Can you do a machine maintenance video? I've had my machine for a while and I'm happy with it. I just want to know what maintenance I should do to the machine and at what intervals.
When calibrating the camera in Luban: "zoom in on the image", but how to do that? There are no controls on screen, clicking and dragging on the image did nothing with or without keyboard modifier keys. Only way I found was to roll the scroll wheel (not available on all mouses). But this seemed to do some random combination of zoom and pan. By trial and error I eventually got all four corners aligned reasonably well, but I did not feel at all in control of the process! It would be much better if the window was resizable so the whole image could be made bigger on screen with all four corners visible at large scale at the same time.
Hey there Snapmaker, question.. I've probably a big project/thing I wanna try out to laser, but I was wondering if it's possible I could set up the Snapmaker2 (350) as a table-machine, so I could engrave bigger projects, in 2 or 3 steps (images) and slide the project under the machine to the next stage when finished? If yes, is there a handy tutorial about this ? :)
Why is the resolution of the background image taken by the built in camera so poor? It makes it very hard to do precise alignments. I assumed this new 10w laser module would be an improvement over the 1.6w laser in terms of camera alignment, and I'm disappointed to find the camera feature is not more functional.
The goggles are good enough for protecting the eyes of the user wearing them, but the Enclosure provides full protection for anyone around the machine, reduces noise and fumes released into the air, and the auto thickness measurement system works better in dim light.
You need to protect the rest of your skin from direct/reflected laser light, think of it as a dangerous UV suntan. It's the same with Welding. Enclosure reduces 10W to safer levels (they say equivalent of the 1.6W), but eye protection still required, so long term exposure is definitely bad.
Can you do a machine maintenance video? I've had my machine for a while and I'm happy with it. I just want to know what maintenance I should do to the machine and at what intervals.
I'm looking forward to receiving this.
Same
When calibrating the camera in Luban: "zoom in on the image", but how to do that? There are no controls on screen, clicking and dragging on the image did nothing with or without keyboard modifier keys. Only way I found was to roll the scroll wheel (not available on all mouses). But this seemed to do some random combination of zoom and pan. By trial and error I eventually got all four corners aligned reasonably well, but I did not feel at all in control of the process! It would be much better if the window was resizable so the whole image could be made bigger on screen with all four corners visible at large scale at the same time.
I just got my snapmaker 2.0 and I order the 10w I still haven't had time to use it due to work... Can't wait to figure out my first project
hi! Can it be used to engrave on a glass bottle?
Yes, you can use Snapmaker 10W high power laser and rotary module on Snapmaker 2.0 to do that.
But you need to make sure the glass is non-transparent.
Hey there Snapmaker, question.. I've probably a big project/thing I wanna try out to laser, but I was wondering if it's possible I could set up the Snapmaker2 (350) as a table-machine, so I could engrave bigger projects, in 2 or 3 steps (images) and slide the project under the machine to the next stage when finished? If yes, is there a handy tutorial about this ? :)
Why is the resolution of the background image taken by the built in camera so poor? It makes it very hard to do precise alignments. I assumed this new 10w laser module would be an improvement over the 1.6w laser in terms of camera alignment, and I'm disappointed to find the camera feature is not more functional.
The camera resolution is really bad for the price...
So, the goggles aren't enough for the 10W laser?
The goggles are good enough for protecting the eyes of the user wearing them, but the Enclosure provides full protection for anyone around the machine, reduces noise and fumes released into the air, and the auto thickness measurement system works better in dim light.
You need to protect the rest of your skin from direct/reflected laser light, think of it as a dangerous UV suntan. It's the same with Welding.
Enclosure reduces 10W to safer levels (they say equivalent of the 1.6W), but eye protection still required, so long term exposure is definitely bad.