ARG
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I am making this thread because the accuracy of all LaserBee products I have encountered have been problematic, and posting in this thread http://laserpointerforums.com/f42/regarding-recent-questions-lpm-accuracy-70181-2.html#post1154526 got no attention to the problems at hand with the laserbee products.
LBII
The set up with my stable 808nm laser. (The same wavelength used to calibrate the laserbee's IIRC)
The Ophir reading (Minus 7 mV for zeroing)
The laserbee II reading:
I know that my Ophir is reading correct because I sent it off to MarioMaster who checked it against his Coherent Fieldmax, it was reading almost the same as the fieldmax.
The laser bee II (in my case) is around 10% off in the 1.8W range, at higher powers the inaccuracy increases.
There has been no damage to the Laser Bee since I bought it.
HLPM
I also received a used HLPM recently.
This test was done with a pen laser as I don't have a lab style 405nm laser.
Ophir reading: 45mV (minus 7 for zeroing) so 38mW.
The Laserbee II read 35mW.
The HLPM read 4.4mV, and according to the correction factor chart it should be multiplied by 23.3. 102.52mW That's 70% off!
When reading in the red spectrum it's fine, but I think the wavelength chart may be a little off.
Could any other users with an HLPM, a 405nm and another power meter confirm the results?
Conclusion
I believe that the laserbee power meters are calibrated individually, but not curve adjusted individually which could lead to inaccuracy in some units when not metering in the 400-600mW range that the power meters are calibrated in, from my own testing with TEC based LPM's the curve adjustment is NOT the same from TEC to TEC, and if the laserbee's are not being individually curve adjusted some units will enviably be inaccurate at the higher range of powers. If this is the case then I'm sure a fair number of the LB LPM's here are not reading as they should at the higher ranges.
The HLPM's wavelength chart is most likely off, meaning that readings not in the 600-700nm spectrum will be off, I would like someone else to confirm this as my unit could be defective.
Follow up
I received a LaserBee-A from someone who wanted me to add my v3 datalogging board to it.
With the exact same laser, untouched since the initial tests I got a reading within 2mW of the initial test on my Ophir.
This was what I got on the LaserBee-A.
LB-A 1.810W
Ophir 1.844W
LB-II 1.656W
Unlike LaserBee has suggested it now appears that the LB-II was reading incorrectly, and my Ophir head is reading correctly. That or both my Ophir, and the LB-A are reading incorrectly, which I highly doubt.
I would still like to know if the LB-II's are curve adjusted individually as I believe that's what was the result of the LB-II inaccuracy.
LBII
The set up with my stable 808nm laser. (The same wavelength used to calibrate the laserbee's IIRC)
The Ophir reading (Minus 7 mV for zeroing)
The laserbee II reading:
I know that my Ophir is reading correct because I sent it off to MarioMaster who checked it against his Coherent Fieldmax, it was reading almost the same as the fieldmax.
The laser bee II (in my case) is around 10% off in the 1.8W range, at higher powers the inaccuracy increases.
There has been no damage to the Laser Bee since I bought it.
HLPM
I also received a used HLPM recently.
This test was done with a pen laser as I don't have a lab style 405nm laser.
Ophir reading: 45mV (minus 7 for zeroing) so 38mW.
The Laserbee II read 35mW.
The HLPM read 4.4mV, and according to the correction factor chart it should be multiplied by 23.3. 102.52mW That's 70% off!
When reading in the red spectrum it's fine, but I think the wavelength chart may be a little off.
Could any other users with an HLPM, a 405nm and another power meter confirm the results?
Conclusion
I believe that the laserbee power meters are calibrated individually, but not curve adjusted individually which could lead to inaccuracy in some units when not metering in the 400-600mW range that the power meters are calibrated in, from my own testing with TEC based LPM's the curve adjustment is NOT the same from TEC to TEC, and if the laserbee's are not being individually curve adjusted some units will enviably be inaccurate at the higher range of powers. If this is the case then I'm sure a fair number of the LB LPM's here are not reading as they should at the higher ranges.
The HLPM's wavelength chart is most likely off, meaning that readings not in the 600-700nm spectrum will be off, I would like someone else to confirm this as my unit could be defective.
Follow up
I received a LaserBee-A from someone who wanted me to add my v3 datalogging board to it.
With the exact same laser, untouched since the initial tests I got a reading within 2mW of the initial test on my Ophir.
This was what I got on the LaserBee-A.
LB-A 1.810W
Ophir 1.844W
LB-II 1.656W
Unlike LaserBee has suggested it now appears that the LB-II was reading incorrectly, and my Ophir head is reading correctly. That or both my Ophir, and the LB-A are reading incorrectly, which I highly doubt.
I would still like to know if the LB-II's are curve adjusted individually as I believe that's what was the result of the LB-II inaccuracy.
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