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It's definitely DLP.
So whatcyoo sayin' is= epic power, epic color, epic mode laser diodes?Nope, it's not. I went back and looked again. The AAXA projector is the DLP-based projector (well, not actually DLP, but LCOS, similar idea though, where the laser is simply a light source and another piece of technology is forming the whole image at once). The Microvision Showwx is a raster-based "flying spot" projector. So it has to use single-mode lasers.
Here's a thread on this very forum that talks about the rastering of the Microvision projector, and also compares it to the AAXA projector on the second page. The last post is even a high-speed video played played back at normal speed of the Microvision projector, which shows the dot rastering across the image.
http://laserpointerforums.com/f44/t...owwx-axaa-l1-laser-pico-projectors-51970.html
So whatcyoo sayin' is= epic power, epic color, epic mode laser diodes?
Dude, I haven't felt this feeling since I found out about those blue diodes.
I'll go burst open out of sheer impatience.
That's what I'm saying, epic powa for single mode. If 445nm's are only 50mW but single mode, I'd still pay $50 for them.I wouldn't say epic power. For a single mode diode, you're not going to get a ton of power. The blue diodes we have are multimode for that reason, to get more power. It's all relative, of course, but you can basically say that if it's single mode, it won't be amazing power.
Microvision's projectors are designed to be small anyway, not powerful. The green diode will make it smaller and more efficient, but not a lot more powerful in all likelihood.
Aren't blu-ray diodes single mode, and recent 12x burners capable of nearly one Watt?
I hope one day this will be achievable in direct green diodes. :drool: