Materials | Safety |
Software |
Computer Optional |
Stepper Motors | Stepper Drivers |
Rotating Axis |
Laser Modules |
Air Assist |
Controller | Offline Controllers |
Power Supply |
Rotating Y |
Frame Components |
Cabling |
Work Table Stands II |
Exhaust |
Enclosures |
||
Products To Be Built Front Panels |
Red Laser Glasses |
Lightburn is the only practical long tieme solution. ~$50 Emulators Grblaser WIN Linux CNC Will not run on Raspberry Use Lightburn to make file then upload to laser. To control one needs a machine that will run linux, WIN or OSX LightBurn will run on Windows 7.0 or later, 32 or 64 bit, MacOS 10.11 or later, or LaserGrbl Sketchup Inkscape FMP Databases Octopi |
The mks board has a web interfac therefore one Does not need a PC if one. Alternate gcode file maker. Kiri Moto Linux CNC? may not talk to board. 64 bit Linux Ubuntu 16 Ubuntu 16 download Slow unuder Raspberry PI 4 with WIN 10 Ebay Purchase $176 Ebay Purchase $155 |
12v 80 watt laser module Aliexpress Includes 48w 12v power supply. The Math says it needs a 7 amp supply. |
Using and Mks Board Solution $50 Supports 12-24v input MKS DLC32 |
12-24v supply 10A xx20ss |
xx90xx |
Donor Machines Get ortur can be parted out. 20 watt version 20 Watt modules are ~$74 $243 20w Not any used on ebay. $183 15w -60 $165 7w -78 X can be readily upgraded with extrusion. Y is more involved. |
Box in Box |
sudo adduser $USER dialout && sudo adduser $USER tty
.run
file or the .7z
file and follow the appropriate steps below:.run
installercd
to the directory you downloaded the file to.bash ./LightBurn-Linux64-v*.run
.7z
installerAppRun
> Properties > Permissions > 'Allow executing file as program'AppRun
inside your Lightburn folderNext: Running LightBurn for the first time
If you've never used LightBurn before, you'll be shown the License and Trial page first. Here you can either enter and activate a license key if you have one, or you can activate a free 30 day trial by clicking "Activate Trial". If you do have a license key, be sure to enter it exactly, including the dashes, then click the 'Activate License' button. We recommend just copying the key and pasting it into the License Key box.
You can get back to this screen in LightBurn at any time by going to the menu and clicking Help > License Management.
Once you have activated your license or the trial, click 'OK'
The next thing you'll see is the 'General Usage Notes' page - this is a brief help page just to get you going. You can get back to it any time in the Help menu, under Help > Quick Help and Notes. Click OK.
You're almost done!
Next Step: Adding your Laser to Lightburn
We get asked this frequently - You don't ever need to connect a laser to LightBurn to use it, but LightBurn will not run without a device profile configured, because it needs a place to store some settings, and wants to know what options to show you in the interface. If you use a laser that accepts files on a USB drive, for example, LightBurn needs to know which controller it uses so it can produce the correct output files.
If you don't have a laser yet, or don't know what you're going to buy and just want to try it out, you can just set up an arbitrary device profile, because these options don't affect the design side of things, just the machine output and laser settings.
In either case, use Create Manually and configure the things you can, and guess at whatever you don't know - it won't matter in the end. When you finally do get your laser, you can come back to this screen, select the 'dummy' profile you set up, and click 'Remove'. Close the window, restart LightBurn, and the software will guide you through the setup again, pulling many of the settings from the controller of your machine. If you get it mostly right, you can double-click the existing profile, then go through the pages and change anything you need to later. Either way works.