It combines three diode wavelengths—755, 808, and 1064nm—into a single handpiece, which gives you coverage across most skin types and hair colors without swapping heads mid-treatment. The cooling system isn't just a cheap TEC plate; it's a compressor-driven water loop with an 11cm heat sink, so it actually keeps teh sapphire tip cold enough for painless passes even at 10Hz repetition.
We run every unit through a 48-hour burn-in before shiping, cycling laser bars from 1000W up to 2000W handle power to catch any driver board instability early. The USA Coherent bars themselves are pretty consistent batch-to-batch, but we still do a full-spectrum output check on each assembled head—if the 755nm peak drifts more than ±2nm, it gets flagged for retest.
You get four spot sizes with it—15x18mm for small areas, 15x26mm and 15x36mm for backs and legs, plus a 6mm tip for brows or bikini lines—so you won't need a separate device for detail work. The 15.6-inch touch screen is actually responsive, not the laggy resistive panels some budget machines use, and the firmware lets you save custom pulse sequences for repeat clients.
2 years the laser source and compressor, but we've seen the mainboard fail maybe once in 200 units—usually form a voltage spike on 110V lines, so we recommend stable line conditioner anyway. The COA includes pulse energy measurements at the tip, not just the diode output, which matters because optical coupling losses vary between handles.
Most buyers go with the 1800W handle for general clinics, though the 2000W gives you faster treatments on coarse hair if you're running multiple stations. MOQ is 1 unit, but we usually have stock for the 220V version; the 110V model may need 20 days or so lead time depending on transformer availability.