6 verified settings · manufacturer data · co2 rf laser · Updated February 2026
| Operation | Speed (mm/s) | Power (%) | Passes | Air Assist | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| engrave | 2000 | 30% | 1 | — | NYC Resistor wiki - 1/8 inch thickness raster - Epilog Fusion 32 with 2 inch lens |
| cut | 600 | 12% | 1 | — | NYC Resistor wiki - 1/8 inch thickness - Epilog Fusion 32 with 2 inch lens |
The Epilog Fusion 32 60W cuts Acrylic cleanly at 600 mm/s with 12% power. Always test on a scrap piece first — every machine is slightly different, and variables like tube age, lens condition, and material batch can shift results.
For Acrylic, the key variables to dial in are speed and power. If the laser isn't cutting through cleanly, slow down or add a pass before pushing power higher — excessive power causes charring and wider kerfs. Air assist is highly recommended for wood and organic materials to clear smoke and protect the lens.
Once you find settings that work, save them in Laser Lab to build your personal settings library. The AI predictor uses your calibrated results to suggest starting points for new materials automatically — so the more you log, the smarter it gets.
For cutting Acrylic on the Epilog Fusion 32 60W, start at 600 mm/s speed and 12% power. These are manufacturer-verified starting points — always test on scrap first.
Air assist is strongly recommended when cutting Acrylic. It clears smoke from the cut path, reduces charring, and helps protect your laser lens.
The manufacturer recommends 1 pass to cut through Acrylic at 600 mm/s and 12% power. If the cut isn't clean, try reducing speed slightly before adding more passes.
Incomplete cuts are usually caused by incorrect power, speed, or focus distance. If edges are charred, try increasing speed or reducing power. If the laser isn't cutting through, reduce speed or increase power — or add an extra pass. Also verify your focal distance is correct for the material thickness and that your lens is clean.
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