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- Apr 8, 2012
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As mentioned 2 days ago, I now have the Amazon laser 3 pack, including:
1. 405nm laser of estimated 30-40mW or so(estimated by members here in reviews).
2. 532nm laser estimated at 20-30mW here
3. 650nm laser estimated at <>100mW
Now I know that divergence will play a role in this, so I've measured the diameter of each laser at 2 feet(24 inches). Here's the list:
1. 405nm- 6.5mm diameter beam at 2 ft
2. 532nm- 3.5mm at 2 ft
3. 650nm- 4.5mm at 2 ft
The red and green lasers seem pretty tight, but the 405 violet laser is far from tight. at about 10 feet distance, its beam is already out to about 25mm diameter!
Now, I still dont have my safety glasses yet, but I dont mess with the lasers indoors hardly at all, and dont shine them on reflective surfaces. I mainly use them outdoors at night, and I dont shine them off anything reflective thats closer than 100 feet or so, a stop sign. By the way, at about 100 ft, the 405nm laser covers the whole stop sign!
So anyway, those specs now listed, I have tried to shine each of these lasers onto my arm. At first I did it only for less than 1/2 second to be safe. Then I gradually tried it for longer amounts of time, til it became obvious that no matter how long I shine any of them onto my arm, I cannot feel ANY heat.
Assuming that 2 of these 3 lasers have decent beams, with minimal divergence, what does that tell you about these lasers and their supposed power levels. They were 'advertised' at <5mW, but they are clearly above 5mW, but maybe not by much......:cryyy:
How much wattage(or milliwattage) does a laser need before you can actually feel heat from it, if its beam stays together well, like 2 of these 3 seem to do?:thinking:
I assume that none of these 3 will pop even a black balloon..... I tried to heat up a section of a black plastic bag, but felt no heat, no hole melted through.
1. 405nm laser of estimated 30-40mW or so(estimated by members here in reviews).
2. 532nm laser estimated at 20-30mW here
3. 650nm laser estimated at <>100mW
Now I know that divergence will play a role in this, so I've measured the diameter of each laser at 2 feet(24 inches). Here's the list:
1. 405nm- 6.5mm diameter beam at 2 ft
2. 532nm- 3.5mm at 2 ft
3. 650nm- 4.5mm at 2 ft
The red and green lasers seem pretty tight, but the 405 violet laser is far from tight. at about 10 feet distance, its beam is already out to about 25mm diameter!
Now, I still dont have my safety glasses yet, but I dont mess with the lasers indoors hardly at all, and dont shine them on reflective surfaces. I mainly use them outdoors at night, and I dont shine them off anything reflective thats closer than 100 feet or so, a stop sign. By the way, at about 100 ft, the 405nm laser covers the whole stop sign!
So anyway, those specs now listed, I have tried to shine each of these lasers onto my arm. At first I did it only for less than 1/2 second to be safe. Then I gradually tried it for longer amounts of time, til it became obvious that no matter how long I shine any of them onto my arm, I cannot feel ANY heat.
Assuming that 2 of these 3 lasers have decent beams, with minimal divergence, what does that tell you about these lasers and their supposed power levels. They were 'advertised' at <5mW, but they are clearly above 5mW, but maybe not by much......:cryyy:
How much wattage(or milliwattage) does a laser need before you can actually feel heat from it, if its beam stays together well, like 2 of these 3 seem to do?:thinking:
I assume that none of these 3 will pop even a black balloon..... I tried to heat up a section of a black plastic bag, but felt no heat, no hole melted through.