fue rapida y efectiva. Yo pensaba solo que me cambiaran el laser pero no existe esa opcion y tuve que regresar toda la maquina y luego del reembolso comprar otra diferente porque la que habia comprado ya habia aumentado mucho de precio. Eso es algo que deben de revisar y considerar ya que con el puro cambio de la unidad laser hubiera sido mas que suficiente.
Javier Ramírez García
Comentado en México el 30 de agosto de 2024
Inicialmente el producto trabajo bien. Buenas instrucciones de ensamble, facil operacion. Pero luego de menos deun mes de uso (62 horas en total) el laser empezo a fallar. Notifique el problema y la atencion fue rapida y efectiva. Yo pensaba solo que me cambiaran el laser pero no existe esa opcion y tuve que regresar toda la maquina y luego del reembolso comprar otra diferente porque la que habia comprado ya habia aumentado mucho de precio. Eso es algo que deben de revisar y considerar ya que con el puro cambio de la unidad laser hubiera sido mas que suficiente.
Javier Ramírez García
Comentado en México el 30 de agosto de 2024
Inicialmente el producto trabajo bien. Buenas instrucciones de ensamble, facil operacion. Pero luego de menos deun mes de uso (62 horas en total) el laser empezo a fallar. Notifique el problema y la atencion fue rapida y efectiva. Yo pensaba solo que me cambiaran el laser pero no existe esa opcion y tuve que regresar toda la maquina y luego del reembolso comprar otra diferente porque la que habia comprado ya habia aumentado mucho de precio. Eso es algo que deben de revisar y considerar ya que con el puro cambio de la unidad laser hubiera sido mas que suficiente.
Javier Ramírez García
Comentado en México el 30 de agosto de 2024
Inicialmente el producto trabajo bien. Buenas instrucciones de ensamble, facil operacion. Pero luego de menos deun mes de uso (62 horas en total) el laser empezo a fallar. Notifique el problema y la atencion fue rapida y efectiva. Yo pensaba solo que me cambiaran el laser pero no existe esa opcion y tuve que regresar toda la maquina y luego del reembolso comprar otra diferente porque la que habia comprado ya habia aumentado mucho de precio. Eso es algo que deben de revisar y considerar ya que con el puro cambio de la unidad laser hubiera sido mas que suficiente.
Bob
Comentado en Australia el 1 de agosto de 2024
We have tried with 2 programs, and are still getting the same results as you can see in the photo's. It looks like one axis is not doing as much as the other one. The two programs are LIGHTBURN and GRBL.Hoping you can help me with this problem.Thanks Bob Mcleod
Bob
Comentado en Australia el 1 de agosto de 2024
We have tried with 2 programs, and are still getting the same results as you can see in the photo's. It looks like one axis is not doing as much as the other one. The two programs are LIGHTBURN and GRBL.Hoping you can help me with this problem.Thanks Bob Mcleod
Bob
Comentado en Australia el 1 de agosto de 2024
We have tried with 2 programs, and are still getting the same results as you can see in the photo's. It looks like one axis is not doing as much as the other one. The two programs are LIGHTBURN and GRBL.Hoping you can help me with this problem.Thanks Bob Mcleod
Bob
Comentado en Australia el 1 de agosto de 2024
We have tried with 2 programs, and are still getting the same results as you can see in the photo's. It looks like one axis is not doing as much as the other one. The two programs are LIGHTBURN and GRBL.Hoping you can help me with this problem.Thanks Bob Mcleod
Bob
Comentado en Australia el 1 de agosto de 2024
We have tried with 2 programs, and are still getting the same results as you can see in the photo's. It looks like one axis is not doing as much as the other one. The two programs are LIGHTBURN and GRBL.Hoping you can help me with this problem.Thanks Bob Mcleod
Bob
Comentado en Australia el 1 de agosto de 2024
We have tried with 2 programs, and are still getting the same results as you can see in the photo's. It looks like one axis is not doing as much as the other one. The two programs are LIGHTBURN and GRBL.Hoping you can help me with this problem.Thanks Bob Mcleod
Bob
Comentado en Australia el 1 de agosto de 2024
We have tried with 2 programs, and are still getting the same results as you can see in the photo's. It looks like one axis is not doing as much as the other one. The two programs are LIGHTBURN and GRBL.Hoping you can help me with this problem.Thanks Bob Mcleod
Bob
Comentado en Australia el 1 de agosto de 2024
We have tried with 2 programs, and are still getting the same results as you can see in the photo's. It looks like one axis is not doing as much as the other one. The two programs are LIGHTBURN and GRBL.Hoping you can help me with this problem.Thanks Bob Mcleod
Dewey Stilwell
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 14 de marzo de 2024
*UPDATE* The main board stopped accepting input from Lightburn in under three months of light use and the seller has been unresponsive. Avoid.Allow me to state at the outset that this is ultimately a good product. I am shooting a laser, as advertised. But an honest rating would be somewhere between 3 and half stars and 4.It took me a while to assemble this, but I'm terrible at assembling things, so that's no real indictment. I did get it put together correctly more or less on the first try. Instructions are in engrish and the manual, while in color, has very small pictures. The included USB stick has a text file with a youtube link. Neat. I didn't use it.The included safety glasses were much appreciated. I ordered a second pair. The included version blocks the laser light better than the ones I ordered.Aiming this thing is hilarious. The frame has a ruler printed on it, but none of that is zero'd against the gantry. In fact, this thing does not include homing sensors. I put a ruled mat under that had a 45 degree angle marked and used that to sorta eyeball it, but if you don't have it slid home on boot, you're going to have a pretty fun time. Additionally, focal height is set by a thumb knob you tighten and loosen along the side, aided by a little notched graduated cylinder. It's primitive, but effective.I'm using lightburn to feed it gCode. It included a profile for lightburn on the thumbstick.... except it was for the 400x400 mm version. I got the 300. It took several angry motor noises and planed circle burns for me to figure out where the mismatch was. Once I reset the bounds, things made a lot more sense.As for the actual cutting, it does pretty good. 5.5 watts of Diode laser will etch wood quite well, and while I had a frustrating time cutting glossy sticker paper, I understand it's a highly reflective substance and this affected absorption. I gave the stickers a black border, and it did reasonably well at roughly 20 inches/s at 100%. The edges do get a bit crispy. I don't mind. My wife does.This is my first laser, and I've had it about a week now. I'm pleased, and look at stuff around my house like targets. I vent the smoke with a fan in the window right above it and that's... aight. I see why people get the smoke hoods though. My brother professionally cuts metal with a 3 KW laser, but didn't want a home version until he saw what this one could do. Seems like a good endorsement to me.Overall, I'd recommend it for makers who want an entry level laser, but not beginners. If I hadn't had similar experiences with my 3D printer, this would have taken me much longer to get the hang of.
Dewey Stilwell
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 14 de marzo de 2024
*UPDATE* The main board stopped accepting input from Lightburn in under three months of light use and the seller has been unresponsive. Avoid.Allow me to state at the outset that this is ultimately a good product. I am shooting a laser, as advertised. But an honest rating would be somewhere between 3 and half stars and 4.It took me a while to assemble this, but I'm terrible at assembling things, so that's no real indictment. I did get it put together correctly more or less on the first try. Instructions are in engrish and the manual, while in color, has very small pictures. The included USB stick has a text file with a youtube link. Neat. I didn't use it.The included safety glasses were much appreciated. I ordered a second pair. The included version blocks the laser light better than the ones I ordered.Aiming this thing is hilarious. The frame has a ruler printed on it, but none of that is zero'd against the gantry. In fact, this thing does not include homing sensors. I put a ruled mat under that had a 45 degree angle marked and used that to sorta eyeball it, but if you don't have it slid home on boot, you're going to have a pretty fun time. Additionally, focal height is set by a thumb knob you tighten and loosen along the side, aided by a little notched graduated cylinder. It's primitive, but effective.I'm using lightburn to feed it gCode. It included a profile for lightburn on the thumbstick.... except it was for the 400x400 mm version. I got the 300. It took several angry motor noises and planed circle burns for me to figure out where the mismatch was. Once I reset the bounds, things made a lot more sense.As for the actual cutting, it does pretty good. 5.5 watts of Diode laser will etch wood quite well, and while I had a frustrating time cutting glossy sticker paper, I understand it's a highly reflective substance and this affected absorption. I gave the stickers a black border, and it did reasonably well at roughly 20 inches/s at 100%. The edges do get a bit crispy. I don't mind. My wife does.This is my first laser, and I've had it about a week now. I'm pleased, and look at stuff around my house like targets. I vent the smoke with a fan in the window right above it and that's... aight. I see why people get the smoke hoods though. My brother professionally cuts metal with a 3 KW laser, but didn't want a home version until he saw what this one could do. Seems like a good endorsement to me.Overall, I'd recommend it for makers who want an entry level laser, but not beginners. If I hadn't had similar experiences with my 3D printer, this would have taken me much longer to get the hang of.
