
But it looks pretty gnarly in terms of extra stuff you don't have to do when 3d printing, so I'm not sure it would be a good fit for Octoprint without substantial enhancements. Lastly for CNC, we know that you can use Fusion to generate gcode for that mode ( SM manual), and I think drive the machine as well. There was someone on the Lightburn forum playing with a way to use that software to manage laser jobs and they found a lot of funky gcode. Looks like you can in theory control the machine via remote gcode for the other two modes - but it's all experimental stuff from what my research has found. Lightburn Tutorial - Setting up a new laser. Do not adjust the Z-offset too much that will cause the nozzle gouge the print sheet. G1 E-1 F300 retract the filament a bit before lifting the nozzle, to release some of the pressure The heart of a laser marker is hidden in its control board, on which there is a small chip on which runs a software capable of transforming the commands it. M140 S0 heated bed heater off (if you have it)

Reference this official SM article with Cura & Fusion profiles which contain the Gcode scripts you need for successful prints via Octopi.īelow I'm pasting the gcode from that article: **Start G-Code** Once you start a print, do not adjust the temp using the screen, or your temps will zero out and the print will fail. Octoprint does work well for SM2, but there is a bug or two.
