RDWorks vs Light Lane

You use RDWorks and want to know if Light Lane is a viable alternative.

A direct answer: Ruida support in Light Lane is in beta. It generates RD files from SVG artwork and sends them over USB or Ethernet. It has not been tested across every Ruida machine. RDWorks is the more mature, more tested option for Ruida hardware. This page is for people who want to understand the tradeoffs.

Ruida support status in Light Lane (February 2026)

Confirmed

  • Generates RD files from SVG artwork.
  • Sends jobs over USB serial or Ethernet (UDP) to Ruida machines.
  • Configurable geometry: flatten mode, DPI override, cut speed, min/max power, passes (1–10).
  • Dry run mode traces the full pipeline without sending to hardware.
  • Oversize detection with auto-fit or clip when your design exceeds the work area.
  • Runs on macOS and Windows. Pro tier required.

Not confirmed

  • Not tested across all Ruida machine models. Transport edge cases may exist.
  • Requires the free lightlane-ruida helper binary, downloaded separately from the Light Lane website. Not bundled with the main app.
  • One SVG at a time only. Multi-file Ruida jobs are not supported.
  • Deep Ruida panel control integration is not available.
  • Not a feature-complete replacement for RDWorks.

Where RDWorks is the stronger choice

RDWorks has been tested across thousands of Ruida CO2 machines. If your machine came with a Ruida controller, RDWorks is the default software for a reason. It has deep integration with Ruida's panel controls, mature cutting pass management, and a large base of users who have worked out the quirks of specific machine models. RDWorks is free and ships with most Ruida hardware.

If your Ruida setup is working reliably today, switching carries real risk. The main reasons to look at Light Lane are: you want modern software on macOS, you want an AI settings assistant for photo engraving jobs, you want the same app for both your GRBL diode laser and your Ruida CO2 machine, or you find RDWorks's interface frustrating. If none of those apply, RDWorks is the safer choice.

Where Light Lane is worth evaluating: it runs on macOS and Windows with a modern interface, receives regular auto-updates, has an AI settings assistant for image jobs, includes a material test grid for calibrating speed and power on acrylic and oak, and uses reusable .lltemplate files for repeat cutting jobs. Both GRBL and Ruida machines are managed in the same app.

Feature comparison

Accurate as of February 2026. Ruida-specific rows reflect beta status in Light Lane.

Feature Light Lane RDWorks
Price $12–$24/month Free (bundled with hardware)
macOS support Yes No (Windows only)
Windows support Yes Yes
Ruida CO2 support Beta (external helper required) Yes (mature, native)
GRBL support Yes (full) No
Marlin support Yes No
AI settings assistant (before/after diff) Yes No
Material test grid (up to 20x20) Yes (Pro tier) No
Reusable layout templates (.lltemplate) Yes Limited
File import: PNG, JPEG, BMP, SVG Yes Yes
File import: DXF, AI, PDF No Yes
Dither algorithms 3: Floyd-Steinberg, Atkinson, Bayer Fewer options
Ruida panel control integration No Yes (deep)
Send via Ethernet (UDP) to Ruida Yes (beta) Yes
Send via USB to Ruida Yes (beta) Yes
Multiple SVGs per Ruida job No (one at a time) Yes
Auto-update (macOS + Windows) Yes Manual updates

Light Lane's Ruida mode

The Ruida pipeline in Light Lane generates RD files from SVG artwork, with geometry controls and a dry run option before sending.

  • The side-by-side evaluation view.
  • The pre-run check modal. Warns before sending if settings are outside the expected range.
  • Template placeholders for repeat Ruida cutting jobs.

RDWorks alternative FAQ

Is Ruida support in Light Lane mature enough to replace RDWorks in production?

It depends on your machine and cutting requirements. The Ruida mode generates RD files from SVG artwork and sends via USB or Ethernet. It has been tested on a limited set of machines. Transport edge cases exist. If RDWorks is working reliably for you, replacing it with a beta implementation carries real risk. The safest approach is to run Light Lane on a non-production job first, confirm your machine responds correctly, and test output quality before committing.

What is the lightlane-ruida helper binary and why do I need to install it separately?

All Ruida protocol work in Light Lane happens in an external binary called lightlane-ruida. Download and install it separately from the Light Lane website using the provided installer. The main app auto-detects the helper and activates Ruida mode when it is found. Keeping it separate during beta means the main app stays production-ready while Ruida support matures independently. The helper is free.

Does Light Lane import my existing RDWorks project files?

No. Light Lane does not import RDWorks project files. In Ruida mode, you import one SVG at a time. Multi-file Ruida jobs are not supported yet.

What does the AI settings assistant do for Ruida jobs?

The AI Engrave Assistant works in Ruida mode. Select your SVG and the assistant can suggest cut speed, min power, max power, and passes. It shows you a before/after diff with exact values. Nothing changes until you hit Confirm. Internet connection and an active Pro licence are required.

I cut thick clear acrylic at multiple passes. Does Light Lane support that?

Yes. Ruida mode in Light Lane supports 1 to 10 passes, set in the sidebar before you send the job. You configure cut speed, min power, and max power alongside the pass count.

I have both a GRBL diode laser and a Ruida CO2 machine. Can I use Light Lane for both?

Yes, and that is one of the strongest reasons to consider it. Light Lane handles GRBL with full support including M4 dynamic mode, $30/$31 power scaling, and character-counting streaming. Ruida is supported in beta via the helper binary. Both machines in one app, one material library, one template format. Worth testing across both machines during the 14-day trial.

Try Light Lane with your Ruida machine

14 days, no card required. Download the lightlane-ruida helper from the website, connect your CO2 laser, and run a test job before deciding.

Next steps

Validate one real workflow in Light Lane, then move to the most relevant guide or feature page.

Last updated February 21, 2026