Helios
0
- Joined
- Jan 7, 2011
- Messages
- 1,341
- Points
- 48
Seems quite cheap actually for such a new exotic wavelength. Even 473nm pens still cost more than that and they are old news.
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473 is DPSS and without a mass market consumer application to drive down the price.
515 is made largely for projectors and other consumer applications. It exists already, ie, this isn't vapourware in general. There are a number of expensive lab lasers already using these diodes and commercially available.
Having said that, I would be surprised if 515s aren't available the minute the first projector uses them, for less than $300 each.
473 is DPSS and without a mass market consumer application to drive down the price.
515 is made largely for projectors and other consumer applications. It exists already, ie, this isn't vapourware in general. There are a number of expensive lab lasers already using these diodes and commercially available.
Having said that, I would be surprised if 515s aren't available the minute the first projector uses them, for less than $300 each.
As far as sources go, that's rarely a secret. The 445s were Sanyo or Nichia, and that didn't make it any easier for hobbyists to get them. Similarly, these are going to be Kaai-Soraa, Sumitomo, Osram or Nichia. And no one manufacturer is likely to be vastly cheaper or more available than another. So really, diode manufacturer is not a "secret formula".
With successful intregration testing by Microvision, that date may become more aggressive.
Helios, 473nm is an exotic/finicky variety of DPSS design, whereas 510nm is just a simple LD-based design, no different from a basic red or Blu-Ray laser, other than it is using a new diode that outputs at 510nm rather than 670nm.
I know this. My use of the 473nm as an example was not a good choice in retrospect. I still however maintain that this price seems too low for literally the first green diode ever to be available to the general public in a CNI pointer.
If its legit than that would be great. I was just saying the low price makes me skeptical.
You want it to cost more? :thinking:
Speculation will get you nowhere.
Be patient. Perhaps Mind_Ripper will return with answers to our questions.
However as I said before if it turns out to be legit thats great.
And if it turns out to be legit, then by August, there will be a source of green diodes that we can ALL harvest, with far less risk, and incorporate into a host of our choosing - likely for less money, and very likely with a higher quality result.
IMO there is no appeal to this offering whatsoever - and I'm all for jumping on random/unique new diode sources!