Dewey Stilwell
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 14 de marzo de 2024
*UPDATE* The main board stopped accepting input from Lightburn in under three months of light use and the seller has been unresponsive. Avoid.Allow me to state at the outset that this is ultimately a good product. I am shooting a laser, as advertised. But an honest rating would be somewhere between 3 and half stars and 4.It took me a while to assemble this, but I'm terrible at assembling things, so that's no real indictment. I did get it put together correctly more or less on the first try. Instructions are in engrish and the manual, while in color, has very small pictures. The included USB stick has a text file with a youtube link. Neat. I didn't use it.The included safety glasses were much appreciated. I ordered a second pair. The included version blocks the laser light better than the ones I ordered.Aiming this thing is hilarious. The frame has a ruler printed on it, but none of that is zero'd against the gantry. In fact, this thing does not include homing sensors. I put a ruled mat under that had a 45 degree angle marked and used that to sorta eyeball it, but if you don't have it slid home on boot, you're going to have a pretty fun time. Additionally, focal height is set by a thumb knob you tighten and loosen along the side, aided by a little notched graduated cylinder. It's primitive, but effective.I'm using lightburn to feed it gCode. It included a profile for lightburn on the thumbstick.... except it was for the 400x400 mm version. I got the 300. It took several angry motor noises and planed circle burns for me to figure out where the mismatch was. Once I reset the bounds, things made a lot more sense.As for the actual cutting, it does pretty good. 5.5 watts of Diode laser will etch wood quite well, and while I had a frustrating time cutting glossy sticker paper, I understand it's a highly reflective substance and this affected absorption. I gave the stickers a black border, and it did reasonably well at roughly 20 inches/s at 100%. The edges do get a bit crispy. I don't mind. My wife does.This is my first laser, and I've had it about a week now. I'm pleased, and look at stuff around my house like targets. I vent the smoke with a fan in the window right above it and that's... aight. I see why people get the smoke hoods though. My brother professionally cuts metal with a 3 KW laser, but didn't want a home version until he saw what this one could do. Seems like a good endorsement to me.Overall, I'd recommend it for makers who want an entry level laser, but not beginners. If I hadn't had similar experiences with my 3D printer, this would have taken me much longer to get the hang of.
Dewey Stilwell
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 14 de marzo de 2024
*UPDATE* The main board stopped accepting input from Lightburn in under three months of light use and the seller has been unresponsive. Avoid.Allow me to state at the outset that this is ultimately a good product. I am shooting a laser, as advertised. But an honest rating would be somewhere between 3 and half stars and 4.It took me a while to assemble this, but I'm terrible at assembling things, so that's no real indictment. I did get it put together correctly more or less on the first try. Instructions are in engrish and the manual, while in color, has very small pictures. The included USB stick has a text file with a youtube link. Neat. I didn't use it.The included safety glasses were much appreciated. I ordered a second pair. The included version blocks the laser light better than the ones I ordered.Aiming this thing is hilarious. The frame has a ruler printed on it, but none of that is zero'd against the gantry. In fact, this thing does not include homing sensors. I put a ruled mat under that had a 45 degree angle marked and used that to sorta eyeball it, but if you don't have it slid home on boot, you're going to have a pretty fun time. Additionally, focal height is set by a thumb knob you tighten and loosen along the side, aided by a little notched graduated cylinder. It's primitive, but effective.I'm using lightburn to feed it gCode. It included a profile for lightburn on the thumbstick.... except it was for the 400x400 mm version. I got the 300. It took several angry motor noises and planed circle burns for me to figure out where the mismatch was. Once I reset the bounds, things made a lot more sense.As for the actual cutting, it does pretty good. 5.5 watts of Diode laser will etch wood quite well, and while I had a frustrating time cutting glossy sticker paper, I understand it's a highly reflective substance and this affected absorption. I gave the stickers a black border, and it did reasonably well at roughly 20 inches/s at 100%. The edges do get a bit crispy. I don't mind. My wife does.This is my first laser, and I've had it about a week now. I'm pleased, and look at stuff around my house like targets. I vent the smoke with a fan in the window right above it and that's... aight. I see why people get the smoke hoods though. My brother professionally cuts metal with a 3 KW laser, but didn't want a home version until he saw what this one could do. Seems like a good endorsement to me.Overall, I'd recommend it for makers who want an entry level laser, but not beginners. If I hadn't had similar experiences with my 3D printer, this would have taken me much longer to get the hang of.
Dewey Stilwell
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 14 de marzo de 2024
*UPDATE* The main board stopped accepting input from Lightburn in under three months of light use and the seller has been unresponsive. Avoid.Allow me to state at the outset that this is ultimately a good product. I am shooting a laser, as advertised. But an honest rating would be somewhere between 3 and half stars and 4.It took me a while to assemble this, but I'm terrible at assembling things, so that's no real indictment. I did get it put together correctly more or less on the first try. Instructions are in engrish and the manual, while in color, has very small pictures. The included USB stick has a text file with a youtube link. Neat. I didn't use it.The included safety glasses were much appreciated. I ordered a second pair. The included version blocks the laser light better than the ones I ordered.Aiming this thing is hilarious. The frame has a ruler printed on it, but none of that is zero'd against the gantry. In fact, this thing does not include homing sensors. I put a ruled mat under that had a 45 degree angle marked and used that to sorta eyeball it, but if you don't have it slid home on boot, you're going to have a pretty fun time. Additionally, focal height is set by a thumb knob you tighten and loosen along the side, aided by a little notched graduated cylinder. It's primitive, but effective.I'm using lightburn to feed it gCode. It included a profile for lightburn on the thumbstick.... except it was for the 400x400 mm version. I got the 300. It took several angry motor noises and planed circle burns for me to figure out where the mismatch was. Once I reset the bounds, things made a lot more sense.As for the actual cutting, it does pretty good. 5.5 watts of Diode laser will etch wood quite well, and while I had a frustrating time cutting glossy sticker paper, I understand it's a highly reflective substance and this affected absorption. I gave the stickers a black border, and it did reasonably well at roughly 20 inches/s at 100%. The edges do get a bit crispy. I don't mind. My wife does.This is my first laser, and I've had it about a week now. I'm pleased, and look at stuff around my house like targets. I vent the smoke with a fan in the window right above it and that's... aight. I see why people get the smoke hoods though. My brother professionally cuts metal with a 3 KW laser, but didn't want a home version until he saw what this one could do. Seems like a good endorsement to me.Overall, I'd recommend it for makers who want an entry level laser, but not beginners. If I hadn't had similar experiences with my 3D printer, this would have taken me much longer to get the hang of.
Dewey Stilwell
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 14 de marzo de 2024
*UPDATE* The main board stopped accepting input from Lightburn in under three months of light use and the seller has been unresponsive. Avoid.Allow me to state at the outset that this is ultimately a good product. I am shooting a laser, as advertised. But an honest rating would be somewhere between 3 and half stars and 4.It took me a while to assemble this, but I'm terrible at assembling things, so that's no real indictment. I did get it put together correctly more or less on the first try. Instructions are in engrish and the manual, while in color, has very small pictures. The included USB stick has a text file with a youtube link. Neat. I didn't use it.The included safety glasses were much appreciated. I ordered a second pair. The included version blocks the laser light better than the ones I ordered.Aiming this thing is hilarious. The frame has a ruler printed on it, but none of that is zero'd against the gantry. In fact, this thing does not include homing sensors. I put a ruled mat under that had a 45 degree angle marked and used that to sorta eyeball it, but if you don't have it slid home on boot, you're going to have a pretty fun time. Additionally, focal height is set by a thumb knob you tighten and loosen along the side, aided by a little notched graduated cylinder. It's primitive, but effective.I'm using lightburn to feed it gCode. It included a profile for lightburn on the thumbstick.... except it was for the 400x400 mm version. I got the 300. It took several angry motor noises and planed circle burns for me to figure out where the mismatch was. Once I reset the bounds, things made a lot more sense.As for the actual cutting, it does pretty good. 5.5 watts of Diode laser will etch wood quite well, and while I had a frustrating time cutting glossy sticker paper, I understand it's a highly reflective substance and this affected absorption. I gave the stickers a black border, and it did reasonably well at roughly 20 inches/s at 100%. The edges do get a bit crispy. I don't mind. My wife does.This is my first laser, and I've had it about a week now. I'm pleased, and look at stuff around my house like targets. I vent the smoke with a fan in the window right above it and that's... aight. I see why people get the smoke hoods though. My brother professionally cuts metal with a 3 KW laser, but didn't want a home version until he saw what this one could do. Seems like a good endorsement to me.Overall, I'd recommend it for makers who want an entry level laser, but not beginners. If I hadn't had similar experiences with my 3D printer, this would have taken me much longer to get the hang of.
Dewey Stilwell
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 14 de marzo de 2024
*UPDATE* The main board stopped accepting input from Lightburn in under three months of light use and the seller has been unresponsive. Avoid.Allow me to state at the outset that this is ultimately a good product. I am shooting a laser, as advertised. But an honest rating would be somewhere between 3 and half stars and 4.It took me a while to assemble this, but I'm terrible at assembling things, so that's no real indictment. I did get it put together correctly more or less on the first try. Instructions are in engrish and the manual, while in color, has very small pictures. The included USB stick has a text file with a youtube link. Neat. I didn't use it.The included safety glasses were much appreciated. I ordered a second pair. The included version blocks the laser light better than the ones I ordered.Aiming this thing is hilarious. The frame has a ruler printed on it, but none of that is zero'd against the gantry. In fact, this thing does not include homing sensors. I put a ruled mat under that had a 45 degree angle marked and used that to sorta eyeball it, but if you don't have it slid home on boot, you're going to have a pretty fun time. Additionally, focal height is set by a thumb knob you tighten and loosen along the side, aided by a little notched graduated cylinder. It's primitive, but effective.I'm using lightburn to feed it gCode. It included a profile for lightburn on the thumbstick.... except it was for the 400x400 mm version. I got the 300. It took several angry motor noises and planed circle burns for me to figure out where the mismatch was. Once I reset the bounds, things made a lot more sense.As for the actual cutting, it does pretty good. 5.5 watts of Diode laser will etch wood quite well, and while I had a frustrating time cutting glossy sticker paper, I understand it's a highly reflective substance and this affected absorption. I gave the stickers a black border, and it did reasonably well at roughly 20 inches/s at 100%. The edges do get a bit crispy. I don't mind. My wife does.This is my first laser, and I've had it about a week now. I'm pleased, and look at stuff around my house like targets. I vent the smoke with a fan in the window right above it and that's... aight. I see why people get the smoke hoods though. My brother professionally cuts metal with a 3 KW laser, but didn't want a home version until he saw what this one could do. Seems like a good endorsement to me.Overall, I'd recommend it for makers who want an entry level laser, but not beginners. If I hadn't had similar experiences with my 3D printer, this would have taken me much longer to get the hang of.
Dewey Stilwell
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 14 de marzo de 2024
*UPDATE* The main board stopped accepting input from Lightburn in under three months of light use and the seller has been unresponsive. Avoid.Allow me to state at the outset that this is ultimately a good product. I am shooting a laser, as advertised. But an honest rating would be somewhere between 3 and half stars and 4.It took me a while to assemble this, but I'm terrible at assembling things, so that's no real indictment. I did get it put together correctly more or less on the first try. Instructions are in engrish and the manual, while in color, has very small pictures. The included USB stick has a text file with a youtube link. Neat. I didn't use it.The included safety glasses were much appreciated. I ordered a second pair. The included version blocks the laser light better than the ones I ordered.Aiming this thing is hilarious. The frame has a ruler printed on it, but none of that is zero'd against the gantry. In fact, this thing does not include homing sensors. I put a ruled mat under that had a 45 degree angle marked and used that to sorta eyeball it, but if you don't have it slid home on boot, you're going to have a pretty fun time. Additionally, focal height is set by a thumb knob you tighten and loosen along the side, aided by a little notched graduated cylinder. It's primitive, but effective.I'm using lightburn to feed it gCode. It included a profile for lightburn on the thumbstick.... except it was for the 400x400 mm version. I got the 300. It took several angry motor noises and planed circle burns for me to figure out where the mismatch was. Once I reset the bounds, things made a lot more sense.As for the actual cutting, it does pretty good. 5.5 watts of Diode laser will etch wood quite well, and while I had a frustrating time cutting glossy sticker paper, I understand it's a highly reflective substance and this affected absorption. I gave the stickers a black border, and it did reasonably well at roughly 20 inches/s at 100%. The edges do get a bit crispy. I don't mind. My wife does.This is my first laser, and I've had it about a week now. I'm pleased, and look at stuff around my house like targets. I vent the smoke with a fan in the window right above it and that's... aight. I see why people get the smoke hoods though. My brother professionally cuts metal with a 3 KW laser, but didn't want a home version until he saw what this one could do. Seems like a good endorsement to me.Overall, I'd recommend it for makers who want an entry level laser, but not beginners. If I hadn't had similar experiences with my 3D printer, this would have taken me much longer to get the hang of.
Vís
Comentado en México el 6 de febrero de 2024
Es de tela fresca, para época de calor está perfecta, aunque si no quieres estarte acomodando cada rato la frazada te recomiendo las que parecen conos
Mike C
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 31 de octubre de 2024
I purchased this product along with a honeycomb mat and an air assist to keep the laser cool. The engraver was relatively straight forward to assemble. I watched the assembly video and followed the instructions. The screws were all supplied in individual bags and marked which was a big help, however about halfway through the assembly video they stopped showing you what size screws were needed for the current application, you then had to revert to the manual to find out which size screw was needed. I ran a couple of test runs with the engraver and it worked as advertised. When I tried to assemble the air assist I found that the supplied instructions were terrible, There were critical steps that were left out of the assembly process. Twotrees says they have 24/7 support available so I emailed the support team with an assembly question and I included 3 pictures showing the problem I was having. After 2 days I had not heard back from them so I was finally able to sit down and work though the problem myself and get the air assist operating correctly. Three day after I sent the request I received an email from Twotrees support stating I need to fill out a form and provide details and pictures or video of the problem. Both of these things I had already provided, so now they wanted me to send it again which would cause further delay. The thing that really upset me was this statement that the support person sent me, "we generally recommend obtaining after-sales support from the purchasing website". How on earth is an Amazon employee going to assist with a technical issue regarding a product that was manufactured by Twotrees? If they don't want to support their product if it purchased through a retailer other then their own then they should not offer it for sale through outside retailers. So as of this point the engraver and air assist are both assembled and working properly but I will say that I am not very confident that Twotrees will be there to assist should issues arise.Update: Twotrees contacted me after I expressed my dissatisfaction with their response to my technical issue. This is their clarification response. "We generally recommend after-sales support from the site of purchase" is because if you are still under warranty, the damaged parts can be sent to you free of charge. If the product is not purchased from the official website, we cannot provide warranty service, but we still provide technical support. This was a much better explanation. I raised my rating to 4 stars. The product is working as it should. There are still issues with assembly instructions though.
Mike C
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 31 de octubre de 2024
I purchased this product along with a honeycomb mat and an air assist to keep the laser cool. The engraver was relatively straight forward to assemble. I watched the assembly video and followed the instructions. The screws were all supplied in individual bags and marked which was a big help, however about halfway through the assembly video they stopped showing you what size screws were needed for the current application, you then had to revert to the manual to find out which size screw was needed. I ran a couple of test runs with the engraver and it worked as advertised. When I tried to assemble the air assist I found that the supplied instructions were terrible, There were critical steps that were left out of the assembly process. Twotrees says they have 24/7 support available so I emailed the support team with an assembly question and I included 3 pictures showing the problem I was having. After 2 days I had not heard back from them so I was finally able to sit down and work though the problem myself and get the air assist operating correctly. Three day after I sent the request I received an email from Twotrees support stating I need to fill out a form and provide details and pictures or video of the problem. Both of these things I had already provided, so now they wanted me to send it again which would cause further delay. The thing that really upset me was this statement that the support person sent me, "we generally recommend obtaining after-sales support from the purchasing website". How on earth is an Amazon employee going to assist with a technical issue regarding a product that was manufactured by Twotrees? If they don't want to support their product if it purchased through a retailer other then their own then they should not offer it for sale through outside retailers. So as of this point the engraver and air assist are both assembled and working properly but I will say that I am not very confident that Twotrees will be there to assist should issues arise.Update: Twotrees contacted me after I expressed my dissatisfaction with their response to my technical issue. This is their clarification response. "We generally recommend after-sales support from the site of purchase" is because if you are still under warranty, the damaged parts can be sent to you free of charge. If the product is not purchased from the official website, we cannot provide warranty service, but we still provide technical support. This was a much better explanation. I raised my rating to 4 stars. The product is working as it should. There are still issues with assembly instructions though.
Mike C
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 31 de octubre de 2024
I purchased this product along with a honeycomb mat and an air assist to keep the laser cool. The engraver was relatively straight forward to assemble. I watched the assembly video and followed the instructions. The screws were all supplied in individual bags and marked which was a big help, however about halfway through the assembly video they stopped showing you what size screws were needed for the current application, you then had to revert to the manual to find out which size screw was needed. I ran a couple of test runs with the engraver and it worked as advertised. When I tried to assemble the air assist I found that the supplied instructions were terrible, There were critical steps that were left out of the assembly process. Twotrees says they have 24/7 support available so I emailed the support team with an assembly question and I included 3 pictures showing the problem I was having. After 2 days I had not heard back from them so I was finally able to sit down and work though the problem myself and get the air assist operating correctly. Three day after I sent the request I received an email from Twotrees support stating I need to fill out a form and provide details and pictures or video of the problem. Both of these things I had already provided, so now they wanted me to send it again which would cause further delay. The thing that really upset me was this statement that the support person sent me, "we generally recommend obtaining after-sales support from the purchasing website". How on earth is an Amazon employee going to assist with a technical issue regarding a product that was manufactured by Twotrees? If they don't want to support their product if it purchased through a retailer other then their own then they should not offer it for sale through outside retailers. So as of this point the engraver and air assist are both assembled and working properly but I will say that I am not very confident that Twotrees will be there to assist should issues arise.Update: Twotrees contacted me after I expressed my dissatisfaction with their response to my technical issue. This is their clarification response. "We generally recommend after-sales support from the site of purchase" is because if you are still under warranty, the damaged parts can be sent to you free of charge. If the product is not purchased from the official website, we cannot provide warranty service, but we still provide technical support. This was a much better explanation. I raised my rating to 4 stars. The product is working as it should. There are still issues with assembly instructions though.
