At the current stage of the laser industry, quality UV markers are usually significantly more expensive than fiber-optic or CO2 laser markers.
For production tasks involving simple laser marking of metals, plastics or non-metallic materials, many will find it more sensible and cost effective to purchase the appropriate fiber-optic or CO2 marker.
Read more about choosing a metal laser marker in our article: «Laser Marking Machine for Metal».
Laser UV markers are used for specific applications: most often in the jewellery and microtechnology industries and for processing particularly complex and delicate materials: diamonds and sapphires, optical lens glass, some types of plastic, precious and highly reflective metals – copper, silver, gold.
Let’s look at the basic parameters for selecting a laser marker: emitter, lens, scanner, controller and software.
Emitter for UV laser markers
We supply the Wattsan UV TT marker with a JPT SEAL 355 3, 5 or 10 W emitter. We have chosen these as they are the most reliable and high quality. We can also install more expensive air cooled JPT emitters at the customer’s request.
The JPT emitter allows stable output power to be maintained, has interference protection and a fully sealed, dustproof, moisture-proof and self-cleaning design.
Let’s move on to the main parameters. If necessary, you can compare the following values with other UV laser sources.
Do not confuse the laser beam diameter measured at 1/e^2 with the minimum focused beam diameter, which for an ultraviolet laser is theoretically closer to 0.000355 mm, but in practice can range from 0.012 to 0.047 mm, depending on the focal length and other lens characteristics.
Beam Divergence Angle <2 mrad, i.e. approximately 0.114592° at a distance of 1 metre from the source.