Built for non-metal production marking, engraving, relief effects, and cutting-style processing on suitable materials
Maximum working area up to 600*600mm to reduce repositioning and improve batch throughput
3D dynamic focusing supports depth control and more consistent results across a wide field
Computer-based controller with broad file compatibility for fast design-to-shop-floor handoff
Ideal for B2B workshops and factories handling high-mix orders, customization, and repeat production
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Features
In real production, the biggest problem is rarely “can it mark.” The problem is whether every piece looks consistent when the order is urgent, the material is slightly different from the last batch, and a new operator is running the shift. Paperboard can warp just enough to change the edge quality. Leather panels vary in thickness and finish. Wide graphics may look sharp in the center but soften near the corners when focus and energy distribution are not stable.
This 100W 3D CO2 laser system is designed to make your process calmer and more predictable. When the scanner begins, the motion is smooth and steady, and the result feels controlled: paper cuts can look crisp and clean rather than fuzzy; leather engraving can produce a warm, tactile texture that looks premium in the hand; wood marks can show deliberate depth that customers notice immediately. The 3D dynamic focusing approach helps keep the working focus consistent across large layouts and supports depth effects, reducing the time you spend compensating with manual alignment, trial passes, and rework. For B2B users, the value is simple: fewer rejects, faster changeovers, and quality you can standardize across batches.
Predictable quality on demanding jobs
Improve consistency across wide patterns and large layouts
Reduce “edge softness” and uneven tone that can trigger customer complaints
Depth and texture that add perceived value
Support controlled engraving depth for relief-like effects
Create tactile finishes that feel intentional, not accidental
Faster throughput through fewer handling steps
Process larger panels or multiple parts per cycle
Reduce repositioning, which lowers alignment errors and operator workload
Workflow-ready file support
Accept common vector and raster formats to reduce file conversion bottlenecks
Make it easier for sales, design, and production teams to collaborate
Cleaner economics compared with mechanical tooling
No stamping dies or consumable blades to replace for many applications
Better fit for high-mix customization and short-run production
This machine is built for non-metal material workflows where clean visuals, repeatability, and throughput matter. Many B2B buyers choose it not because they want “a laser,” but because they want to reduce manual steps and stabilize quality when the product mix changes every week.
Typical materials and results
Paper and cardboard
Packaging patterns, decorative inserts, paper cutting layouts, serial marks
Clean geometry can reduce hand-finishing time and improve presentation
Leather
Logos, patterns, traceability codes, decorative textures
Tunable contrast and depth can match premium brand positioning
Wood and bamboo
Branding, signage, craft engraving, product labeling
Good for bold marks and fine line work depending on settings
Cloth and textile products
Label marking, IDs, pattern guidance, batch coding
Useful in workflows where visible but controlled marking is required
Acrylic and other non-metals
Branding, panel marking, small-batch customization and personalization
Industry scenarios where it fits well
Packaging and printing suppliers needing fast layout switching
Leather goods factories balancing customization with repeat production
Craft, signage, and promotional product manufacturers handling multi-SKU orders
Non-metal labeling applications where contact-free processing reduces damage risk
Flat-field marking can perform well on perfectly flat stock, but B2B production materials are rarely perfect. Paper bows. Leather has thickness tolerance. Wood has grain height variation. When the focal point is not managed across the field, you see it as uneven depth, soft edges, or inconsistent shading that makes products look less premium.
3D dynamic focusing helps by adjusting the focal point and supporting processing behaviors like deep engraving, relief engraving, curved surface engraving, and cutting behavior on suitable materials. The practical advantage is better energy consistency across large layouts, which improves the stability of your process recipe. That means fewer trial runs and less operator “feel-based” correction. It also supports scaling: once you validate a recipe for a specific paperboard, leather finish, or wood type, you can replicate results with less dependence on the individual operator. For B2B buyers, this is a quality-control tool as much as it is a manufacturing tool.
A maximum 600*600mm marking area changes how you run daily jobs. It is not just about fitting a bigger product; it is about reducing the number of times your team touches the workpiece. Every repositioning step adds risk: skewed alignment, inconsistent placement, and wasted minutes that don’t show up on a spec sheet but do show up in delivery delays.
With a larger field, you can nest multiple parts, run full-panel layouts, or complete large designs in fewer cycles. This supports more reliable quoting because your throughput becomes more predictable. It also supports training and standardization: large, stable layouts are easier to convert into SOPs, fixtures, and repeatable job templates. In production terms, the machine helps you win by removing steps, not by adding complexity.
In B2B environments, your workflow begins with customer files and ends with repeatable output. If your team spends hours converting formats, fixing broken vectors, or rebuilding layouts, the laser becomes the least expensive part of the process and the bottleneck becomes pre-production.
This system supports a broad set of graphic formats, including AI/PLT/DXF for vector workflows and BMP/JPG/PNG for raster images, plus Dst/Dwg/LAS/DXP. That flexibility reduces friction between design, sales, and production. It also helps you accept customer files with fewer delays, improving response time on RFQs and sample requests.
Process control is where profits are protected. With a computer controller and marking software, you can build standardized job libraries, material presets, and parameter recipes. This reduces operator mistakes and keeps output consistent across shifts. When customers ask, “Can you match the last batch exactly,” your ability to run a controlled, repeatable workflow becomes your competitive advantage.
Main Configurations
Parameters
Applications
FAQ