Mike C
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 31 de octubre de 2024
I purchased this product along with a honeycomb mat and an air assist to keep the laser cool. The engraver was relatively straight forward to assemble. I watched the assembly video and followed the instructions. The screws were all supplied in individual bags and marked which was a big help, however about halfway through the assembly video they stopped showing you what size screws were needed for the current application, you then had to revert to the manual to find out which size screw was needed. I ran a couple of test runs with the engraver and it worked as advertised. When I tried to assemble the air assist I found that the supplied instructions were terrible, There were critical steps that were left out of the assembly process. Twotrees says they have 24/7 support available so I emailed the support team with an assembly question and I included 3 pictures showing the problem I was having. After 2 days I had not heard back from them so I was finally able to sit down and work though the problem myself and get the air assist operating correctly. Three day after I sent the request I received an email from Twotrees support stating I need to fill out a form and provide details and pictures or video of the problem. Both of these things I had already provided, so now they wanted me to send it again which would cause further delay. The thing that really upset me was this statement that the support person sent me, "we generally recommend obtaining after-sales support from the purchasing website". How on earth is an Amazon employee going to assist with a technical issue regarding a product that was manufactured by Twotrees? If they don't want to support their product if it purchased through a retailer other then their own then they should not offer it for sale through outside retailers. So as of this point the engraver and air assist are both assembled and working properly but I will say that I am not very confident that Twotrees will be there to assist should issues arise.Update: Twotrees contacted me after I expressed my dissatisfaction with their response to my technical issue. This is their clarification response. "We generally recommend after-sales support from the site of purchase" is because if you are still under warranty, the damaged parts can be sent to you free of charge. If the product is not purchased from the official website, we cannot provide warranty service, but we still provide technical support. This was a much better explanation. I raised my rating to 4 stars. The product is working as it should. There are still issues with assembly instructions though.
Mike C
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 31 de octubre de 2024
I purchased this product along with a honeycomb mat and an air assist to keep the laser cool. The engraver was relatively straight forward to assemble. I watched the assembly video and followed the instructions. The screws were all supplied in individual bags and marked which was a big help, however about halfway through the assembly video they stopped showing you what size screws were needed for the current application, you then had to revert to the manual to find out which size screw was needed. I ran a couple of test runs with the engraver and it worked as advertised. When I tried to assemble the air assist I found that the supplied instructions were terrible, There were critical steps that were left out of the assembly process. Twotrees says they have 24/7 support available so I emailed the support team with an assembly question and I included 3 pictures showing the problem I was having. After 2 days I had not heard back from them so I was finally able to sit down and work though the problem myself and get the air assist operating correctly. Three day after I sent the request I received an email from Twotrees support stating I need to fill out a form and provide details and pictures or video of the problem. Both of these things I had already provided, so now they wanted me to send it again which would cause further delay. The thing that really upset me was this statement that the support person sent me, "we generally recommend obtaining after-sales support from the purchasing website". How on earth is an Amazon employee going to assist with a technical issue regarding a product that was manufactured by Twotrees? If they don't want to support their product if it purchased through a retailer other then their own then they should not offer it for sale through outside retailers. So as of this point the engraver and air assist are both assembled and working properly but I will say that I am not very confident that Twotrees will be there to assist should issues arise.Update: Twotrees contacted me after I expressed my dissatisfaction with their response to my technical issue. This is their clarification response. "We generally recommend after-sales support from the site of purchase" is because if you are still under warranty, the damaged parts can be sent to you free of charge. If the product is not purchased from the official website, we cannot provide warranty service, but we still provide technical support. This was a much better explanation. I raised my rating to 4 stars. The product is working as it should. There are still issues with assembly instructions though.
Mike C
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 31 de octubre de 2024
I purchased this product along with a honeycomb mat and an air assist to keep the laser cool. The engraver was relatively straight forward to assemble. I watched the assembly video and followed the instructions. The screws were all supplied in individual bags and marked which was a big help, however about halfway through the assembly video they stopped showing you what size screws were needed for the current application, you then had to revert to the manual to find out which size screw was needed. I ran a couple of test runs with the engraver and it worked as advertised. When I tried to assemble the air assist I found that the supplied instructions were terrible, There were critical steps that were left out of the assembly process. Twotrees says they have 24/7 support available so I emailed the support team with an assembly question and I included 3 pictures showing the problem I was having. After 2 days I had not heard back from them so I was finally able to sit down and work though the problem myself and get the air assist operating correctly. Three day after I sent the request I received an email from Twotrees support stating I need to fill out a form and provide details and pictures or video of the problem. Both of these things I had already provided, so now they wanted me to send it again which would cause further delay. The thing that really upset me was this statement that the support person sent me, "we generally recommend obtaining after-sales support from the purchasing website". How on earth is an Amazon employee going to assist with a technical issue regarding a product that was manufactured by Twotrees? If they don't want to support their product if it purchased through a retailer other then their own then they should not offer it for sale through outside retailers. So as of this point the engraver and air assist are both assembled and working properly but I will say that I am not very confident that Twotrees will be there to assist should issues arise.Update: Twotrees contacted me after I expressed my dissatisfaction with their response to my technical issue. This is their clarification response. "We generally recommend after-sales support from the site of purchase" is because if you are still under warranty, the damaged parts can be sent to you free of charge. If the product is not purchased from the official website, we cannot provide warranty service, but we still provide technical support. This was a much better explanation. I raised my rating to 4 stars. The product is working as it should. There are still issues with assembly instructions though.
Mike C
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 31 de octubre de 2024
I purchased this product along with a honeycomb mat and an air assist to keep the laser cool. The engraver was relatively straight forward to assemble. I watched the assembly video and followed the instructions. The screws were all supplied in individual bags and marked which was a big help, however about halfway through the assembly video they stopped showing you what size screws were needed for the current application, you then had to revert to the manual to find out which size screw was needed. I ran a couple of test runs with the engraver and it worked as advertised. When I tried to assemble the air assist I found that the supplied instructions were terrible, There were critical steps that were left out of the assembly process. Twotrees says they have 24/7 support available so I emailed the support team with an assembly question and I included 3 pictures showing the problem I was having. After 2 days I had not heard back from them so I was finally able to sit down and work though the problem myself and get the air assist operating correctly. Three day after I sent the request I received an email from Twotrees support stating I need to fill out a form and provide details and pictures or video of the problem. Both of these things I had already provided, so now they wanted me to send it again which would cause further delay. The thing that really upset me was this statement that the support person sent me, "we generally recommend obtaining after-sales support from the purchasing website". How on earth is an Amazon employee going to assist with a technical issue regarding a product that was manufactured by Twotrees? If they don't want to support their product if it purchased through a retailer other then their own then they should not offer it for sale through outside retailers. So as of this point the engraver and air assist are both assembled and working properly but I will say that I am not very confident that Twotrees will be there to assist should issues arise.Update: Twotrees contacted me after I expressed my dissatisfaction with their response to my technical issue. This is their clarification response. "We generally recommend after-sales support from the site of purchase" is because if you are still under warranty, the damaged parts can be sent to you free of charge. If the product is not purchased from the official website, we cannot provide warranty service, but we still provide technical support. This was a much better explanation. I raised my rating to 4 stars. The product is working as it should. There are still issues with assembly instructions though.
Mike C
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 31 de octubre de 2024
I purchased this product along with a honeycomb mat and an air assist to keep the laser cool. The engraver was relatively straight forward to assemble. I watched the assembly video and followed the instructions. The screws were all supplied in individual bags and marked which was a big help, however about halfway through the assembly video they stopped showing you what size screws were needed for the current application, you then had to revert to the manual to find out which size screw was needed. I ran a couple of test runs with the engraver and it worked as advertised. When I tried to assemble the air assist I found that the supplied instructions were terrible, There were critical steps that were left out of the assembly process. Twotrees says they have 24/7 support available so I emailed the support team with an assembly question and I included 3 pictures showing the problem I was having. After 2 days I had not heard back from them so I was finally able to sit down and work though the problem myself and get the air assist operating correctly. Three day after I sent the request I received an email from Twotrees support stating I need to fill out a form and provide details and pictures or video of the problem. Both of these things I had already provided, so now they wanted me to send it again which would cause further delay. The thing that really upset me was this statement that the support person sent me, "we generally recommend obtaining after-sales support from the purchasing website". How on earth is an Amazon employee going to assist with a technical issue regarding a product that was manufactured by Twotrees? If they don't want to support their product if it purchased through a retailer other then their own then they should not offer it for sale through outside retailers. So as of this point the engraver and air assist are both assembled and working properly but I will say that I am not very confident that Twotrees will be there to assist should issues arise.Update: Twotrees contacted me after I expressed my dissatisfaction with their response to my technical issue. This is their clarification response. "We generally recommend after-sales support from the site of purchase" is because if you are still under warranty, the damaged parts can be sent to you free of charge. If the product is not purchased from the official website, we cannot provide warranty service, but we still provide technical support. This was a much better explanation. I raised my rating to 4 stars. The product is working as it should. There are still issues with assembly instructions though.
PaolA
Comentado en México el 30 de julio de 2023
Me encantó porque es súper delgada y yo vivo en zona de calor
Itza
Comentado en México el 20 de junio de 2023
Me es un poco estorbosa, pero la tela es increíble y muy fresca.
María Mejía
Comentado en México el 1 de diciembre de 2023
Era un regalo y le encantó a la chava
Alejandro
Comentado en México el 9 de noviembre de 2023
La tela es de bajísima calidad, se ve todo y al lavar se encoje.
