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Ruby: Prepare Screen

TheOnce you've pushed your design over to the Prepare Screen you'll see it sitting in the working area. This area shows the entire working area of the laser bed, with the top left corner reprisenting the back left of the laser cutter bed.

When the machine is running you'll find the red dot laser position matches an icon on the work area in this screen.

This screen allowswill allow you to take one or more designs and placeposition them acrossonto a material in the working area of the laser cutter as a single jobready to runbe in one go.lasered.

Typically you would come to this screen by pressing "Create Job" on the Design ScreenScreen, but you can also create a new job and then add designs from your library directly into a job.

Screenshot of the Ruby Prepare Screen

The Prepare Screen is split into 3 columns:

Left: Browsers
    Top: Design browser
    Bottom: Job browser
Middle: Work area
    Top: Toolbar
    Bottom: Working area
Right
    Top: Job name and tags
    Middle: Design parameters
    Bottom: Materials and list of designs included in the job

Toolbar

Adding a design

If your design isn't on the working area open the designs browser on the top left, and drag the design(s) out into the working area where you want them.

Positioning a design

At this point in the process you'll want to put your material into the laser cutter and position the red dot laser on the material where you want it to cut.

The red dot will be mirrored in the Prepare Screen by an icon, and you can position the design in relation to this icon, around any one of the 9 snappable positions around the bounding box of your design, most commonly people use the top left corner.

Image showing a cube with 9 cubes positioned in a 3x3 grid indicating the snappable locations

Selecting a material

Once you've got your design(s) laid out in the correct places you will need to set the material for the job.

You cannot have different materials for each design.

Select the material from the lower right corner, make sure you pick the exact material you have. The thickeness and the type are important.

Screenshot of the material selector

In this screenshot you can see we are using the black, blue and red colours but that the 4th "effect" is unassigned, this colour is RGB green #00ff00 but was not included in our example design so it is shown as unassigned.

From this area you can also disable certain effects if you want to skip them by unchecking the boxes next to them.

Tweaking effects

By clicking the dropdown icon to the right of an effect you can open the effect settings, this lets you get full control over the machines power, speed and other settings.

Screenshot of the extended materials settings

These settings are very granular, but we ask that you avoid adjusting without the support of a technician as there is a greater risk of fire or damage to the machine if you use these incorrectly.

Queue the job

Once you are ready to send the job to the laser cutter press Queue, the machine won't start until you press the start button on the laser cutter.

Screenshot of the Queue button