Steve, Thank you for the great overview. I’m currently reviewing the LP5 as far as the power on/off I thought you had to unplug to turn it off and plug it in to turn it on. What I found was if you press and hold the pause button on top of the unit it will turn the machine on. Press and hold again to turn it off. I was surprised this wasn’t anywhere in the user manual, but it works for me. Keep up the good work!
The portability of this one over the F1 Ultra is a big difference. While you can move the F1, it's not exactly something I'd want to do often. This one is much more suited for that.
This used a depth map greyscale image. I'm going to work on a video showing the process using their software soon as it's one of the things people are most curious about. Thanks for watching!
I just checked the power adaptor and it's listed as 100-240v input 50/60hz 2.5A max. So assuming you get the correct input cable for the power brick, it uses a typical PC power supply cable, then it would likely work. I do not see a voltage input switch on the power brick so you may want to double check this with LaserPecker to see if it is swappable between 110 and 220v without any other modifications.
It is but they have not released the Lightburn Device configuration for it yet. I've been talking with them about it and once they have it ready for release, I'm looking forward to testing it with LightBurn.
Steve, Thank you for the great overview. I’m currently reviewing the LP5 as far as the power on/off I thought you had to unplug to turn it off and plug it in to turn it on. What I found was if you press and hold the pause button on top of the unit it will turn the machine on. Press and hold again to turn it off. I was surprised this wasn’t anywhere in the user manual, but it works for me. Keep up the good work!
Thanks for the info! I'll have to check that out as plugging and un-plugging it just seems like it's asking for that connector to wear out.
Thanks Steve! Very interesting, would love getting one for shows someday!😊
Another nice informative review. Thank you.
Nice job on the review! Much nicer laser and support compared to the xFool.
Good review thanks. Interesting little machine
Thanks, this one would be easier to take to a Farmers Market than the Ultra F1. You think?
The portability of this one over the F1 Ultra is a big difference. While you can move the F1, it's not exactly something I'd want to do often. This one is much more suited for that.
@@cubansli3099 i would say just use the common Xtool F1 for portability and shows.
May I ask you what makes me buy 5 rather than 4 even though it's pretty good I mean 4
@@Bodari23 if you want to do the deeper etching you'll need the power of the LP5.
does the laserpecker 5 have a roller (trolley) like the LaserPecker 2 has?
It does not, they have the sliding tray to handle some longer material but not the rollers.
Great review, with the grayscale metal round, did you use a height map op depth map grayscale image?
This used a depth map greyscale image. I'm going to work on a video showing the process using their software soon as it's one of the things people are most curious about. Thanks for watching!
Is it dual voltage? I need something on 110v and 220v. Knowing I have to change the cable/power supply.
I just checked the power adaptor and it's listed as 100-240v input 50/60hz 2.5A max. So assuming you get the correct input cable for the power brick, it uses a typical PC power supply cable, then it would likely work. I do not see a voltage input switch on the power brick so you may want to double check this with LaserPecker to see if it is swappable between 110 and 220v without any other modifications.
@@Vintauri thanks. I hope to pick one of these up soon. It will be my first machine.
Is it compatible with lightburn?
It is but they have not released the Lightburn Device configuration for it yet. I've been talking with them about it and once they have it ready for release, I'm looking forward to testing it with LightBurn.