Hey folks,
At work today an employee shined a Class IIIa, 5 mW, 525 nm laser into my eye.
Laser Specs:
Model DPSS-5B
Output Power Certified 4.0 ~ 5.0 mW
Wavelength 532nm
Dimension
12X31.3+/-0.5mm
(without circuit)
Beam Mode TEM00
Operation Mode CW
Beam Diameter <1.5mm at aperture
Beam Divergence <1.2mrad
Warm Up Time < 3 sec.
Optimum Operating
Temperature
20c~30c
Operating Current <300mA
Lift Time(MTTF) >3000hr
Input Voltage 3V
Housing Brass
Safety Class FDA IIIa, IEC 3R
Exposure time was within the 1-3 seconds. Once I realized they were shining a laser at my face I immediately tried to block it and close my eyes.
The laser is part of this product: BullsEye | Bullex
(LASER-DRIVEN FIRE EXTINGUISHER)
I don't see any damage at the moment, but it occurred within the last half hour.
I know none of you can give medical advice, but would any of you suggest going to the Doctor to get examined for potential damage?
Thanks for any input or suggestions.
At work today an employee shined a Class IIIa, 5 mW, 525 nm laser into my eye.
Laser Specs:
Model DPSS-5B
Output Power Certified 4.0 ~ 5.0 mW
Wavelength 532nm
Dimension
12X31.3+/-0.5mm
(without circuit)
Beam Mode TEM00
Operation Mode CW
Beam Diameter <1.5mm at aperture
Beam Divergence <1.2mrad
Warm Up Time < 3 sec.
Optimum Operating
Temperature
20c~30c
Operating Current <300mA
Lift Time(MTTF) >3000hr
Input Voltage 3V
Housing Brass
Safety Class FDA IIIa, IEC 3R
Exposure time was within the 1-3 seconds. Once I realized they were shining a laser at my face I immediately tried to block it and close my eyes.
The laser is part of this product: BullsEye | Bullex
(LASER-DRIVEN FIRE EXTINGUISHER)
I don't see any damage at the moment, but it occurred within the last half hour.
I know none of you can give medical advice, but would any of you suggest going to the Doctor to get examined for potential damage?
Thanks for any input or suggestions.
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