BLU-RAY LASER AT KD FOR >$550???

Timelord

Newly Enlightened
Joined
Feb 26, 2007
Messages
48
Enlarge image
KD's Price:$787.18 Qty:
bus.gif
FREE SHIPPING Availability:In Stock – Ship in 1-2 days Avg.Rating:
rating_0.gif
0 Customer Reviews

highlight.gif





Size: φ40 × 220mm
Specifications parameters:
Output:> 50mW
Working methods: CW
Width: <0.1
Polarization way: Line polarization
Polarization over:> 100:1
Beam quality: <1.2 M2 factor
Beam divergence angle: 1.2 ± 0.2mrad
Beam diameter: 1.2 ± 0.2mm
Elliptical beam:> 90%
Power stability: <15%
Warm-up time: <3 min
Temperature :18-30 ℃
Life:> 5000 hours
Warranty: 3 months
alivechat_orange.gif
Live chat by AliveChat
 

pyrokid3

Newly Enlightened
Joined
Nov 6, 2007
Messages
33
Blue lasers are harder and more expensive to produce. And they look really cool too :naughty:
 

RDZombie

Newly Enlightened
Joined
Sep 16, 2004
Messages
81
i didnt see the wavelength in the specs. wonder if its blu ray as in 405nm or blue dpss; 473?
 

Tachikoma

Enlightened
Joined
Apr 6, 2007
Messages
487
If you are practical with electronics you can build a 130mw Bluray laser pointer for about $350, just check some laser forums if you don't believe me :)
 

ajohnson

Newly Enlightened
Joined
Jul 1, 2006
Messages
112
i didnt see the wavelength in the specs. wonder if its blu ray as in 405nm or blue dpss; 473?
Based on the price and the "Blu-Ray" in the title, I'd have to assume direct 405nm. I'd think a handheld 473nm dpss would be more expensive.
 

Patriot

Flashaholic
Joined
Feb 13, 2007
Messages
11,254
Location
Arizona
I noticed that too...wavelength would be a ***VERY IMPORTANT*** parameter to show on a web page about...a...LASER. :shakehead



Yeah, and that's typical KD. :(

That thing look exactly like the Optotronis RPL too! I wonder if it's the same body with blueray guts in it.........?
 

VaThInK

Newly Enlightened
Joined
Apr 19, 2007
Messages
82
For the price, its beam diameter and physical construction, I would say it's definitely a cheap Chinese made 473nm portable DPSS laser. I don't think direct injected diodes can produce a beam as fine as 1.2mm, unless if that spec is a typo (never seen or heard one with a beam diameter that thin). And the big heatsink is needed to help dissipate the heat produced from the powerful pump diode due to poor efficiency for LBO crystals (it's a lot worse than KTP). The most powerful commonly available 405nm diodes don't need heatsink that huge. Direct injected laser diodes have fairly low heat dissipation compared to DPSS lasers. I might be wrong on this one but my common sense is saying otherwise :whistle:.

Cheers.
 
Last edited:
Top