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Creality Falcon A1 Pro Review in 57 Seconds

Aug 7, 2025
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🔥 Grab the Creality Falcon A1 Pro here: https://geni.us/CrealityFalconA1Pro The Creality Falcon A1 Pro is a laser engraver that shouldn’t work this well—but it does. This dual-laser machine combines a 20W diode and a 2W infrared laser into one compact desktop unit that can engrave stainless steel, burn wood, cut acrylic, and mark leather without breaking a sweat. In this Short, I put it through a real-world test with no marketing fluff—just raw footage of it doing what it claims to do. If you're new to laser engraving or looking to upgrade from a budget machine, the Falcon A1 Pro offers an oddly satisfying mix of chaos and capability. It’s beginner-friendly in theory, thanks to autofocus, built-in air assist, and a top-down preview camera. It works with USB or Wi-Fi, and supports rotary engraving for curved objects like tumblers. The working area is 318x305mm, giving plenty of room for custom gifts, production jobs, and creative mayhem. Unlike most diode engravers, the Falcon A1 Pro includes an IR laser module, which allows it to engrave metal directly—no marking sprays or coatings required. You can burn crisp text into anodised aluminium, etch branding into stainless steel, and engrave onto coated plastics without resorting to hacks. For wood, leather, and acrylic, the 20W diode is fast, sharp, and delivers excellent contrast and depth, especially when paired with air assist. And yet… it's still a Creality machine. The software is basic, the UI is clunky, and the camera calibration process feels like a puzzle with missing instructions. Wi-Fi drops unexpectedly, and LightBurn setup isn’t plug-and-play unless you’re comfortable with device profiles. Still, when you get it going, it’s fun. It burns beautifully. It cuts quickly. It’s janky, but it delivers. This isn’t just a tool for hobbyists. It’s a small business weapon. You can use it to personalise coasters, engrave leather wallets, mark tumblers, customise phone cases, or cut wood signage. If you're starting an Etsy shop, selling engraved gifts at craft markets, or running a side hustle out of your garage, this machine gets the job done. It’s fast enough for light production, accurate enough for fine detail, and cheap enough to justify without needing a bank loan. And yes, it works with LightBurn—once set up, it unlocks far better control over power, speed, and positioning than the default Falcon Design Suite software. LightBurn also helps mitigate some of the awkward UI moments from the touchscreen panel, which hides useful features like homing in the weirdest places. Use LightBurn and you’ll see what this machine is really capable of. One thing I won’t shut up about is safety. The Falcon A1 Pro is marketed as a Class 1 device, and the orange shield is supposed to block laser radiation—but don’t risk your eyes on a promise. I strongly recommend wearing OD6+ laser safety glasses every time, especially when engraving reflective surfaces like stainless steel. I had a scare, and it’s not worth it. Be smart. This Short is just a tease. The full review on my channel dives deeper—showing how the A1 Pro performs across dozens of materials, how to calibrate the camera, how to fix annoying software quirks, and where this machine falls short. I cover everything you’d wish you knew before buying: what’s included, what works out of the box, and what still feels like a public beta. Compared to other laser engravers like the xTool D1 Pro, Atomstack X30, and Ortur Laser Master 3, the Falcon A1 Pro is less refined but just as capable. It’s chaotic, powerful, and weirdly addictive. It’s not the most professional experience, but the end results are often indistinguishable from machines that cost much more. It’s one of those tools that keeps you coming back—even after it annoys the hell out of you.

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