Excelente calidad y muy útiles en la cocina
Comentado en México el 10 de noviembre de 2023
Ligero, fácil de usar me ha salvado de muchas realmente lo recomiendo
dafna
Comentado en México el 18 de enero de 2023
Muy muy muy dificil de usar. Si eres un mortal como yo no la compres. Nunca pude hacerlo compatible con mac.En la pc tarde dias y cuando lo logre el laser que dice q es para pintar no pinta y el q es para cortar pinta pero dejando superficies muy resaltadas
dafna
Comentado en México el 18 de enero de 2023
Muy muy muy dificil de usar. Si eres un mortal como yo no la compres. Nunca pude hacerlo compatible con mac.En la pc tarde dias y cuando lo logre el laser que dice q es para pintar no pinta y el q es para cortar pinta pero dejando superficies muy resaltadas
dafna
Comentado en México el 18 de enero de 2023
Muy muy muy dificil de usar. Si eres un mortal como yo no la compres. Nunca pude hacerlo compatible con mac.En la pc tarde dias y cuando lo logre el laser que dice q es para pintar no pinta y el q es para cortar pinta pero dejando superficies muy resaltadas
dafna
Comentado en México el 18 de enero de 2023
Muy muy muy dificil de usar. Si eres un mortal como yo no la compres. Nunca pude hacerlo compatible con mac.En la pc tarde dias y cuando lo logre el laser que dice q es para pintar no pinta y el q es para cortar pinta pero dejando superficies muy resaltadas
dafna
Comentado en México el 18 de enero de 2023
Muy muy muy dificil de usar. Si eres un mortal como yo no la compres. Nunca pude hacerlo compatible con mac.En la pc tarde dias y cuando lo logre el laser que dice q es para pintar no pinta y el q es para cortar pinta pero dejando superficies muy resaltadas
dafna
Comentado en México el 18 de enero de 2023
Muy muy muy dificil de usar. Si eres un mortal como yo no la compres. Nunca pude hacerlo compatible con mac.En la pc tarde dias y cuando lo logre el laser que dice q es para pintar no pinta y el q es para cortar pinta pero dejando superficies muy resaltadas
dafna
Comentado en México el 18 de enero de 2023
Muy muy muy dificil de usar. Si eres un mortal como yo no la compres. Nunca pude hacerlo compatible con mac.En la pc tarde dias y cuando lo logre el laser que dice q es para pintar no pinta y el q es para cortar pinta pero dejando superficies muy resaltadas
dafna
Comentado en México el 18 de enero de 2023
Muy muy muy dificil de usar. Si eres un mortal como yo no la compres. Nunca pude hacerlo compatible con mac.En la pc tarde dias y cuando lo logre el laser que dice q es para pintar no pinta y el q es para cortar pinta pero dejando superficies muy resaltadas
Norma E.
Comentado en México el 29 de abril de 2023
Marca mexicana que tiene súper buenos productos, es muy fresca y cómoda
mrducky
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 3 de diciembre de 2022
I started my research a couple of weeks ago on all sorts of lasers - cost/power and type. While I really want all of them, I asked myself "honestly, what am I really going to do with a laser?", where am I going to set it up to run...So, I made a list of projects that I 'actually' have:- engraving on cedar bird houses I make to avoid using a wood burner tool.- small gifts like Christmas ornaments, cutting board engraving, knick knacks, etc.- some glass etching for a local distillery tasting room.- slate coasters, tasting boards, etc...- making some custom tool box organizers (like marking the wrench/socket sizes, cutting slots/holes in thin wood, maybe foam)- cleaner masking of copper/steel for metal acid/electrolysis etchingSo, this is all pretty small stuff. There's no 'cutting' metal, there's no cutting 5/8' cedar, although it does come close... surprisingly.While this is for my personal amusement mostly - I really don't expect to make money on this stuff... I do like challenging myself with the designs and using CAD/Vector graphics programs.Whether it's an old sewing machine, bridgeport mill, plasma table or 100 ton press brake - CNC is just another tool in the arsenal that can help you. It's up to the operator to know the capacities and limits of the machine and how to operate it and the software effectively... Once those things are understood, you can be creative with how you can overcome limitations. Like anything, you can get a bad result if you don't understand what's going on.So, I decided to go with this TTS-55 unit on a Black Friday deal. The package came as promised, a single neatly packed box.I dumped the contents out on the table and proceeded to RTFM. I did have to furrow my brow at some of the instructions, but things were more clear to me once I had the parts in front of me. Check and double check your work prior to locking everything down.That said, assembly was fairly easy.Getting it set up in lasergrbl, and lightburn were easy - I use linux, mac and windows - have not tried the mac yet, but I suspect that is fine too. The comment somewhere about the mac saying it's 'not secure' or whatever is true - but that doesn't mean much. It's not that the software isn't 'secure' - it's that the developers didn't feel like jumping through Apple's hoops to certify software. I don't blame them. I would be more concerned about sticking a unknown usb stick into my computer to install the drivers. I did it anyway.I did downloaded lightburn from the official lightburn website, imported the cutter profile from the included sd card and ran the head around the table a bit. Everything worked fine X/Y axis wise.I did find I had a slight problem with the Z-Axis screw - it was galled somewhere in the middle. I did disassemble the Z-axis, clean the threads up on my bench grinder wheel, lubed it and ran it up and down the carriage with my drill, ran a tap over it - that fixed that problem. The Z-axis assembly could be a little more 'robust', but once properly adjusted it is a lot better - At the top of the Z-axis there is:- a flanged bearing that fits in the carrier hole- a hard washer- softwasher- then the knob.Do not over tighten the the outboard carrier guide rods. Tighten the nut on the bottom of the z-axis just enough to take the slack/vertical movement out of the Z axis.. the rubber washers act like springs, but do not compress them. Also, make sure you loosen/tighten the grub/locking screw when moving/locking the z-axis head height in position.Next was to start testing various materials to start building a materials library of what this laser can do at various speed/power settings. Lightburn makes this easy enough. I have done various fabrics, woods, plastics, papers, things found in my garage...One of the best pieces of advice I read/saw somewhere is to affix your engraver to a board so it doesn't move around. Next, make yourself a 300x300mm grid with and burn it into your board - I used inkscape and imported the SVG into lightburn and aligned it to the center of the cutter area. Think of it like one of those fancy grid mats for rotary fabric cutting. Once you've burned the grid into your work surface, change the cut path to a tool path in lightburn. Now your grid is your background/template layer in lightburn and anything you layout on top of that and place your material onto the work surface physically will be 'in the same spot' as what you expect on the screen. (see attached screenshot)Go to the local smoke shop and see if they're giving away any wooden cigar boxes that you to practice on.Ok, that's enough of a review. I like this little machine, it does what it is designed to do. It is inexpensive, yet punches above it's weight class. I am adding some homing switches, but really it's doesn't seem to be a big deal without them so far.I am considering getting the 'fancy' rotary / chuck & risers for it once I verify my etching process on some flat glass.
mrducky
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 3 de diciembre de 2022
I started my research a couple of weeks ago on all sorts of lasers - cost/power and type. While I really want all of them, I asked myself "honestly, what am I really going to do with a laser?", where am I going to set it up to run...So, I made a list of projects that I 'actually' have:- engraving on cedar bird houses I make to avoid using a wood burner tool.- small gifts like Christmas ornaments, cutting board engraving, knick knacks, etc.- some glass etching for a local distillery tasting room.- slate coasters, tasting boards, etc...- making some custom tool box organizers (like marking the wrench/socket sizes, cutting slots/holes in thin wood, maybe foam)- cleaner masking of copper/steel for metal acid/electrolysis etchingSo, this is all pretty small stuff. There's no 'cutting' metal, there's no cutting 5/8' cedar, although it does come close... surprisingly.While this is for my personal amusement mostly - I really don't expect to make money on this stuff... I do like challenging myself with the designs and using CAD/Vector graphics programs.Whether it's an old sewing machine, bridgeport mill, plasma table or 100 ton press brake - CNC is just another tool in the arsenal that can help you. It's up to the operator to know the capacities and limits of the machine and how to operate it and the software effectively... Once those things are understood, you can be creative with how you can overcome limitations. Like anything, you can get a bad result if you don't understand what's going on.So, I decided to go with this TTS-55 unit on a Black Friday deal. The package came as promised, a single neatly packed box.I dumped the contents out on the table and proceeded to RTFM. I did have to furrow my brow at some of the instructions, but things were more clear to me once I had the parts in front of me. Check and double check your work prior to locking everything down.That said, assembly was fairly easy.Getting it set up in lasergrbl, and lightburn were easy - I use linux, mac and windows - have not tried the mac yet, but I suspect that is fine too. The comment somewhere about the mac saying it's 'not secure' or whatever is true - but that doesn't mean much. It's not that the software isn't 'secure' - it's that the developers didn't feel like jumping through Apple's hoops to certify software. I don't blame them. I would be more concerned about sticking a unknown usb stick into my computer to install the drivers. I did it anyway.I did downloaded lightburn from the official lightburn website, imported the cutter profile from the included sd card and ran the head around the table a bit. Everything worked fine X/Y axis wise.I did find I had a slight problem with the Z-Axis screw - it was galled somewhere in the middle. I did disassemble the Z-axis, clean the threads up on my bench grinder wheel, lubed it and ran it up and down the carriage with my drill, ran a tap over it - that fixed that problem. The Z-axis assembly could be a little more 'robust', but once properly adjusted it is a lot better - At the top of the Z-axis there is:- a flanged bearing that fits in the carrier hole- a hard washer- softwasher- then the knob.Do not over tighten the the outboard carrier guide rods. Tighten the nut on the bottom of the z-axis just enough to take the slack/vertical movement out of the Z axis.. the rubber washers act like springs, but do not compress them. Also, make sure you loosen/tighten the grub/locking screw when moving/locking the z-axis head height in position.Next was to start testing various materials to start building a materials library of what this laser can do at various speed/power settings. Lightburn makes this easy enough. I have done various fabrics, woods, plastics, papers, things found in my garage...One of the best pieces of advice I read/saw somewhere is to affix your engraver to a board so it doesn't move around. Next, make yourself a 300x300mm grid with and burn it into your board - I used inkscape and imported the SVG into lightburn and aligned it to the center of the cutter area. Think of it like one of those fancy grid mats for rotary fabric cutting. Once you've burned the grid into your work surface, change the cut path to a tool path in lightburn. Now your grid is your background/template layer in lightburn and anything you layout on top of that and place your material onto the work surface physically will be 'in the same spot' as what you expect on the screen. (see attached screenshot)Go to the local smoke shop and see if they're giving away any wooden cigar boxes that you to practice on.Ok, that's enough of a review. I like this little machine, it does what it is designed to do. It is inexpensive, yet punches above it's weight class. I am adding some homing switches, but really it's doesn't seem to be a big deal without them so far.I am considering getting the 'fancy' rotary / chuck & risers for it once I verify my etching process on some flat glass.
