Set Laser 2 Offset
If you have a DSP laser with dual laser tubes and dual laser heads, the directions below will help you set your Laser 2 Offset values.
Laser 2 Offset¶
The X and Y fields beneath the Enable Laser 2 Offset switch in the Device Settings window are used to compensate for the distance between two laser heads. By shifting output to the 2nd laser head by specified X and Y values, output from Laser 2 will line up with output from Laser 1.
Follow the instructions below to measure the distance between Laser 1 and Laser 2 and apply appropriate offsets.
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Before beginning this process, make sure Enable Laser 2 Controls is toggled on. 
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Load an inexpensive, expendable material into your laser's bed. Make sure it is large enough for both laser heads to mark it at once. Position it beneath both laser heads. 
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Use the Draw Lines tool to create a short, perfectly vertical line in your LightBurn workspace. Tip Hold Shift while drawing to ensure the line is perfectly vertical. 
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Assign the vertical line to a layer set to Line Mode. 
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In the Cut Settings Editor, enable both Laser 1 and Laser 2, and apply appropriate settings to mark the vertical lines on the material without cutting through. 
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Select Current Position as your Start From mode. 
- Press Start to mark the lines on the material.
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Measure and record the distance between the lines. 
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In the Device Settings window, turn on Enable Laser 2 Offset. 
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If Laser 2 is farther from your machine's origin than Laser 1, enter the measured distance between the lines as a negative value in the X field. If it is closer to the origin, enter the distance as a positive value. Note The machine's origin is the location it homes to when it first starts. 
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Rotate the vertical line 90 degrees to make it horizontal. Tip Press the . key to rotate objects 90 degrees clockwise. 
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In the Cut Settings Editor, add a Sub-Layer to the layer the horizontal line is assigned to. 
- You'll now have two Sub-Layers. Keep both set to Line Mode.
- Disable Laser 2 for the first Sub-Layer, but enable it for the second Sub-Layer. Disable Laser 1 for the second Sub-Layer.
- On the second Sub-Layer, apply appropriate settings for Laser 2 to mark your material.
- Select Current Position as your Start From mode, and make sure the first laser head is positioned over the material.
- Press Start.
- If you measured the distance between the vertical lines accurately in Step 8, each horizontal line should line up perfectly in the X dimension.- If they are misaligned and the output from Laser 2 shifted in the opposite direction of what you expected, reverse the sign of the X dimension Laser 2 Offset in the Device Settings window. In other words, if the value is positive, make it negative, or vice versa.
- If they are misaligned but Laser 2 output was shifted in the correct direction, repeat Steps 1-8, taking care to measure as precisely as possible.
 
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If the horizontal lines are aligned in both the X dimension and the Y dimension, the process is complete. If they are aligned in X but misaligned in Y, measure the distance between the 2 lines. 
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If the line output by Laser 2 is farther from your machine's origin than the one output by Laser 1, enter the measured distance between the lines as a negative value in the X field. If it closer to the origin, enter the distance as a positive value. Note The machine's origin is the location it homes to when it first starts. 
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Mark the horizontal lines again to verify alignment. - Reverse the sign of the Y offset if output was shifted in the incorrect direction.
- If output was shifted in the correct direction in Y but is still misaligned, reset the Y offset to 0 and repeat Steps 17-20.
 
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