Handheld Laser Cleaning Parameters: 800W & 1200W — Carbon Steel Reference Guide

In this guide
  1. 1200W parameters
  2. 800W parameters
  3. 800W vs 1200W
  4. What cleaning removes
  5. How Peak Power works
  6. Safety
  7. Column definitions
  8. How to choose depth
  9. Troubleshooting
  10. FAQ

This guide provides factory reference cleaning parameters for the GWEIKE 800W and 1200W handheld laser cleaning heads — the same platform as the handheld welding and cutting heads in the M series multi-process system.

The parameters cover carbon steel cleaning at four depth targets from 0.10mm to 0.25mm. The core operating logic is simpler than welding or cutting: speed, height, pressure, and frequency are fixed once set up correctly. The only variable you adjust for depth is Peak Power.

These are starting-point reference values developed under standard factory conditions. Your actual results will depend on surface condition, contamination type, material grade, and machine calibration. Always test on scrap material before cleaning production workpieces.

Quick reference: Peak Power is the only variable you adjust — speed, height, gas, and frequencies are fixed. For 1200W: start at 65% Peak Power (0.10mm depth), increase to 95% for 0.25mm, cleaning speed 20mm/s. For 800W: start at 75% (0.10mm), increase to 95% for 0.20mm, cleaning speed 15mm/s. All parameters are for carbon steel. Test on scrap before production.

1200W handheld laser cleaning parameters — carbon steel

Reference starting parameters for the 1200W handheld cleaning head on carbon steel. Test on scrap material before cleaning production surfaces.

Cleaning depth (mm) Cleaning speed (mm/s) Gas Height (mm) Pressure (bar) Peak Power (%) PWM duty (%) PWM freq (Hz) Scan freq (Hz) Wash width (mm)
0.10 20 N₂ 120 2–4 65% 100 1000 100 20
0.15 20 N₂ 120 2–4 75% 100 1000 100 20
0.20 20 N₂ 120 2–4 85% 100 1000 100 20
0.25 20 N₂ 120 2–4 95% 100 1000 100 20
0.10mmLight surface rust, thin oxide film, pre-weld surface prep on clean steel
0.15mmModerate rust, post-weld oxide removal, general surface cleaning
0.20mmHeavy surface rust, multiple oxide layers, prep for coating or painting
0.25mmSevere contamination, thick rust scale — maximum depth in reference range

800W handheld laser cleaning parameters — carbon steel

Cleaning depth (mm) Cleaning speed (mm/s) Gas Height (mm) Pressure (bar) Peak Power (%) PWM duty (%) PWM freq (Hz) Scan freq (Hz) Wash width (mm)
0.10 15 N₂ 120 2–4 75% 100 1000 100 20
0.15 15 N₂ 120 2–4 85% 100 1000 100 20
0.20 15 N₂ 120 2–4 95% 100 1000 100 20
0.10mmLight surface rust, thin oxide film, pre-weld prep
0.15mmModerate rust, post-weld oxide removal, general surface cleaning
0.20mmHeavy surface rust, thick oxide layers

The 800W reference parameters do not include a 0.25mm entry. For applications requiring deeper cleaning at this power level, run additional passes at 95% Peak Power rather than attempting to exceed the reference range.


800W vs 1200W: quick comparison

1200W 800W
Cleaning speed 20 mm/s 15 mm/s
Max depth (reference range) 0.25mm 0.20mm
Peak Power at 0.10mm 65% 75%
Peak Power at 0.20mm 85% 95%
Heavy contamination (0.25mm) ✅ Yes ❌ Not in reference range

At 1200W, the machine achieves the same depth at lower Peak Power and higher speed — more energy headroom for the same task. For light-to-moderate rust removal and pre-weld prep at low volume, both machines produce comparable results. The 1200W advantage is most significant at production volumes and for the 0.25mm depth range.


What laser cleaning actually removes

Laser cleaning uses a pulsed fiber laser beam to ablate surface contaminants — vaporizing or displacing them without significantly affecting the base material beneath. The pulse parameters are tuned to couple energy into the contaminant layer rather than the substrate.

Rust and iron oxide removalThe most common application. Surface rust and mill scale on carbon steel respond well to laser cleaning; the oxide layer absorbs the laser energy while base material removal is minimized at appropriate parameters.
Pre-weld surface preparationRemoving oxidation, oil residue, and surface contamination from weld joints before welding. Cleaner weld surfaces produce fewer inclusions, better fusion, and stronger joints. Laser cleaning is faster and more precise than mechanical grinding for this application.
Post-weld oxide removalWelding produces a heat-affected zone with discoloration and oxide buildup. Laser cleaning removes this without mechanical contact, leaving a clean surface ready for inspection, coating, or finishing.
Paint and coating removalStripping old paint, primer, or protective coatings from metal surfaces. Results depend heavily on the coating type, thickness, and adhesion. A test pass is always recommended before full-surface cleaning.
Oil and grease removalLight hydrocarbon contamination on metal surfaces can be removed with laser cleaning, though heavily soaked surfaces may require mechanical pre-cleaning first.
What laser cleaning cannot do: It is not a substitute for chemical passivation on stainless steel, does not remove deep pitting corrosion (the pits remain after the loose rust is removed), and is not appropriate for materials that absorb poorly at 1064nm or that are highly reflective without proper parameter adjustment. See the safety section before cleaning aluminum, copper, or other highly reflective metals.

