Ir directamente al contenido
The Ultimate Laser Engraving FAQ: 100+ Questions Answered By Experts (2026)

The Ultimate Laser Engraving FAQ: 100+ Questions Answered By Experts (2026)

Last Updated: May 10, 2026

Based on actual Google search data — these are the real questions people are asking every single day.


Table of Contents

  1. General Laser Engraving FAQs
  2. Galvo Laser Specific FAQs
  3. Fiber Laser vs Diode Laser FAQs
  4. Materials & Capabilities FAQs
  5. Settings & Quality FAQs
  6. Business & Money Making FAQs
  7. Maintenance & Troubleshooting FAQs
  8. Safety FAQs
  9. Software FAQs
  10. Buying & Comparison FAQs

General Laser Engraving FAQs

Q: What is laser engraving?

A: Laser engraving is the process of using a focused laser beam to permanently mark the surface of a material. Unlike printing, the mark is physical, permanent, and will never fade or wear off.

Q: What's the difference between laser engraving and laser etching?

A: Engraving removes material to create a deep, permanent mark. Etching only changes the surface color without removing significant material. For most practical purposes, people use the terms interchangeably.

Q: How much does a good laser engraver cost?

A: - Hobby grade: $200-$500 - Professional galvo: $150-$1,500 - Industrial: $5,000+

The best value in 2026 is the Tyvok P2 at $149. It produces the same quality as machines costing 3-5x more.

Q: Can you make money with laser engraving?

A: Yes. Extremely well. Average part-time income is $500-$1,500/week. Full-time operators make $3,000-$8,000/week. It's one of the highest ROI small businesses you can start in 2026.

Q: Is laser engraving hard to learn?

A: No. The basics take about 2 hours to learn. Getting consistently great results takes about 1-2 weeks of practice. Compared to almost any other skilled trade, it's extremely easy.

Q: How long does a laser engraver last?

A: A good galvo laser will last 10,000-30,000 hours of use. That's 5-15 years of daily use. There are very few moving parts, so they're extremely reliable.

Q: Do you need a computer to use a laser engraver?

A: Yes. You need a Windows, Mac, or Linux computer to run the design software and send jobs to the laser. Most professional lasers use LightBurn software.

Q: Can you laser engrave from a phone?

A: Some hobby machines have phone apps, but for serious work, you need a computer. Phone apps are extremely limited and not suitable for business use.

Q: How fast is laser engraving?

A: Galvo lasers engrave at 2,000-5,000 mm/second. A typical tumbler engraving takes 1-2 minutes. A full sheet of 100 business cards takes 10-12 minutes.

Q: Is laser engraving permanent?

A: Yes, on almost all materials. On metal, the mark is permanent and will not fade, wear off, or wash off for the lifetime of the material.


Galvo Laser Specific FAQs

Q: What is a galvo laser?

A: A galvo laser uses two moving mirrors (galvanometers) to steer the laser beam extremely quickly across the material. This is different from gantry lasers that move the entire laser head.

Q: How fast are galvo lasers compared to regular lasers?

A: Galvo lasers are 10-50x faster than traditional gantry diode lasers. A job that takes 10 minutes on a diode laser takes 30 seconds on a galvo.

Q: What are galvo lasers good for?

A: Galvo lasers excel at: - Metal engraving (their biggest strength) - High speed production work - Fine detail and text - Tumblers and cylindrical objects - High volume business use

Q: What are galvo lasers NOT good for?

A: Galvo lasers (especially fiber) are NOT good for: - Cutting (they can't cut anything meaningful) - Large engravings (typical work area is 100x100mm) - Wood engraving (diode lasers are much better at this)

Q: What's the typical engraving area for a galvo laser?

A: Most consumer/prosumer galvos have a 100x100mm (about 4x4 inch) work area. This is perfect for 95% of the profitable jobs: tumblers, business cards, jewelry, knives, tools.

Q: Can you get a larger work area for a galvo laser?

A: Yes, but it gets expensive very quickly. A 200x200mm galvo typically costs $3,000+. For reference, the $149 Tyvok P2 is 100x100mm.

Q: Can galvo lasers engrave cylindrical objects?

A: Yes, with a rotary attachment. This is the #1 most popular accessory and is required for doing tumblers.

Q: Are galvo lasers worth it?

A: If you're doing metal engraving or running a business, absolutely yes. The speed difference alone will make you 5-10x more productive and profitable.

Q: What's the best galvo laser for the money in 2026?

A: The Tyvok P2 is the clear value leader at $149. It's a true 10W fiber galvo that performs identically to machines costing $500-$1,000 more.


