Laser Glass Processing Machines at Rayno: Choosing the Right Laser for Cutting, Drilling, Sandblasting, and Marking

glass cutting sample

Overview

Rayno provides a portfolio of laser glass processing machines to address different budgets, precision needs, thickness ranges, and application scenarios. From high-end picosecond infrared laser cutting machines to cost-effective nanosecond infrared, UV, and green solutions, we help manufacturers achieve the optimal balance of edge quality, throughput, multifunctionality, and investment cost.

Below is a clear, SEO-friendly breakdown of the four primary laser options Rayno currently offers for glass processing.


1) Picosecond Infrared Laser Cutting Machine

Best for: Ultra-smooth edges, fast cutting, high-end production lines

Key strengths

  • Extremely smooth edges, virtually no post-processing required.
  • High cutting speed, ideal for mass production.
  • Typically paired with a CO₂ laser system to split the cut path cleanly (controlled cracking).

Limitations

  • Cannot cut holes smaller than 50 mm in diameter.
  • High equipment cost—premium solution for premium requirements.

When to choose it:
If your priority is top-tier edge quality, minimal heat-affected zones, and fast throughput—and your budget allows for a higher-end laser—this is the right choice.


2) Nanosecond Infrared Laser Cutting Machine

Best for: Cost-effective, multi-function processing (cutting + drilling + sandblasting + marking)

Key strengths

  • Lower price compared to picosecond IR systems.
  • Multi-functional: besides cutting, it can drill, sandblast, and mark—a true “one machine, many jobs” solution.
  • Edge quality is good for most industrial needs.

Limitations

  • Precision and edge finish are not as fine as picosecond IR.
  • May require light post-processing for high-spec optical edges.

When to choose it:
If you need versatility and value—and can accept slightly less refined edges than picosecond cutting—this is the most economical and flexible option.


3) Nanosecond UV Laser Device

Best for: Thin glass drilling and cutting

Key strengths

  • Shorter wavelength enables higher absorption and finer features on thin, brittle glass.
  • Lower heat input, reducing microcracks and edge chipping for thin substrates.
  • Ideal for precision drilling and cutting of thin glass (e.g., display panels, cover glass).

Limitations

  • Generally not as fast as IR solutions on thicker glass.
  • Higher cost than nanosecond IR, but typically less than picosecond IR.

When to choose it:
If your core business involves thin glass with high precision requirements, UV nanosecond is a smart, targeted choice.


4) Nanosecond Green Laser Device

Best for: Micro-drilling, ultra-small apertures

Key strengths

  • Capable of drilling holes as small as 0.1 mm diameter.
  • Excellent for micro-features and delicate processing where beam focus and absorption are critical.
  • A strong complement to other lasers when fine drilling is the bottleneck.

Limitations

  • Typically used primarily for drilling, not broad-area cutting.
  • Not suited for very high-speed bulk cutting.

When to choose it:
If ultra-small hole drilling (≈0.1 mm) is a core requirement, the green nanosecond laser is the ideal specialized tool.


Quick Comparison Table

Laser TypeTypical Use CasesEdge QualityHole CapabilitySpeedCost LevelKey Limitation
Picosecond IR Laser Cutting MachineHigh-end cutting, premium edge quality★★★★★ (ultra-smooth)≥ 50 mm apertures★★★★★ (very fast)★★★★★ (highest)Cannot drill < 50 mm holes; high price
Nanosecond IR Laser Cutting MachineCutting + drilling + sandblasting + marking (all-in-one)★★★★☆ (good)Versatile, but not micro-hole focused★★★★☆ (fast)★★☆☆☆ (affordable)Edge quality/precision below picosecond IR
Nanosecond UV Laser DeviceThin glass drilling & cutting★★★★☆ (fine on thin glass)Small holes on thin substrates★★★☆☆★★★☆☆Less efficient on thick glass
Nanosecond Green Laser DeviceMicro-drilling (as small as 0.1 mm)★★★★☆ (for drilling tasks)≈0.1 mm micro-holes★★☆☆☆★★★☆☆Mainly for drilling; not ideal for high-speed cutting

How to Choose the Right Laser Glass Processing Machine

Ask yourself:

  1. What matters most—edge quality, cost, or versatility?
  2. Do you need micro-holes (<0.5 mm) or large apertures?
  3. Are you processing thin or thick glass?
  4. Is post-processing acceptable, or must the cut be production-ready off the machine?

Typical recommendations:

  • Top-edge quality & speed: Picosecond IR + CO₂ splitting.
  • Balanced cost & flexibility: Nanosecond IR (cut, drill, sandblast, mark).
  • Thin glass precision: Nanosecond UV.
  • Micro-drilling (down to 0.1 mm): Nanosecond Green.
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