Here are some pictures of example cuts and etches I did. Clean consistent cuts with straight and thin lines. My first cut was done on 3 mm thick wood, with default preset settings, and it did a fantastic job. The laser was already pre-aligned from factory, and the cooling water tank was already filled. Connect it to WiFi, send over a file, and it did its thing. ![]() ![]() Out of the box, it worked, I didn’t even read the manual. 30W is still on the weaker end of the market, it means the cut depth isn’t very thick and the speed will be slower, but these are problems that can be mitigated or ignored. It also claims to be able to etch glass, and even stainless steel if you coat the steel with a special coating first. Other “easy” materials like wood and leather it’ll have no problems with. The capabilities of the laser is supposed to be enough to cut and etch clear acrylic. It also advertises to be capable of 1000 DPI of resolution, meaning each pixel is 0.02mm, which is half bull****, the stepper motors are capable of that sort of resolution but the laser beam itself is larger (depends on focus and settings and the area of material being melted), all CO2 lasers are like this. It can also be upgraded with a “autofocus” attachment, and a rotary attachment. It has modern features such as a touch screen, camera preview, and WiFi. The workspace area is about the size of a sheet of paper, 300mm x 210mm. The Flux Beamo claims to output 30W of optical power at 10.6um wave length. I finally took the plunge and bought myself my very own laser cutter! It’s a cute little Flux Beamo!Ī small but modern 30W CO2 CNC laser cutter/engraver.
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