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OMTech 60 W Laser: Engraving Wobbulation
Continuing the experiments on Y axis wobbling produced this shaky engraving:

Engraving – 100mm-s 0.25mm interval 9pct The rectangle is 30×10 mm, with lines spaced 0.25 mm apart to simplify estimating distances (although I also have a measuring magnifier) and run at 100 mm/s to simplify converting distance to time. The lines alternate in direction, beginning with a left-to-right line at the bottom (which is bar-straight from the initial positioning move). The wobbles occur at the start of each line.
A closer look with blown contrast:

Engraving – 100mm-s 0.25mm interval 9pct – detail The maximum error in the Y axis direction looks like 0.12 mm and damps out after 3 cycles. Each cycle covers 2.8 mm = 28 ms = 35 Hz.
The LightBurn
Previewshows a 1.5 mm overscan distance and extrapolating the wobbulations leftward suggests the gantry starts the scan line with an overshoot due to the Y axis motion. The cycle-to-cycle damping is about 50%, so the initial overshoot (invisible in the overscan region) might be 0.25 mm, agreeing reasonably well with the 0.2 mm seen while cutting small squares.The results above come from these settings:
- Layer speed: 100 mm/s
- Line interval: 0.25 mm
- Y acceleration: 2000 mm/s²
- Y start speed: 20 mm/s
I then made single-variable changes to the
Engraving Parameterssettings:Line shift speed- 500 mm/s
- 10 mm/s
Y Acceleration- 200 mm/s²
Y start speed- 30 mm/s
Today I Learned: The
Y Start Speed(in mm/s) for engraving is capped by the Y AxisJumpoff Speed(in mm/s², so perhaps the maximum change in speed), which is, in turn, capped at 80 mm/s.Each of the variations produced a result visually indistinguishable from the image you see above: the error magnitude and oscillation frequency were identical.
One possible reason: None of those settings have any effect, because LightBurn doesn’t do whatever the Ruida controller defines as
Engraving. However, changing both theY start speedand theJumpoff speedshould have made at least a little change to the results and did not.Another possible reason: Each 0.25 mm Y axis change requires 20.8 motor steps (either 20 or 21 at 12 µm/step), so the fancy tweaks lack space to take effect, the motor thumps 20-ish steps, and the gantry shakes the same way every time.
The closer you look, the worse it gets …