Fiber vs Diode FAQs

Q: What's the difference between fiber laser and diode laser?

A: The biggest difference is wavelength: - Fiber lasers: 1064nm (infrared) — Perfect for metal - Diode lasers: 450nm (blue) — Perfect for wood and acrylic

Q: Which is better: fiber or diode?

A: It depends on what you're doing: - Get fiber if you mostly engrave metal (tumblers, business cards, tools, jewelry) - Get diode if you mostly do wood, acrylic, or cutting

Q: Can a fiber laser engrave wood?

A: Yes, but not well. It will mark dark hardwoods, but the quality is not nearly as good as a diode laser. Wood is not what fiber lasers are designed for.

Q: Can a diode laser engrave stainless steel?

A: Yes, but poorly and very slowly. A fiber laser will produce a darker, more consistent mark 10x faster. For serious metal work, fiber is the only real choice.

Q: Can a fiber laser cut?

A: No, not meaningfully. A 10W fiber can barely cut through 0.1mm aluminum foil. If you need to cut, you want a diode or CO2 laser.

Q: Can a diode laser mark brass or copper?

A: Very poorly, if at all. Blue light from diode lasers reflects off copper and brass almost completely. Fiber lasers at 1064nm absorb extremely well into these metals.

Q: Which lasts longer: fiber or diode?

A: Fiber lasers typically last 2-3x longer than diode lasers. A good fiber source is rated for 10,000-30,000 hours. A good diode is rated for 5,000-10,000 hours.

Q: Which is better for starting a business?

A: Fiber galvo for 95% of people. The profitable jobs (tumblers, business cards, metal work) all require fiber. The business ROI on fiber is much higher.


Materials & Capabilities FAQs

Q: What can you engrave with a fiber laser?

A:Excellent: All metals (stainless, aluminum, brass, copper, titanium, gold, silver), anodized aluminum, powder coating, most plastics, leather, glass, ceramic ⚠️ Okay: Dark hardwoods, rubber ❌ Poor: Light wood, acrylic, most fabrics

Q: Can fiber lasers engrave glass?

A: Yes. You get a nice frosted white mark. It's slower than metal but works great for wine glasses, beer mugs, and awards.

Q: Can you engrave ceramic?

A: Yes. Glazed ceramic mugs are one of the most popular and profitable products. A custom engraved mug sells for $20-25 and costs $2-3 to make.

Q: Can you engrave plastic?

A: Most plastics engrave very well. ABS, PVC, Delrin, and most engineering plastics produce excellent dark marks. Test first as some plastics don't mark well.

Q: Can you engrave leather?

A: Yes. Leather produces a nice dark mark and is very popular for wallets, belts, and pet tags. Real leather works better than faux leather.

Q: Can you engrave guns and firearms?

A: Yes, extremely well. This is one of the highest margin applications. You do need an FFL license to do this commercially in the USA.

Q: Can you engrave jewelry?

A: Yes. Silver, gold, platinum, titanium all engrave beautifully. Personalized jewelry is a very high margin business.

Q: Can you engrave knives?

A: Yes. This is an extremely popular niche with almost zero competition. Knife collectors will pay premium prices for quality engraving.

Q: Can you engrave serial numbers and barcodes?

A: Yes. This is actually what galvo lasers were originally designed for (industrial part marking). Barcodes and QR codes scan perfectly.

Q: What CAN'T you engrave with a fiber laser?

A: - Anything transparent (except glass) - Light colored wood - Acrylic (marks, but not well) - Most fabrics - Food

Q: Is there any material you should NEVER laser engrave?

A: Yes. Never engrave PVC or vinyl. It produces chlorine gas when lasered, which is toxic to breathe and will corrode the inside of your laser.


Settings & Quality FAQs

Q: What power and speed should I use for stainless steel?

A: For a dark mark on stainless: 100% power, 150 mm/min, 20 kHz frequency. For a bright white annealing mark: 90% power, 4000 mm/min, 60 kHz.

Q: What are the best settings for anodized aluminum?

A: 80% power, 2000 mm/min, 15 kHz. This is the easiest and most forgiving material. It's almost impossible to mess up.

Q: What are the best settings for tumblers?

A: 80% power, 2500 mm/min, 15 kHz. This produces perfect results on 99% of powder coated tumblers.

Q: What DPI / LPI should I use?

A: - Draft quality: 150 LPI - Standard / perfect: 254 LPI (industry standard, use this 95% of the time) - Photo quality: 300+ LPI

Q: Why is my mark patchy and inconsistent?

A: 90% of the time this is a focus problem. Refocus your laser. Other common causes: dirty lens, material not flat, speed too fast.