How laser cleaning works — and what Peak Power controls

The laser cleaning process works by delivering controlled pulses of laser energy to the surface. Each pulse heats the contamination layer enough to ablate, vaporize, or detach it — while the short pulse duration limits heat transfer into the base material.

The key relationship in the parameter table: Cleaning depth is controlled almost entirely by Peak Power. In the factory reference parameters for this platform, speed, nozzle height, gas pressure, PWM duty cycle, PWM frequency, scanning frequency, and wash width are all fixed. Peak Power is the only parameter adjusted between depth targets.

This means the operational workflow is simpler than it might appear:

1

Set up the fixed parameters once (speed, height, pressure, frequencies)

2

Start at the lowest Peak Power (65% for 1200W, 75% for 800W)

3

Run a test pass and assess the surface

4

Increase Peak Power in increments until the target cleanliness is achieved

5

Record the Peak Power that works for your specific surface condition and use it consistently

Higher Peak Power = more energy per pulse = deeper contaminant removal per pass. The other parameters (speed, frequency) determine the spatial distribution of pulses — once those are correct for the beam geometry and application, they stay fixed.

The 800W vs 1200W difference: At 1200W, the cleaning speed is 20mm/s. At 800W, it is 15mm/s — 25% slower for the same depth target. The 1200W also achieves 0.25mm cleaning depth, which is outside the 800W reference range. For light surface cleaning at 0.10mm, the 800W requires 75% Peak Power vs 65% for the 1200W — the higher power unit works more efficiently at the same depth.


Before you clean: safety requirements

Handheld laser cleaning with a fiber laser source at these power levels is a Class 4 laser operation. The following requirements apply before any cleaning operation.

⚠ Safety requirements

Laser safety eyewear
Always wear laser safety eyewear rated for 1064nm at the appropriate optical density for your power level. Standard CO₂ laser eyewear (rated for 10,600nm) does not protect against 1064nm fiber laser radiation. Check that all personnel in the work area are protected — reflected beams from metal surfaces are a real hazard.
High-reflectivity materials — elevated risk
Cleaning aluminum, copper, brass, or other highly reflective metals produces stronger back-reflection than cleaning carbon steel. Before cleaning highly reflective surfaces, verify that the machine's back-reflection protection is active, reduce initial Peak Power significantly below the carbon steel reference values, and ensure the beam angle is not directed toward personnel or reflective surfaces behind the operator.
Fume and particulate extraction
Laser cleaning produces metal oxide particles, vaporized contaminants, and — when cleaning painted or coated surfaces — potentially toxic fumes from the coating material. Ensure mechanical extraction is running before starting any cleaning operation. When cleaning painted surfaces, identify the paint type before cleaning. Do not clean lead-based paint without appropriate respiratory protection and hazard controls.
N₂ gas handling
The reference parameters use nitrogen assist gas at 2–4 bar. Use only rated, certified gas delivery components. Check connections before pressurizing.
Follow the official user manual
These parameters assume a trained operator familiar with the M series cleaning head setup and operation. Read and follow all safety instructions in the GWEIKE M series user manual before operating the cleaning head.

What the columns mean

Cleaning depth (mm)Target contaminant or oxide removal depth per pass — not base material removal. At correct parameters, base material loss is minimal.
Cleaning speed (mm/s)Travel speed of the cleaning head across the surface. Consistent motion speed is critical for even results.
GasN₂ (nitrogen) for all reference parameters. Blows ablated material away from the cleaning zone and prevents re-deposition.
Height (mm)Nozzle tip to material surface. Fixed at 120mm — the working distance of the cleaning head optics. Variation changes beam spot size and cleaning uniformity.
Pressure (bar)N₂ gas pressure at 2–4 bar. Measured at the cleaning head, not at the source regulator.
Peak Power (%)Percentage of maximum rated power per pulse. The primary depth control variable — the only parameter that changes between depth targets.
PWM duty cycle (%)Fixed at 100% for all reference parameters.
PWM frequency (Hz)Fixed at 1000 Hz for all reference parameters.
Scanning frequency (Hz)Frequency at which the beam oscillates to create the wash pattern across the 20mm cleaning width. Fixed at 100 Hz.
Wash width (mm)Width of the cleaning swath per pass — 20mm. Determined by the scanning optics configuration.

