Review of the Portable Stage Lights

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The_LED_Museum

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Portable Stage Lights, retail $69.90 (http://www.alibaba.com...)
Manufactured by Shenzhen Baoan Guanlan Libao Electronics Factory (http://libaolaser.en.alibaba.com)
Last updated 11-01-10


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Now this is a fairly interesting product...it combines a blue LED light (3 ea. 5mm blue LEDs), a red directly injected diode laser (advertised wavelength 660nm; spectrographically measured at 659.70nm), and a green DPSS laser with both lasers behind a rotating holographic "starfield" generator to create a dynamic, ever-changing pattern of red & green spots and a blue "spotlight"-type of effect (which can be turned off if desired) against any light-colored surface.

Although it is designed to be used on a stage, it can be placed just about anywhere that a neat moving starfield effect is wanted.



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SIZE


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As with any rechargeable product, charge it first (see directly below), and THEN you can light up your stage sets like parts of the Rocky Horror Picture Show.
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To activate it, look on the left side of the unit for a small black slide switch. Slide it toward the rear of the unit to the "ON" position.

On the upper surface of the unit you'll see two silvery-colored buttons and a small ribbed wheel.

Press & release the leftmost button to turn the blue LEDs on. Perform the same action to turn them off.

Press & release the rightmost button to turn the lasers on. Perform the same action to turn them off.

When the lasers are first activated, both red & green will be displayed simultaneously (at the same time) for ten seconds, then the green laser will turn off. The red laser only will then operate for ten seconds. Then the red laser will turn off and the green laser will come on for another ten seconds. The red & green lasers will continue to alternate like this until the unit is powered down.

The 10 seconds value was measured using a clock with a second hand on it.

To change the speed at which the "stars" move, turn the ribbed wheel in the center (located directly between the two buttons). Clockwise (as though tightening) speeds them up; counterclockwise (as though loosening) slows them down -- it even allows the "stars" to be stopped or frozen if you happen to really like a particular display.

When you're finished using this product, slide the little black slide switch on the left side of the product forward to the "OFF" position.



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To charge the battery in the Portable Stage Lights, there are two ways (both of them involve using the same cord).

Plug the small end of the included charging cord intro the female receptacle for it on the left hand side of the unit's body just to the right of the power switch. This connector is shaped to fit only one way, so that there is a 0% chance of inserting it incorrectly.

Plug the larger end into either any free USB port on your desktop or laptop computer (that's one), OR into the matching receptacle for it on the included "wall wart"-type charger (and that's two). Plug this charger into any standard (in north America anyway) two- or three-slot 110 volts to 130 volts AC household receptacle (or "wall outlet" or even "wall socket" if you prefer). This charger is designed to operate from voltages ranging from 100 volts to 240 volts AC 50Hz or 60Hz source, so European users can simply find a plug adapter and use it without messy transformers.

When the unit is charging, an LED recessed into a hosel for it directly under the "LED" button will glow red, and then change to yellow-green when the charge cycle is complete.

At this point, you may disconnect the cable and unplug the charger if you used that in leiu of the USB charging capability.





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This is a self-contained laser light show, and not a flashlight meant to be carried around, thrashed, trashed, and abused - so I won't thrash it like I might thrash a flashlight in the name of science.

So this section of the post will be ***SIGNIFICANTLY*** more bare than this section of the post on a posted evaluation of a flashlight.

Having said that I won't open up a can of Whoop ***
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on this light, I really find myself liking it!
The only thing that pisses me off even a little is that you can't have the red & green lasers going simultaneously (at the same time) -- that power-on segment of 10 seconds with both lasers on is kind of a tease in that regard.







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Beam photograph (LEDs only) on the test target at 12".
Measures 2,070mcd on an Amprobe LM631A light meter.

This is a fairly wide-angle light source, and if I've told you once, I've told you 1,053,000 times:
Wider viewing angles always, ALWAYS, ALWAYS equal lower mcd values!!!


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Beam photograph (LEDs + red & green lasers) on the test target at 12".


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Beam photograph (LEDs + red laser) on the test target at 12".


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Beam photograph (red laser only) on the test target at 12".
Measures 23.1477mW* on a Sper Scientific Pocket Laser Power Meter # 840011.


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Beam photograph (LEDs + green laser) on the test target at 12".


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Beam photograph (green laser only) on the test target at 12".
Measures 6.765mW* on a Sper Scientific Pocket Laser Power Meter # 840011.





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Spectrographic analysis of the red laser in this light.


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Spectrographic analysis of the red laser in this light; spectrometer's response narrowed to a range of 655nm to 675nm to pinpoint wavelength; which appears to be 659.70nm.



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Spectrographic analysis of the green laser in this light.