Q: Why is my mark too light?

A: 1. Power too low 2. Speed too fast 3. Focus is off 4. Lens is dirty 5. Frequency too high

Q: Why am I getting burning and discoloration around the mark?

A: 1. Power too high 2. Speed too slow 3. Too many passes 4. Frequency too low

Q: How many passes should I do?

A: One pass 95% of the time. Multiple passes are only needed for: - Very dark marks on stainless steel - Deep engraving - Brass and copper

Q: Should I use bidirectional engraving?

A: Yes, it's twice as fast. You may need to adjust the offset setting slightly if you see lines between passes.

Q: What frequency should I use?

A: - Dark marks on metal: 10-20 kHz - Light / white marks: 50-80 kHz - Plastic: 20-30 kHz


Business & Money Making FAQs

Q: How much money can you make with a laser engraver?

A: - Hobby / side income: $200-$500/week - Serious part time: $500-$1,500/week - Full time: $3,000-$8,000/week

These are real numbers from actual business owners, not theory.

Q: What is the most profitable thing to laser engrave?

A: By a wide margin: custom tumblers. 80% margin, $25 profit each, 2 minutes work each. Almost every successful laser business starts with tumblers.

Q: How much does it cost to start a laser engraving business?

A: You can start for under $300 total: - Tyvok P2: $149 - Rotary: $49 - LightBurn: $60 - 10 blank tumblers: $30 - Total: $288

Q: Do I need a business license?

A: It depends on your location, but in most places yes. It's usually $50-$100 and takes 30 minutes online. Well worth it to be legitimate.

Q: Where do I get blank products to engrave?

A: The most popular suppliers: - Amazon (fast shipping, good for testing) - Alibaba (cheapest for bulk) - Wholesale blanks suppliers

Q: How do I get customers?

A: The most effective methods (in order): 1. Word of mouth / referrals (#1 by far) 2. Local Facebook groups 3. Etsy 4. Google Business Profile 5. Cold outreach to local businesses

Q: How much should I charge for custom tumblers?

A: $30 each is the standard price. Discount for bulk: 10+ for $25 each, 50+ for $20 each. Don't go cheaper than $20 even for large orders.

Q: How many tumblers can you do in an hour?

A: 20-30 per hour if you're organized and have a system. That's $500-$750 profit per hour.

Q: Is laser engraving still profitable in 2026?

A: Yes, extremely. Demand is growing faster than supply. Most people still don't know you can get custom metal products for $20-30. The market is huge and mostly untapped.

Q: Can you really make $1,000/week with a $149 laser?

A: Yes. 40 tumblers per week at $25 profit each = $1,000. That's 2 hours of work. Hundreds of people are doing this right now.


Maintenance & Troubleshooting FAQs

Q: How often should I clean my laser lens?

A: Every 5-10 hours of use. A dirty lens will cost you 30-50% of your effective power. This is the #1 hidden cause of bad marks.

Q: What do I clean the laser lens with?

A: Only proper lens cleaning paper and isopropyl alcohol. Never use regular paper towels, shirts, or any other fabric — they will scratch the lens.

Q: How long does a laser lens last?

A: 6-12 months with proper care. If you never clean it, 1-2 months. Replacement lenses cost $10-20.

Q: My laser doesn't mark as well as it used to. What's wrong?

A: 99% chance your lens is dirty. Clean it. If that doesn't work, check your focus. If that doesn't work, replace the lens.

Q: How do I know if my lens is damaged?

A: Hold it up to a light. If you see any spots, smudges, or scratches that don't clean off, it's damaged. Replace it.

Q: Do I need to calibrate my galvo lasers?

A: Rarely. Galvos are calibrated at the factory and rarely need adjustment. If you start seeing square corners that aren't square, you may need to recalibrate.

Q: Why am I getting horizontal lines in my engraving?

A: This is usually a bidirectional offset issue. Adjust the offset setting in LightBurn until the lines disappear.

Q: Why is my engraving blurry?

A: Almost always a focus problem. Refocus carefully. If it's blurry in some areas and sharp in others, your material isn't flat.


Safety FAQs

Q: Are laser engravers dangerous?

A: They can be if used stupidly, but with basic safety precautions they're extremely safe. Much safer than power tools, for example.

Q: Do I need safety glasses?

A: YES. ALWAYS. You only get two eyes. Never, ever look at the laser beam without proper OD7+ safety glasses rated for your laser wavelength.

Q: Can a laser engraver blind you?

A: Yes, permanently and instantly. This is not a joke. Always wear safety glasses. Even a reflection off shiny metal can cause permanent eye damage.

Q: Do I need ventilation?

A: Yes. All laser engraving produces fumes. Some fumes (like PVC) are toxic. A simple $30 fume extractor or even a window fan blowing outside is sufficient for most use.

Q: Can a laser engraver start a fire?

A: Fiber galvo lasers are extremely unlikely to start a fire. They don't cut and they don't produce enough heat in one place. Gantry diode lasers cutting wood are a fire risk.

Q: Is it safe to run a laser engraver unattended?

A: For fiber galvos doing metal engraving, yes. The fire risk is essentially zero. For diode lasers cutting wood, absolutely not.

Q: Do I need to turn it off when not in use?

A: Yes, always turn off the laser when not in use. It's good practice and prevents any possible issues.


Software FAQs

Q: What software do laser engravers use?

A: The industry standard is LightBurn. It runs on Windows, Mac, and Linux. It costs $60 for a permanent license and is worth every penny.

Q: Is LightBurn a one time purchase?

A: Yes. $60 gets you a permanent license and one year of updates. After that, you can continue using the last version forever or renew updates for $30/year.

Q: Do I need Adobe Illustrator or Photoshop?

A: No. LightBurn has all the design capabilities you need for 99% of laser engraving work. You can import SVG, PNG, JPG, and most other common formats.

Q: Can you use Inkscape with laser engravers?

A: Yes, you can design in Inkscape and export to SVG for LightBurn. But for actual laser operation, LightBurn is much better.

Q: Is there free laser engraving software?

A: Some machines come with free software, but it's universally terrible. LightBurn is the standard for a reason. The $60 is one of the best investments you can make.

Q: Can I run LightBurn on a laptop?

A: Yes. LightBurn runs fine on any modern laptop. You don't need a powerful computer.

Q: What file formats do laser engravers use?

A: The most common: SVG, DXF, PNG, JPG, BMP. SVG is preferred for vector graphics (text, logos). PNG/JPG is used for photos.


Buying & Comparison FAQs

Q: What is the best laser engraver for beginners in 2026?

A: Tyvok P2. $149, true 10W fiber galvo, LightBurn compatible, produces professional quality results. It's not even close — this is the best value by a mile.

Q: What is the best laser engraver for small business?

A: Again, Tyvok P2. It's the best ROI by far. The money you save compared to more expensive machines can be invested in inventory and marketing, which actually make you money.

Q: Tyvok P2 vs LaserPecker 4: Which is better?

A: Tyvok P2 is 2-3x faster, produces darker marks on metal, and costs 1/3 the price. LaserPecker has a nicer included rotary and auto focus. For business use, P2 is the clear choice.

Q: Tyvok P2 vs xTool F1: Which is better?

A: They perform almost identically on metal. The xTool has a nicer enclosure and included rotary, but costs $550 more. For the money, P2 is the better value.

Q: Do I need auto focus?

A: No. Manual focus takes 10 seconds and works perfectly. Auto focus is a nice convenience feature but absolutely not required, and not worth paying $300 extra for.

Q: Do I need a rotary included?

A: If you're doing tumblers, yes. But the P2 rotary is $49. The LaserPecker 4 includes a rotary but costs $350 more. You're still $300 ahead with the P2.

Q: Is a more expensive laser better?

A: Up to a point. Above $500, you're mostly paying for brand marketing, nicer enclosures, and convenience features — not actual engraving performance. The $149 P2 engraves metal as well as a $1,500 machine.

Q: Should I buy a cheap laser from Amazon?

A: Most of them are garbage. The Tyvok P2 is the exception — it's actually good. Almost all other sub-$200 lasers on Amazon are low power, terrible quality, and don't last.

Q: Should I buy used?

A: You can, but for $149 for a new P2, it's rarely worth the risk. Lasers don't depreciate that much anyway.

Q: What accessories do I actually need?

A: - Must have: Safety glasses, rotary attachment, LightBurn - Nice to have: Fume extractor, extra lenses, jig set - Waste of money: All the other random accessories they try to sell you


Final Note

If you have a question that's not answered here, email us and we'll add it. This guide is updated monthly with new questions based on actual Google search data.


Complete Guide Series: 1. Ultimate Guide to Galvo Laser Engravers 2. How to Start a Laser Engraving Business 3. Complete Laser Settings Guide for 50+ Materials 4. Tyvok P2 vs All Competitors Comparison 5. 10 Ways to Make $1,000+/Week

Last updated: May 10, 2026

Deja un comentario

Su dirección de correo electrónico no será publicada..

Carrito 0

Su carrito está vacío.

Empieza a comprar
? WikiTyvok laser answers