How to choose your starting depth

For rust removalStart at 0.10mm and run a test pass on a representative area. If rust remains, increase to 0.15mm. Most light-to-moderate rust on carbon steel is removed within the 0.10–0.15mm range. Reserve 0.20–0.25mm for heavily corroded surfaces or areas with thick mill scale.
For pre-weld surface preparation0.10mm is typically sufficient. The goal is to remove the oxide film and surface contamination without significant base metal removal. Use the lowest effective Peak Power. For welding parameters on the same platform, see the handheld laser welder settings guide.
For post-weld oxide removal0.10–0.15mm. The heat-affected zone discoloration on stainless steel and carbon steel is typically a thin surface layer. Start at 0.10mm.
For paint and coating removalResults vary significantly by coating type and adhesion. Start at 0.10mm with a test pass. Some thin coatings lift at this depth; thicker or more adherent coatings may require 0.20mm or multiple passes. Identify the coating material before cleaning — see the safety section regarding toxic coating components.
For other materials (stainless steel, aluminum, copper, alloys)The reference parameters in this guide are for carbon steel. Use these as a starting reference only. As a practical starting point for stainless steel, try 40–50% of the carbon steel Peak Power value and increase from there. Highly reflective metals like aluminum and copper require additional safety precautions as noted in the safety section.

Troubleshooting

Surface not clean after a full pass

Cause: Contamination layer is thicker than the current depth setting.

Fix: Increase Peak Power one step (e.g., 65% → 75% for 1200W) and run another test pass. If still not clean at 95%, run a second full pass at 95% rather than exceeding the reference range.

Surface discoloration or blue/brown oxidation after cleaning

Cause: Base metal is being overheated.

Fix: Reduce Peak Power one step. Also check that nozzle height is correct at 120mm — if the nozzle is too close, the effective energy density is higher than the reference condition.

Uneven cleaning — stripes or bands visible

Cause: Scan pattern is not overlapping correctly.

Fix: Check that your travel speed is consistent and that scanning frequency is set correctly at 100Hz. For production applications, use a guide fixture to maintain consistent speed and overlap.

Cleaning head back-reflection alarm

Cause: Significant laser energy returning into the head optics — most likely from a highly reflective material or oblique beam angle on a polished surface.

Fix: Stop immediately. Reduce Peak Power significantly, check beam angle, and verify nozzle height before resuming. Do not disable back-reflection protection.

N₂ pressure alarm or inconsistent gas flow

Fix: Check the gas line for kinks, leaks, or undersized fittings. Verify pressure at the cleaning head, not just at the source regulator. Pressure drop through long lines is common.


FAQ

Can the handheld laser cleaner remove rust from stainless steel?

Yes, with caveats. Stainless steel surface oxidation and heat tint from welding respond well to laser cleaning. However, the carbon steel parameters in this guide are not directly applicable — stainless steel requires lower Peak Power values to avoid damaging the passive oxide layer that provides corrosion resistance. As a practical starting point, try 40–50% of the carbon steel Peak Power value for your machine power, test on a small area, and increase carefully. For post-weld stainless cleaning where preserving corrosion resistance is critical, consult a specialist.

Do I need nitrogen gas for laser cleaning, or can I use air?

The factory reference parameters specify nitrogen (N₂) at 2–4 bar. N₂ provides an inert environment that prevents re-oxidation of the freshly cleaned surface during the process. Compressed air is sometimes used at lower pressures for less critical applications, but it can cause re-oxidation on reactive metals and produce inconsistent results on surfaces intended for welding or coating. For best results on production work, use N₂ as specified.

What is the difference between 800W and 1200W for cleaning?

The 1200W unit cleans at 20mm/s vs 15mm/s for the 800W — 33% faster at the same depth target. The 1200W also extends to 0.25mm cleaning depth, which is not available in the 800W reference parameters. For light-to-moderate rust removal and pre-weld prep, both machines produce comparable results; the 1200W is more efficient at production volumes and covers more severe contamination.

Is laser cleaning safe for thin sheet metal?

Use caution on thin sheet. At the deeper cleaning parameters (0.20–0.25mm), there is a risk of warping or perforation on very thin material. For sheet metal under approximately 2mm, start at the lowest depth target (0.10mm) and monitor carefully. Multiple light passes are safer than a single aggressive pass on thin material.

Can laser cleaning remove mill scale from new steel?

Yes. Mill scale — the hard iron oxide layer formed on hot-rolled steel during manufacturing — responds well to laser cleaning. Mill scale is typically denser and more adherent than surface rust, so start at 0.15–0.20mm and adjust based on results. Pre-weld mill scale removal is one of the most common production applications for handheld laser cleaning, as it improves weld quality significantly compared to grinding or leaving scale in place.


Disclaimer: The parameters in this guide were developed under factory standard conditions for the GWEIKE M series handheld cleaning head on carbon steel. They apply to the cleaning head configuration only — not to the welding or cutting heads, which use different parameter sets. Due to differences in surface condition, contamination type, material grade, machine calibration, and ambient environment, actual results may require adjustment. All parameters are starting-point references only. Verify on test material before cleaning production workpieces. Laser cleaning operations must comply with applicable workplace laser safety regulations and local requirements for fume extraction. Gas purity: liquid nitrogen ≥ 99.999%. All pressure values refer to monitored pressure at the cleaning head.

The cleaning head is part of the GWEIKE M series 6-in-1 platform — the same workstation supports welding, cutting, and cleaning heads, switchable without changing machines.

View the GWEIKE M series 6-in-1 workstation →

 

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