Yup, first thing I looked for was Lightburn compatibility. Same with the C02... I did a lot of research before buying both my machines. Lightburn is a bit glitchy... at least on mine, If you move the engraving while it's showing the mark more than a dozen times itll lock up sometimes... but other than that, it's been perfect.
I have a rotary like that, And its how I justified buying myself a 30" x 30" 3D printer so I can print my own jigs / test them out, before I CNC true jigs at work....
I havent hooked it up yet... or the rotary for my Co2... It's on my to do list.
I do 3" x 4" Tags - I think it takes about 5 mins on my fiber... Where as on my laser I can load 70 at a time and it takes about 1 hour to do all 70, with no interaction from me... Just load them, hit go, then watch TV in the room for an hour to make sure it doesnt burn my house down.
Takes about... 5 minutes to spray a sheet of 70, 10 mins to rinse them off. So roughly an hour and a half for 70 VS almost 6 hours on the fiber... I did buy the fiber mainly for these tags, and Honestly I've played with it for maybe an hour since I've had it... so I'm sure I can tweak my settings - But the black looks different... I'd say it looks better, more black - but also its shiny compared to the sprays. Since it was a job I'm taking over from the other company, I had to match the look of the old tags as well... and the laser spray matches it perfectly.
So theres a few reasons I use The spray VS fiber... main one being lazy and too busy to learn how to do it quickly! It's thick 16 gauge stainless, And I only had 10 spares to play with and do tests on.... so I ran out of material. I have 1000 of them upcoming that I have to do, and I bought 100 extra just for playing with...so maybe I'll try the fiber again.
I use brilliance powder mostly, instead of ceramark - Ceramark was better since it sticks... You can spray 100 items and stack them and it'll hold up fine. The brilliance wipes off with your finger or a cloth...so you have to spray right before you drop them in. But you can buy 250 Grams for $100 CAD on sale, Mix it with some rubbing alcohol and use a Youcan -
https://paintspot.ca/art-supplies/s...-paints/jacquard-youcan-refillable-spray-can/ $40, you re-pressurize it with your air compressor.... And 1 tub of 250gram fills it up at least 5 times...so it's like paying $20 a can VS the $165 trotec charges. I find the brilliance to be a deeper black too... AND while it not sticking is a pain if you want to pre-paint 100 items, it also makes it wash off way easier. Thinner application, and cheap - So if your employees slather it on, its not too bad