Laser Raster

A laser raster operation engraves an image by mapping pixel intensity directly to laser power. Each pixel becomes a short laser move at a power level interpolated between the configured min and max — white pixels run at min, black pixels at max, with continuous greyscale between. This produces continuous-tone output, in contrast to halftone mode which dithers to binary on/off.

Scanning

The image is scanned row by row. The Dots Per Mm setting defines both the spacing between scan lines and the spacing between pixels within a row, so it directly controls the engraving resolution.

Bidirectional scanning runs alternate rows in opposite directions, which roughly doubles throughput. Unidirectional (every row scanned in the same direction) avoids the one-pixel-wide kerf offset some machines exhibit between forward and reverse strokes, at the cost of extra return moves.

Settings

SettingDescription
Dots Per MmEngraving resolution (scan-line and pixel spacing).
Min PowerLaser power for white pixels, 0-255.
Max PowerLaser power for black pixels, 0-255.
BidirectionalScan alternate rows in opposite directions.

Feed rate comes from the assigned laser tool preset.

Tool requirement

A laser tool with dynamic power output. Static-on/off lasers can run this operation but won't reproduce greyscale; use Laser Halftone instead.

When to use

  • Photographic image engraving on wood, MDF, leather, or acrylic
  • Continuous-tone shading where you want subtle gradients
  • Image-based marking where halftone dots would be visible