mrducky
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 3 de diciembre de 2022
I started my research a couple of weeks ago on all sorts of lasers - cost/power and type. While I really want all of them, I asked myself "honestly, what am I really going to do with a laser?", where am I going to set it up to run...So, I made a list of projects that I 'actually' have:- engraving on cedar bird houses I make to avoid using a wood burner tool.- small gifts like Christmas ornaments, cutting board engraving, knick knacks, etc.- some glass etching for a local distillery tasting room.- slate coasters, tasting boards, etc...- making some custom tool box organizers (like marking the wrench/socket sizes, cutting slots/holes in thin wood, maybe foam)- cleaner masking of copper/steel for metal acid/electrolysis etchingSo, this is all pretty small stuff. There's no 'cutting' metal, there's no cutting 5/8' cedar, although it does come close... surprisingly.While this is for my personal amusement mostly - I really don't expect to make money on this stuff... I do like challenging myself with the designs and using CAD/Vector graphics programs.Whether it's an old sewing machine, bridgeport mill, plasma table or 100 ton press brake - CNC is just another tool in the arsenal that can help you. It's up to the operator to know the capacities and limits of the machine and how to operate it and the software effectively... Once those things are understood, you can be creative with how you can overcome limitations. Like anything, you can get a bad result if you don't understand what's going on.So, I decided to go with this TTS-55 unit on a Black Friday deal. The package came as promised, a single neatly packed box.I dumped the contents out on the table and proceeded to RTFM. I did have to furrow my brow at some of the instructions, but things were more clear to me once I had the parts in front of me. Check and double check your work prior to locking everything down.That said, assembly was fairly easy.Getting it set up in lasergrbl, and lightburn were easy - I use linux, mac and windows - have not tried the mac yet, but I suspect that is fine too. The comment somewhere about the mac saying it's 'not secure' or whatever is true - but that doesn't mean much. It's not that the software isn't 'secure' - it's that the developers didn't feel like jumping through Apple's hoops to certify software. I don't blame them. I would be more concerned about sticking a unknown usb stick into my computer to install the drivers. I did it anyway.I did downloaded lightburn from the official lightburn website, imported the cutter profile from the included sd card and ran the head around the table a bit. Everything worked fine X/Y axis wise.I did find I had a slight problem with the Z-Axis screw - it was galled somewhere in the middle. I did disassemble the Z-axis, clean the threads up on my bench grinder wheel, lubed it and ran it up and down the carriage with my drill, ran a tap over it - that fixed that problem. The Z-axis assembly could be a little more 'robust', but once properly adjusted it is a lot better - At the top of the Z-axis there is:- a flanged bearing that fits in the carrier hole- a hard washer- softwasher- then the knob.Do not over tighten the the outboard carrier guide rods. Tighten the nut on the bottom of the z-axis just enough to take the slack/vertical movement out of the Z axis.. the rubber washers act like springs, but do not compress them. Also, make sure you loosen/tighten the grub/locking screw when moving/locking the z-axis head height in position.Next was to start testing various materials to start building a materials library of what this laser can do at various speed/power settings. Lightburn makes this easy enough. I have done various fabrics, woods, plastics, papers, things found in my garage...One of the best pieces of advice I read/saw somewhere is to affix your engraver to a board so it doesn't move around. Next, make yourself a 300x300mm grid with and burn it into your board - I used inkscape and imported the SVG into lightburn and aligned it to the center of the cutter area. Think of it like one of those fancy grid mats for rotary fabric cutting. Once you've burned the grid into your work surface, change the cut path to a tool path in lightburn. Now your grid is your background/template layer in lightburn and anything you layout on top of that and place your material onto the work surface physically will be 'in the same spot' as what you expect on the screen. (see attached screenshot)Go to the local smoke shop and see if they're giving away any wooden cigar boxes that you to practice on.Ok, that's enough of a review. I like this little machine, it does what it is designed to do. It is inexpensive, yet punches above it's weight class. I am adding some homing switches, but really it's doesn't seem to be a big deal without them so far.I am considering getting the 'fancy' rotary / chuck & risers for it once I verify my etching process on some flat glass.
mrducky
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 3 de diciembre de 2022
I started my research a couple of weeks ago on all sorts of lasers - cost/power and type. While I really want all of them, I asked myself "honestly, what am I really going to do with a laser?", where am I going to set it up to run...So, I made a list of projects that I 'actually' have:- engraving on cedar bird houses I make to avoid using a wood burner tool.- small gifts like Christmas ornaments, cutting board engraving, knick knacks, etc.- some glass etching for a local distillery tasting room.- slate coasters, tasting boards, etc...- making some custom tool box organizers (like marking the wrench/socket sizes, cutting slots/holes in thin wood, maybe foam)- cleaner masking of copper/steel for metal acid/electrolysis etchingSo, this is all pretty small stuff. There's no 'cutting' metal, there's no cutting 5/8' cedar, although it does come close... surprisingly.While this is for my personal amusement mostly - I really don't expect to make money on this stuff... I do like challenging myself with the designs and using CAD/Vector graphics programs.Whether it's an old sewing machine, bridgeport mill, plasma table or 100 ton press brake - CNC is just another tool in the arsenal that can help you. It's up to the operator to know the capacities and limits of the machine and how to operate it and the software effectively... Once those things are understood, you can be creative with how you can overcome limitations. Like anything, you can get a bad result if you don't understand what's going on.So, I decided to go with this TTS-55 unit on a Black Friday deal. The package came as promised, a single neatly packed box.I dumped the contents out on the table and proceeded to RTFM. I did have to furrow my brow at some of the instructions, but things were more clear to me once I had the parts in front of me. Check and double check your work prior to locking everything down.That said, assembly was fairly easy.Getting it set up in lasergrbl, and lightburn were easy - I use linux, mac and windows - have not tried the mac yet, but I suspect that is fine too. The comment somewhere about the mac saying it's 'not secure' or whatever is true - but that doesn't mean much. It's not that the software isn't 'secure' - it's that the developers didn't feel like jumping through Apple's hoops to certify software. I don't blame them. I would be more concerned about sticking a unknown usb stick into my computer to install the drivers. I did it anyway.I did downloaded lightburn from the official lightburn website, imported the cutter profile from the included sd card and ran the head around the table a bit. Everything worked fine X/Y axis wise.I did find I had a slight problem with the Z-Axis screw - it was galled somewhere in the middle. I did disassemble the Z-axis, clean the threads up on my bench grinder wheel, lubed it and ran it up and down the carriage with my drill, ran a tap over it - that fixed that problem. The Z-axis assembly could be a little more 'robust', but once properly adjusted it is a lot better - At the top of the Z-axis there is:- a flanged bearing that fits in the carrier hole- a hard washer- softwasher- then the knob.Do not over tighten the the outboard carrier guide rods. Tighten the nut on the bottom of the z-axis just enough to take the slack/vertical movement out of the Z axis.. the rubber washers act like springs, but do not compress them. Also, make sure you loosen/tighten the grub/locking screw when moving/locking the z-axis head height in position.Next was to start testing various materials to start building a materials library of what this laser can do at various speed/power settings. Lightburn makes this easy enough. I have done various fabrics, woods, plastics, papers, things found in my garage...One of the best pieces of advice I read/saw somewhere is to affix your engraver to a board so it doesn't move around. Next, make yourself a 300x300mm grid with and burn it into your board - I used inkscape and imported the SVG into lightburn and aligned it to the center of the cutter area. Think of it like one of those fancy grid mats for rotary fabric cutting. Once you've burned the grid into your work surface, change the cut path to a tool path in lightburn. Now your grid is your background/template layer in lightburn and anything you layout on top of that and place your material onto the work surface physically will be 'in the same spot' as what you expect on the screen. (see attached screenshot)Go to the local smoke shop and see if they're giving away any wooden cigar boxes that you to practice on.Ok, that's enough of a review. I like this little machine, it does what it is designed to do. It is inexpensive, yet punches above it's weight class. I am adding some homing switches, but really it's doesn't seem to be a big deal without them so far.I am considering getting the 'fancy' rotary / chuck & risers for it once I verify my etching process on some flat glass.
