Lasers

CO2 Lasers: What to Buy, What You Actually Need, and How Not to Waste Money

CO2 lasers are the workhorse for acrylic, wood, leather, rubber, and glass marking. This page is the guide for: which laser type fits your work, what upgrades are non-optional, and how to get better results on tricky stuff like glass (including boro).

Quick start (the “tell me what to do” version)

If your goal is cutting + engraving non-metals

  1. Choose CO2 if you want clean results on acrylic/wood/leather and reliable glass marking.
  2. Budget for ventilation first. A laser without exhaust is a smoke machine that occasionally cuts stuff.
  3. Get air assist (even basic) to improve edge quality and reduce flare-ups.
  4. Use a consistent dial-in workflow (material tests, focus checks, and one variable at a time).
  5. Plan for tube life: most hobby CO2 lasers have a tube that eventually weakens and gets replaced.
Important reality: most hobby CO2 lasers use a sealed laser tube. You usually don’t “refill CO2” like a cylinder. When performance drops, you replace the tube or service the machine.

CO2 vs diode vs fiber (pick the right tool once)

This choice determines whether you get a useful machine or a very expensive frustration ritual. Here’s the practical decision logic:

Laser type Best at Weak at Buy it if…
CO2 (10.6µm) Acrylic, wood, leather, rubber, many plastics, glass marking Direct metal work (generally), needs ventilation + cooling You want non-metals done right and you want speed
Diode Basic engraving on wood/leather, low-budget entry Clear acrylic, speed, thicker cutting, consistency You’re experimenting and okay going slow
Fiber Metal marking/engraving, some cutting workflows Many non-metals, acrylic/wood like CO2 Your main goal is metal engraving or metal production work
Most “I want to engrave glass and cut acrylic” people end up with CO2. Most “I want to engrave metal” people end up with fiber.

Gear & upgrades (what’s non-optional vs “later”)

Glass + borosilicate (what to expect, how to get clean results)

Glass marking is one of those things that looks “easy” until you try it. CO2 lasers can mark glass, but the goal is controlled surface change, not random chipping. Use this as your baseline approach.

Practical baseline workflow

  1. Start with a test strip (speed/power grid) on similar glass before your real piece.
  2. Keep focus consistent. Small focus changes can flip results from clean frost to ugly chip.
  3. Use masking (tape/paper) when it improves uniformity or reduces debris on the surface.
  4. Prefer multiple lighter passes over one brutal pass if you’re getting chips.
  5. Keep airflow and exhaust steady to reduce heat chaos and residue.
“Boro vs soda-lime” behavior varies. Treat every glass + finish as its own material profile. Save your test grids like you save kiln schedules: boring, necessary, and extremely effective.

Dial-in workflow (the repeatable way, not the lucky way)

Run this every time you add a new material

  1. Set your baseline: same lens, same focus, same air assist/exhaust.
  2. Run a test grid: speed vs power. Keep it small. Label it.
  3. Pick the cleanest result (not the darkest) and then refine DPI/passes if needed.
  4. Check edges and residue after cleaning. Some “good looking” results clean up badly.
  5. Save settings as a material profile: material + thickness + finish + notes.
The best “secret” in lasers is boring: material profiles + consistency. People who look like wizards are usually just organized.

Troubleshooting (symptom → likely cause → fix)

Symptom Likely cause Fix
Weak cuts / engraving looks faded Dirty optics, wrong focus, tube aging Clean lens/mirrors; confirm focus; then evaluate tube health
Edges look burnt / sooty Insufficient air assist or exhaust, wrong speed Increase air assist; improve exhaust; adjust speed; mask if appropriate
Inconsistent depth across bed Bed not level, focus variance, alignment issues Level bed; verify focus; check alignment and mirror mounts
Flare-ups / small flames Material, slow speed, poor air assist Do not leave unattended; increase air assist; increase speed; reduce power
Banding or wavy lines Mechanical play, belt tension, speed/accel too aggressive Check belts, wheels, rails; reduce accel; tighten mechanics
Glass mark is chippy/rough Too much energy per pass, inconsistent focus Lower power; multiple passes; consistent focus jig; try masking
Exhaust smells awful / haze everywhere Bad ventilation setup Upgrade fan/ducting; seal leaks; vent outside; add filtration if needed

Safety (short, serious, and actually relevant)

  • Ventilation: exhaust to outside if possible. Don’t cook fumes in your workspace.
  • Fire risk: many materials can ignite. Don’t run jobs unattended.
  • Material safety: avoid known toxic materials (PVC is a hard no).
  • Optics: dirty optics cause heat build-up and performance drops.
  • Electrical + cooling: treat the power and cooling loop with respect. Stable cooling matters.

Call script (makerspaces, service shops, tube replacement, job shops)

People waste time because they call and ask vague stuff like “do you have a laser.” Ask like a person who wants a real answer:

Script: “Hi. I’m trying to [engrave glass / cut acrylic / engrave wood] and I’m looking for access to a CO2 laser. What’s the bed size, do you allow walk-ins or is it appointment/training only, and do you offer assisted jobs if I bring a file?”
  • Makerspace: ask about training, hourly cost, material restrictions, rotary availability.
  • Service shop: ask about file formats, turnaround time, and whether they can test on scrap.
  • Tube replacement: ask your machine model, tube type (glass/RF), and lead times.

Laser FAQ (the stuff people keep asking)

Do CO2 lasers use tank CO2 like welding?
Usually no. Most CO2 laser machines use a sealed laser tube (glass or RF metal). You don’t refill it at a gas supplier. When performance drops, you generally replace the tube or service the machine.
Can a CO2 laser engrave glass (including borosilicate)?
Yes, CO2 is commonly used for glass marking. The trick is controlled energy: consistent focus, good tests, and often lighter/multiple passes. Treat each glass type and finish as its own material profile.
Do I need a chiller right away?
You need stable cooling. Some setups start with a reliable water loop, but as usage grows, a real chiller often becomes the “why didn’t I do this sooner” upgrade. If cooling is unstable, results become inconsistent and component life suffers.
What’s the most important upgrade after buying the laser?
Ventilation and air assist. They improve cut quality, reduce residue, and help prevent flare-ups. A laser without real exhaust is basically a smoke generator with occasional accuracy.
How do I stop wasting time on settings?
Use a simple test grid per material, label it, and save it. Then change one variable at a time. Most “laser wizards” are just organized. Consistency beats guessing.

Find laser help near you

We’re building out location coverage for laser access and service. For now, use the fast paths below. If you tell us your city/state, we can prioritize it.

If you’re also looking for cylinder CO2 for other shop needs (welding, beverage, etc.), you can still browse the CO2 directory:
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