jupiter8
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- Apr 28, 2010
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I've had a very productive evening in the workshop; picked up this DVD burner today for AU$26, 24X, I thought it was worth experimenting with even if it was a pain in the butt.
I've pulled apart a few DVD drives now so it went smoothly, the sled looks pretty standard, with no PBS cube, but some nice optics I'll have to experiment with later.
Locating the 650nm diode mount was easy enough and I didn't panic when I saw the odd shape of the cast, molded heatsink, I've been reading the posts here detailing other members adventures with these types of diodes so I knew what to expect.
An interesting little optical element with some kind of plastic filter is mounted right on top of the diode window.
This is a three pin diode molded into an odd shaped square heatsink.
I tuned a driver to 100mA on 3v and cautiously made an educated guess about the wiring order - looked similar to one in another post so took a chance and tried the same wiring - bingo! Worked first go, lovely colour. My first thought was, seems shorter wavelength than 650s I'm used to (?) Wish I had a spectral analyser.
Next, I took a nice big pair of wire cutters and proceeded to very carefully nibble at the housing to create a smaller, squarer block, something I could mount in a aixiz module. My patience paid off, the brittle alloy heatsink broke away cleanly leaving me with a rectangular block shaped diode. So far so good!
My heart missed a beat when I re soldered the wires and checked it on the driver, no lasing, then... I'd unplugged the power supply, all good, I hadn't broken it.
Next step - housing. I took a tungsten barrel burr in my dremel (cheap copy of a dremel) and slowly, slowly squared up and enlarged the diode recess hole in the aixiz module, checking against the diode then grinding away more metal until it almost fitted. I was then able to use needle nosed pliers to press the diode into the machined out housing - not a perfect fit by any means but a tight fit with some good points of contact between the diode heatsink material and the aixiz.
I had to press the diode in a bit further after a focusing test with the lens, and then press one side and then the other until it was as straight as I could get it, not easy considering the make-shift nature of the build.
I don't have any thermally conductive epoxy of any kind so I actually used solder - pressing it quickly into the larger gaps with minimal heat and cooling it as fast as possible. Another nervous test with the driver confirmed everything still working fine...
After assembling the aixiz module I disconnected the driver and reset it to 200mA using a dummy load.
Success! I can hardly believe I pulled this off, the thing produces a surprisingly nice beam with good divergence and beam profile. There are some aberrations surrounding the dot and a bit of a "wing" out one side but all in all it's very usable.
I hope this post isn't re-hashing work already done too much (thanks Hemlock_Mike, HIMNL9 and LarryDFW for your tips), and that it's useful to people who are looking to use these affordable, high powered diodes in builds.
Now my question is, what is a safe current to run this thing up to? Is 200mA a reasonable starting power?
I've pulled apart a few DVD drives now so it went smoothly, the sled looks pretty standard, with no PBS cube, but some nice optics I'll have to experiment with later.
Locating the 650nm diode mount was easy enough and I didn't panic when I saw the odd shape of the cast, molded heatsink, I've been reading the posts here detailing other members adventures with these types of diodes so I knew what to expect.
An interesting little optical element with some kind of plastic filter is mounted right on top of the diode window.
This is a three pin diode molded into an odd shaped square heatsink.
I tuned a driver to 100mA on 3v and cautiously made an educated guess about the wiring order - looked similar to one in another post so took a chance and tried the same wiring - bingo! Worked first go, lovely colour. My first thought was, seems shorter wavelength than 650s I'm used to (?) Wish I had a spectral analyser.
Next, I took a nice big pair of wire cutters and proceeded to very carefully nibble at the housing to create a smaller, squarer block, something I could mount in a aixiz module. My patience paid off, the brittle alloy heatsink broke away cleanly leaving me with a rectangular block shaped diode. So far so good!
My heart missed a beat when I re soldered the wires and checked it on the driver, no lasing, then... I'd unplugged the power supply, all good, I hadn't broken it.
Next step - housing. I took a tungsten barrel burr in my dremel (cheap copy of a dremel) and slowly, slowly squared up and enlarged the diode recess hole in the aixiz module, checking against the diode then grinding away more metal until it almost fitted. I was then able to use needle nosed pliers to press the diode into the machined out housing - not a perfect fit by any means but a tight fit with some good points of contact between the diode heatsink material and the aixiz.
I had to press the diode in a bit further after a focusing test with the lens, and then press one side and then the other until it was as straight as I could get it, not easy considering the make-shift nature of the build.
I don't have any thermally conductive epoxy of any kind so I actually used solder - pressing it quickly into the larger gaps with minimal heat and cooling it as fast as possible. Another nervous test with the driver confirmed everything still working fine...
After assembling the aixiz module I disconnected the driver and reset it to 200mA using a dummy load.
Success! I can hardly believe I pulled this off, the thing produces a surprisingly nice beam with good divergence and beam profile. There are some aberrations surrounding the dot and a bit of a "wing" out one side but all in all it's very usable.
I hope this post isn't re-hashing work already done too much (thanks Hemlock_Mike, HIMNL9 and LarryDFW for your tips), and that it's useful to people who are looking to use these affordable, high powered diodes in builds.
Now my question is, what is a safe current to run this thing up to? Is 200mA a reasonable starting power?
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