mrducky
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 3 de diciembre de 2022
I started my research a couple of weeks ago on all sorts of lasers - cost/power and type. While I really want all of them, I asked myself "honestly, what am I really going to do with a laser?", where am I going to set it up to run...So, I made a list of projects that I 'actually' have:- engraving on cedar bird houses I make to avoid using a wood burner tool.- small gifts like Christmas ornaments, cutting board engraving, knick knacks, etc.- some glass etching for a local distillery tasting room.- slate coasters, tasting boards, etc...- making some custom tool box organizers (like marking the wrench/socket sizes, cutting slots/holes in thin wood, maybe foam)- cleaner masking of copper/steel for metal acid/electrolysis etchingSo, this is all pretty small stuff. There's no 'cutting' metal, there's no cutting 5/8' cedar, although it does come close... surprisingly.While this is for my personal amusement mostly - I really don't expect to make money on this stuff... I do like challenging myself with the designs and using CAD/Vector graphics programs.Whether it's an old sewing machine, bridgeport mill, plasma table or 100 ton press brake - CNC is just another tool in the arsenal that can help you. It's up to the operator to know the capacities and limits of the machine and how to operate it and the software effectively... Once those things are understood, you can be creative with how you can overcome limitations. Like anything, you can get a bad result if you don't understand what's going on.So, I decided to go with this TTS-55 unit on a Black Friday deal. The package came as promised, a single neatly packed box.I dumped the contents out on the table and proceeded to RTFM. I did have to furrow my brow at some of the instructions, but things were more clear to me once I had the parts in front of me. Check and double check your work prior to locking everything down.That said, assembly was fairly easy.Getting it set up in lasergrbl, and lightburn were easy - I use linux, mac and windows - have not tried the mac yet, but I suspect that is fine too. The comment somewhere about the mac saying it's 'not secure' or whatever is true - but that doesn't mean much. It's not that the software isn't 'secure' - it's that the developers didn't feel like jumping through Apple's hoops to certify software. I don't blame them. I would be more concerned about sticking a unknown usb stick into my computer to install the drivers. I did it anyway.I did downloaded lightburn from the official lightburn website, imported the cutter profile from the included sd card and ran the head around the table a bit. Everything worked fine X/Y axis wise.I did find I had a slight problem with the Z-Axis screw - it was galled somewhere in the middle. I did disassemble the Z-axis, clean the threads up on my bench grinder wheel, lubed it and ran it up and down the carriage with my drill, ran a tap over it - that fixed that problem. The Z-axis assembly could be a little more 'robust', but once properly adjusted it is a lot better - At the top of the Z-axis there is:- a flanged bearing that fits in the carrier hole- a hard washer- softwasher- then the knob.Do not over tighten the the outboard carrier guide rods. Tighten the nut on the bottom of the z-axis just enough to take the slack/vertical movement out of the Z axis.. the rubber washers act like springs, but do not compress them. Also, make sure you loosen/tighten the grub/locking screw when moving/locking the z-axis head height in position.Next was to start testing various materials to start building a materials library of what this laser can do at various speed/power settings. Lightburn makes this easy enough. I have done various fabrics, woods, plastics, papers, things found in my garage...One of the best pieces of advice I read/saw somewhere is to affix your engraver to a board so it doesn't move around. Next, make yourself a 300x300mm grid with and burn it into your board - I used inkscape and imported the SVG into lightburn and aligned it to the center of the cutter area. Think of it like one of those fancy grid mats for rotary fabric cutting. Once you've burned the grid into your work surface, change the cut path to a tool path in lightburn. Now your grid is your background/template layer in lightburn and anything you layout on top of that and place your material onto the work surface physically will be 'in the same spot' as what you expect on the screen. (see attached screenshot)Go to the local smoke shop and see if they're giving away any wooden cigar boxes that you to practice on.Ok, that's enough of a review. I like this little machine, it does what it is designed to do. It is inexpensive, yet punches above it's weight class. I am adding some homing switches, but really it's doesn't seem to be a big deal without them so far.I am considering getting the 'fancy' rotary / chuck & risers for it once I verify my etching process on some flat glass.
mrducky
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 3 de diciembre de 2022
I started my research a couple of weeks ago on all sorts of lasers - cost/power and type. While I really want all of them, I asked myself "honestly, what am I really going to do with a laser?", where am I going to set it up to run...So, I made a list of projects that I 'actually' have:- engraving on cedar bird houses I make to avoid using a wood burner tool.- small gifts like Christmas ornaments, cutting board engraving, knick knacks, etc.- some glass etching for a local distillery tasting room.- slate coasters, tasting boards, etc...- making some custom tool box organizers (like marking the wrench/socket sizes, cutting slots/holes in thin wood, maybe foam)- cleaner masking of copper/steel for metal acid/electrolysis etchingSo, this is all pretty small stuff. There's no 'cutting' metal, there's no cutting 5/8' cedar, although it does come close... surprisingly.While this is for my personal amusement mostly - I really don't expect to make money on this stuff... I do like challenging myself with the designs and using CAD/Vector graphics programs.Whether it's an old sewing machine, bridgeport mill, plasma table or 100 ton press brake - CNC is just another tool in the arsenal that can help you. It's up to the operator to know the capacities and limits of the machine and how to operate it and the software effectively... Once those things are understood, you can be creative with how you can overcome limitations. Like anything, you can get a bad result if you don't understand what's going on.So, I decided to go with this TTS-55 unit on a Black Friday deal. The package came as promised, a single neatly packed box.I dumped the contents out on the table and proceeded to RTFM. I did have to furrow my brow at some of the instructions, but things were more clear to me once I had the parts in front of me. Check and double check your work prior to locking everything down.That said, assembly was fairly easy.Getting it set up in lasergrbl, and lightburn were easy - I use linux, mac and windows - have not tried the mac yet, but I suspect that is fine too. The comment somewhere about the mac saying it's 'not secure' or whatever is true - but that doesn't mean much. It's not that the software isn't 'secure' - it's that the developers didn't feel like jumping through Apple's hoops to certify software. I don't blame them. I would be more concerned about sticking a unknown usb stick into my computer to install the drivers. I did it anyway.I did downloaded lightburn from the official lightburn website, imported the cutter profile from the included sd card and ran the head around the table a bit. Everything worked fine X/Y axis wise.I did find I had a slight problem with the Z-Axis screw - it was galled somewhere in the middle. I did disassemble the Z-axis, clean the threads up on my bench grinder wheel, lubed it and ran it up and down the carriage with my drill, ran a tap over it - that fixed that problem. The Z-axis assembly could be a little more 'robust', but once properly adjusted it is a lot better - At the top of the Z-axis there is:- a flanged bearing that fits in the carrier hole- a hard washer- softwasher- then the knob.Do not over tighten the the outboard carrier guide rods. Tighten the nut on the bottom of the z-axis just enough to take the slack/vertical movement out of the Z axis.. the rubber washers act like springs, but do not compress them. Also, make sure you loosen/tighten the grub/locking screw when moving/locking the z-axis head height in position.Next was to start testing various materials to start building a materials library of what this laser can do at various speed/power settings. Lightburn makes this easy enough. I have done various fabrics, woods, plastics, papers, things found in my garage...One of the best pieces of advice I read/saw somewhere is to affix your engraver to a board so it doesn't move around. Next, make yourself a 300x300mm grid with and burn it into your board - I used inkscape and imported the SVG into lightburn and aligned it to the center of the cutter area. Think of it like one of those fancy grid mats for rotary fabric cutting. Once you've burned the grid into your work surface, change the cut path to a tool path in lightburn. Now your grid is your background/template layer in lightburn and anything you layout on top of that and place your material onto the work surface physically will be 'in the same spot' as what you expect on the screen. (see attached screenshot)Go to the local smoke shop and see if they're giving away any wooden cigar boxes that you to practice on.Ok, that's enough of a review. I like this little machine, it does what it is designed to do. It is inexpensive, yet punches above it's weight class. I am adding some homing switches, but really it's doesn't seem to be a big deal without them so far.I am considering getting the 'fancy' rotary / chuck & risers for it once I verify my etching process on some flat glass.
