weird i just tried it out with my green goggles and it seems like it enhanced the beam of the 405nm i will try and snap some pictures later. but as of now i am not comfortable with my 532nm goggles used for 405nm
What's wrong with you people? Look how clear the 405nm goggles are! I bet you can't observe fluorescence as well with red-orange green-blocking goggles : I mean comeon, do you use your blurays strictly for burning? :-/ What a shame. I dunno, these goggles are for people who like fluorescence.
Put me down as a 'maybe' , I'll see if I can get 35 dollars first.
Btw, do you happen to have a VLT rating on them?
I'm just wondering, I mean ,the point is to let higher wavelengths through so you could still see colors well.That way you could see fluorescence without the purple "pollution" from the initial beam
and maybe in the next couple weeks i can make a new thread of people that are for sure interested in buying and we can go from there. if there is close to enough people i will gladly cover the rest of the cost and pay enough to make the total 30 and then sell the remainder as people become interested later down the road
It would make sense to me that since they're 405nm specific , they won't block much higher than that. If they also accidentally block 808nm , I'll take 2 or 3
goggles will only be 35 dollars if we get the minimum 30 people and shipping would be a flat rate of 5 dollars in the us and about 10-12 any where else.
Course, I'd not mind them cutting away some .7-2µm at the same time, but I imagine that'll push the price to the end of the beanstalk, right?
Incidentally, yellow polycarbonates for welding will strip diffuse and low-intensity 405nm as far as I can tell (like OD1-OD2 or so), but it'll remove a significant fraction of the blue spectrum at the same time. I see exactly zilch of 50 UV LEDs (405nm center wavelength) driven hard, and I get less eye irritation from sunlight than I do with sunglasses, despite the brightness at longer wavelengths being the same. Another member here verified that they do stop the diffuse reflections from BR lasers.
Of course, I wouldn't trust those to handle the beam head-on, or a strong specular reflection.
Tell me these will be OD3 or better at 405nm across the entire surface, and I'm in.
Tell me they will be OD6, and you can put me down for two.
Heck, I'll be wearing them whenever the sun is up. ;D
P.S. If you can get an >700nm OD3+ filter in there without losing the visible, then I have 1-3 more buyers for you; seperate quote?
I am probably going to buy these, but I just want to know specifically:
-What makes them better than Dragonlasers glasses?
-If they allow fluorescence to be seen clearly, than won't looking at the dot through them hurt my eyes?