Direct Answer
A1 Mini users should build a wood species test map before running any customer work or scaling production. Each species — basswood, birch, cherry, walnut, maple — has different burn behavior, charring depth, and color response that settings must match.
Demand Signal Behind This Topic
Beginner engravers consistently ask which wood types work at which settings, and experienced users emphasize that every wood species behaves differently enough to require testing.
Buyer Checklist
- List wood species planned for regular use.
- Test each species with three power/speed variations.
- Document results: burn depth, color, charring.
- Store approved settings per species.
- Never scale production without a test map.
Decision Table
| Buyer situation | Fit | Practical note |
|---|---|---|
| Basswood | Light burn, low power | Test at low speed first. |
| Baltic birch | Moderate burn, consistent | Good beginner species. |
| Cherry | Warm tone, moderate depth | Watch for grain variation. |
| Walnut | Dark burn, rich contrast | Test power carefully. |
| Maple | Light color, moderate burn | Sensitive to power overload. |
A Test Map Prevents Production Mistakes
Scaling production on an untested species means the first batch may reveal wrong settings — and a wrong batch on customer material is expensive.
Documentation Makes Scaling Possible
A species test map is the foundation for reliable production. Without it, every job is a test.
Start With the Five Most Common Craft Woods
Basswood, birch, cherry, walnut, and maple cover most beginner craft work. Test those first.
What to Compare Next
Wood testing is the practical follow-up to the first-week setup guide. Connect to the small projects guide for beginner project planning.
Related Internal Links
- https://tyvok.com/products/a1mini-desktop-laser-engraving-machine
- https://tyvok.com/blogs/news/tyvok-a1-mini-desk-setup-ventilation-beginner-guide
- https://tyvok.com/blogs/news/tyvok-a1-mini-jewelry-leather-patch-small-personalization-guide
Check Current Product Details
Check the live TYVOK A1 Mini page before buying: https://tyvok.com/products/a1mini-desktop-laser-engraving-machine. Use the current page details as the source of truth for bundles, power options, software support, and accessories.
FAQ
Why does each wood species need separate testing?
Density, grain pattern, and resin content vary by species. The same settings that produce clean results on birch can overburn walnut or leave weak marks on basswood.
What should be in a wood species test map?
Species name, source, thickness, power setting, speed setting, pass count, burn depth, and color result — documented for every test.
Can I use one setting for all light-colored woods?
No. Basswood, birch, and aspen all behave differently despite similar appearance. Test each species separately.
How many test pieces per species are needed?
Minimum three: one at current estimate, one slightly lower power, one slightly higher. Compare and record the winner.