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Spectrographic analysis of the green laser in this light; spectrometer's response narrowed to a band between 800nm and 820nm to pinpoint NIR laser line from pump diode -- which -- as you can see -- is completely filtered out. Yes, this is a very good thing -- you wouldn't want that stuff in your green beam!



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Spectrographic analysis of the blue LEDs in this light.



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Spectrographic analysis of the red "Charge cycle in progress" die of the bicolor LED in this light.


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Spectrographic analysis of both the red & yellow-green dice of the bicolor LED in this light; indicating that the charge cycle is nearing completion.



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Spectrographic analysis of the yellow-green "Charge cycle complete" die of the bicolor LED in this light.

USB2000 spectrometer graciously donated by P.L.



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Beam cross-sectional analysis (blue lights only).
Image made using the ProMetric System by Radiant Imaging.






Video on YourTube showing the unit in operation (all modes plus various speeds).

This clip is approximately 53.222154357865 megabytes (53,419,484 bytes) in length; dial-up users please be aware.
It will take no less than one two hundred sixty six (!) minutes to load at 48.0Kbps.








TEST NOTES:
Test unit was purchased on Ebay on 10-20-10 (or "20 Oct 2010" if you prefer) and was received at 4:18pm PDT on 10-29-10 (or "29 Oct 2010").

* These measurements are ***NOT*** accurate because the laser emitting area is larger than the active surface area of the sensor in my laser power meter!!!
This product is advertised to have a total laser output power of 110mW {80mW red and 30mW green}.

The AC charger is labelled to have an output of +5.20 volts at 500mA.


UPDATE: 11-01-10
I had this product deployed on the front porch on Halloween evening, directed (aimed) at the front door.
I believe it contributed rather greatly to almost every Trick Or Treater and his/her parent complimenting me on the porch decoration; some of the older children even remarked that ours was "the coolest house I ever saw!!!"
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PROS:
Neat moving "starfield" effect
Small and compact
Uses an internal rechargeable battery, not disposable cells
Can be charged from AC or from many computers


CONS:
Laser display cannot be set so that both red & green are displayed simultaneously




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MANUFACTURER: Shenzhen Baoan Guanlan Libao Electronics Factory
PRODUCT TYPE: Portable rechargeable stage lighting unit
LAMP TYPE: LED, directly-injected red diode laser, DPSS green laser
No. OF LAMPS: 5 (3 5mm blue LEDs, 1 red laser, 1 green laser)
BEAM TYPE: Medium flood (starfield plus LEDs)
SWITCH TYPE: Slide on/off; pushbutton on/off for LEDs and lasers
CASE MATERIAL: Plastic
BEZEL: Soft plastic; LEDs & lasers recessed into shallow hosels for them
BATTERY: Internal rechargeable; voltage, capacity, and chemistry not known
CURRENT CONSUMPTION: Unknown/unable to measure
WATER- AND KENTUCKY BOURBON-RESISTANT: Very light splatter-resistance at maximum
SUBMERSIBLE: FOR GOD SAKES NOOOOO!!!
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ACCESSORIES: Tripod, "wall wart" charger, USB charging cord
SIZE: 130mm L x 92mm W x 52mm H
WEIGHT: 0.220Kg
COUNTRY OF MANUFACTURE: China
WARRANTY: Unknown/not stated



PRODUCT RATING:

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bshanahan14rulz

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Spectrographic analysis of the green laser in this light; spectrometer's response narrowed to a band between 800nm and 820nm to pinpoint NIR laser line from pump diode -- which -- as you can see -- is completely filtered out

Is lack of 808nm a good indication that 1064nm is filtered out as well?

Saw your review of the 150mW dpss blue. WOW at 150mW, that's some serious power behind that blue!
 

The_LED_Museum

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Is lack of 808nm a good indication that 1064nm is filtered out as well?...

The lack of the 808nm laser line from the pump diode is indeed a VERY good indication that the 1,064nm laser line is being filtered out; though you must remember that there are no absolute, positive, 100% guarantees that this is indeed the case -- however, the probability is quite high.

My instruments will not detect wavelengths that long, so I'm simply not capable of verifying this firsthand.
 

The_LED_Museum

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I just retook the spectrum of the green laser *SPECIFICALLY* to isolate the 808nm NIR laser line from the pump diode, and the following is what I found:

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Spectrographic analysis of the green laser in this light; spectrometer's response narrowed to a band between 800nm and 820nm to pinpoint NIR laser line from pump diode. I had to seriously overload the spectrometer's inputs to find even this.


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Spectrographic analysis of the green laser in this light; spectrometer's response widened to a band between 380nm and 820nm to show how much I had to overload the instrument to detect the 808nm laser line. See that broadband "emission" from ~550nm down to 380nm? That is caused by my overloading the input in effort to find that very tiny 808nm emission; the blue arrow points to the 808nm NIR emission from the pump diode.
So to put it briefly; the IR filter in this product is doing a SUPERB job!!!
 
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