mrducky
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 3 de diciembre de 2022
I started my research a couple of weeks ago on all sorts of lasers - cost/power and type. While I really want all of them, I asked myself "honestly, what am I really going to do with a laser?", where am I going to set it up to run...So, I made a list of projects that I 'actually' have:- engraving on cedar bird houses I make to avoid using a wood burner tool.- small gifts like Christmas ornaments, cutting board engraving, knick knacks, etc.- some glass etching for a local distillery tasting room.- slate coasters, tasting boards, etc...- making some custom tool box organizers (like marking the wrench/socket sizes, cutting slots/holes in thin wood, maybe foam)- cleaner masking of copper/steel for metal acid/electrolysis etchingSo, this is all pretty small stuff. There's no 'cutting' metal, there's no cutting 5/8' cedar, although it does come close... surprisingly.While this is for my personal amusement mostly - I really don't expect to make money on this stuff... I do like challenging myself with the designs and using CAD/Vector graphics programs.Whether it's an old sewing machine, bridgeport mill, plasma table or 100 ton press brake - CNC is just another tool in the arsenal that can help you. It's up to the operator to know the capacities and limits of the machine and how to operate it and the software effectively... Once those things are understood, you can be creative with how you can overcome limitations. Like anything, you can get a bad result if you don't understand what's going on.So, I decided to go with this TTS-55 unit on a Black Friday deal. The package came as promised, a single neatly packed box.I dumped the contents out on the table and proceeded to RTFM. I did have to furrow my brow at some of the instructions, but things were more clear to me once I had the parts in front of me. Check and double check your work prior to locking everything down.That said, assembly was fairly easy.Getting it set up in lasergrbl, and lightburn were easy - I use linux, mac and windows - have not tried the mac yet, but I suspect that is fine too. The comment somewhere about the mac saying it's 'not secure' or whatever is true - but that doesn't mean much. It's not that the software isn't 'secure' - it's that the developers didn't feel like jumping through Apple's hoops to certify software. I don't blame them. I would be more concerned about sticking a unknown usb stick into my computer to install the drivers. I did it anyway.I did downloaded lightburn from the official lightburn website, imported the cutter profile from the included sd card and ran the head around the table a bit. Everything worked fine X/Y axis wise.I did find I had a slight problem with the Z-Axis screw - it was galled somewhere in the middle. I did disassemble the Z-axis, clean the threads up on my bench grinder wheel, lubed it and ran it up and down the carriage with my drill, ran a tap over it - that fixed that problem. The Z-axis assembly could be a little more 'robust', but once properly adjusted it is a lot better - At the top of the Z-axis there is:- a flanged bearing that fits in the carrier hole- a hard washer- softwasher- then the knob.Do not over tighten the the outboard carrier guide rods. Tighten the nut on the bottom of the z-axis just enough to take the slack/vertical movement out of the Z axis.. the rubber washers act like springs, but do not compress them. Also, make sure you loosen/tighten the grub/locking screw when moving/locking the z-axis head height in position.Next was to start testing various materials to start building a materials library of what this laser can do at various speed/power settings. Lightburn makes this easy enough. I have done various fabrics, woods, plastics, papers, things found in my garage...One of the best pieces of advice I read/saw somewhere is to affix your engraver to a board so it doesn't move around. Next, make yourself a 300x300mm grid with and burn it into your board - I used inkscape and imported the SVG into lightburn and aligned it to the center of the cutter area. Think of it like one of those fancy grid mats for rotary fabric cutting. Once you've burned the grid into your work surface, change the cut path to a tool path in lightburn. Now your grid is your background/template layer in lightburn and anything you layout on top of that and place your material onto the work surface physically will be 'in the same spot' as what you expect on the screen. (see attached screenshot)Go to the local smoke shop and see if they're giving away any wooden cigar boxes that you to practice on.Ok, that's enough of a review. I like this little machine, it does what it is designed to do. It is inexpensive, yet punches above it's weight class. I am adding some homing switches, but really it's doesn't seem to be a big deal without them so far.I am considering getting the 'fancy' rotary / chuck & risers for it once I verify my etching process on some flat glass.
mrducky
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 3 de diciembre de 2022
I started my research a couple of weeks ago on all sorts of lasers - cost/power and type. While I really want all of them, I asked myself "honestly, what am I really going to do with a laser?", where am I going to set it up to run...So, I made a list of projects that I 'actually' have:- engraving on cedar bird houses I make to avoid using a wood burner tool.- small gifts like Christmas ornaments, cutting board engraving, knick knacks, etc.- some glass etching for a local distillery tasting room.- slate coasters, tasting boards, etc...- making some custom tool box organizers (like marking the wrench/socket sizes, cutting slots/holes in thin wood, maybe foam)- cleaner masking of copper/steel for metal acid/electrolysis etchingSo, this is all pretty small stuff. There's no 'cutting' metal, there's no cutting 5/8' cedar, although it does come close... surprisingly.While this is for my personal amusement mostly - I really don't expect to make money on this stuff... I do like challenging myself with the designs and using CAD/Vector graphics programs.Whether it's an old sewing machine, bridgeport mill, plasma table or 100 ton press brake - CNC is just another tool in the arsenal that can help you. It's up to the operator to know the capacities and limits of the machine and how to operate it and the software effectively... Once those things are understood, you can be creative with how you can overcome limitations. Like anything, you can get a bad result if you don't understand what's going on.So, I decided to go with this TTS-55 unit on a Black Friday deal. The package came as promised, a single neatly packed box.I dumped the contents out on the table and proceeded to RTFM. I did have to furrow my brow at some of the instructions, but things were more clear to me once I had the parts in front of me. Check and double check your work prior to locking everything down.That said, assembly was fairly easy.Getting it set up in lasergrbl, and lightburn were easy - I use linux, mac and windows - have not tried the mac yet, but I suspect that is fine too. The comment somewhere about the mac saying it's 'not secure' or whatever is true - but that doesn't mean much. It's not that the software isn't 'secure' - it's that the developers didn't feel like jumping through Apple's hoops to certify software. I don't blame them. I would be more concerned about sticking a unknown usb stick into my computer to install the drivers. I did it anyway.I did downloaded lightburn from the official lightburn website, imported the cutter profile from the included sd card and ran the head around the table a bit. Everything worked fine X/Y axis wise.I did find I had a slight problem with the Z-Axis screw - it was galled somewhere in the middle. I did disassemble the Z-axis, clean the threads up on my bench grinder wheel, lubed it and ran it up and down the carriage with my drill, ran a tap over it - that fixed that problem. The Z-axis assembly could be a little more 'robust', but once properly adjusted it is a lot better - At the top of the Z-axis there is:- a flanged bearing that fits in the carrier hole- a hard washer- softwasher- then the knob.Do not over tighten the the outboard carrier guide rods. Tighten the nut on the bottom of the z-axis just enough to take the slack/vertical movement out of the Z axis.. the rubber washers act like springs, but do not compress them. Also, make sure you loosen/tighten the grub/locking screw when moving/locking the z-axis head height in position.Next was to start testing various materials to start building a materials library of what this laser can do at various speed/power settings. Lightburn makes this easy enough. I have done various fabrics, woods, plastics, papers, things found in my garage...One of the best pieces of advice I read/saw somewhere is to affix your engraver to a board so it doesn't move around. Next, make yourself a 300x300mm grid with and burn it into your board - I used inkscape and imported the SVG into lightburn and aligned it to the center of the cutter area. Think of it like one of those fancy grid mats for rotary fabric cutting. Once you've burned the grid into your work surface, change the cut path to a tool path in lightburn. Now your grid is your background/template layer in lightburn and anything you layout on top of that and place your material onto the work surface physically will be 'in the same spot' as what you expect on the screen. (see attached screenshot)Go to the local smoke shop and see if they're giving away any wooden cigar boxes that you to practice on.Ok, that's enough of a review. I like this little machine, it does what it is designed to do. It is inexpensive, yet punches above it's weight class. I am adding some homing switches, but really it's doesn't seem to be a big deal without them so far.I am considering getting the 'fancy' rotary / chuck & risers for it once I verify my etching process on some flat glass.
oscar de la rosa
Comentado en México el 16 de diciembre de 2022
Llevo poco tiempo y he grabado ciertas cosas de madera, cuero y plastico, es buena para grabar y aprender a manejar el software, para corte solo he cortado cartulina con 3 pasadas aun no intento cortar cosas de mayor grosor aunque no tiene mucha potencia y no creo que lo logre.
oscar de la rosa
Comentado en México el 16 de diciembre de 2022
Llevo poco tiempo y he grabado ciertas cosas de madera, cuero y plastico, es buena para grabar y aprender a manejar el software, para corte solo he cortado cartulina con 3 pasadas aun no intento cortar cosas de mayor grosor aunque no tiene mucha potencia y no creo que lo logre.
oscar de la rosa
Comentado en México el 16 de diciembre de 2022
Llevo poco tiempo y he grabado ciertas cosas de madera, cuero y plastico, es buena para grabar y aprender a manejar el software, para corte solo he cortado cartulina con 3 pasadas aun no intento cortar cosas de mayor grosor aunque no tiene mucha potencia y no creo que lo logre.
oscar de la rosa
Comentado en México el 16 de diciembre de 2022
Llevo poco tiempo y he grabado ciertas cosas de madera, cuero y plastico, es buena para grabar y aprender a manejar el software, para corte solo he cortado cartulina con 3 pasadas aun no intento cortar cosas de mayor grosor aunque no tiene mucha potencia y no creo que lo logre.
oscar de la rosa
Comentado en México el 16 de diciembre de 2022
Llevo poco tiempo y he grabado ciertas cosas de madera, cuero y plastico, es buena para grabar y aprender a manejar el software, para corte solo he cortado cartulina con 3 pasadas aun no intento cortar cosas de mayor grosor aunque no tiene mucha potencia y no creo que lo logre.
oscar de la rosa
Comentado en México el 16 de diciembre de 2022
Llevo poco tiempo y he grabado ciertas cosas de madera, cuero y plastico, es buena para grabar y aprender a manejar el software, para corte solo he cortado cartulina con 3 pasadas aun no intento cortar cosas de mayor grosor aunque no tiene mucha potencia y no creo que lo logre.
oscar de la rosa
Comentado en México el 16 de diciembre de 2022
Llevo poco tiempo y he grabado ciertas cosas de madera, cuero y plastico, es buena para grabar y aprender a manejar el software, para corte solo he cortado cartulina con 3 pasadas aun no intento cortar cosas de mayor grosor aunque no tiene mucha potencia y no creo que lo logre.
oscar de la rosa
Comentado en México el 16 de diciembre de 2022
Llevo poco tiempo y he grabado ciertas cosas de madera, cuero y plastico, es buena para grabar y aprender a manejar el software, para corte solo he cortado cartulina con 3 pasadas aun no intento cortar cosas de mayor grosor aunque no tiene mucha potencia y no creo que lo logre.
Elizabeth
Comentado en México el 4 de noviembre de 2022
Es de muselina pero no se transparenta nada; es fácil de poner y muy fresco no a la bebe ni a mi nos da calor. SÚPER PRACTICO
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