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FrozenGate by Avery

Did I goof?

Joined
Oct 19, 2012
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I started with lasers as a hobby about a month ago, and have been lurking in the forums for quite some time since then. I had successfully built the same exact driver in this post: http://laserpointerforums.com/f42/diy-homemade-laser-diode-driver-26339.html, albeit with a 10K Ohm POT and 3-4 10 Ohm resistors (went with what I could find at Radio Shack). I built it out on one of those solderless breadboards, and used a pair of 3.7v 14550 Lithium Ion batteries as the power source (7.5v at the output) and had the pot adjusted to output 300, then 400mA, all verified with a digital multimeter.
I had tested the driver with one of those high-intensity LED's before I took the diode from a DVD burner and fired it for a second or two (still in its sled) just to see what happened. It looked dim through the laser safety goggles I picked up online, but watching it through the display on my iPad, it was pretty bright.

After that all worked out, I removed the components from the solderless breadboard and soldered them in to an actual breadboard. I tested all of the connections and the output from the driver with my multimeter again and confirmed the numbers were the same. I installed my test LED to confirm that it worked, and then the DVD burner diode. Both ended up failing... my best guess is that I forgot to discharge the capacitor before reconnecting the diodes, I couldn't find any shorts. I went back to using the solderless breadboard - new test LED, new dvd-burner diode, worked fine.
Online I ordered a 5-pack of LPC-826 diodes and 1 x 12x30mm housings from Cajunlasers.com, and then visited Wayne Electronics in NJ to get a few 100ohm pots, and a handful of 3.5 and 4 ohm resistors (so I didn't need to hook up 3 or 4 10 ohm resistors in parallel to get my desired mA output). I reworked the (solderless) driver again with the new pot and resistors, verified the V and mA, and waited for my diodes and housings to arrive.

The diodes were packed in a small pink plastic bag which was in a clear 1"x1" plastic box, while wearing my anti-static strap I took out a diode, placed it into the housing, then pressed it in to the housing using the rear portion of the housing (inverted it) - lastly I took a small metal sheath with the same circumference as the diode and pressed it in so it appeared recessed (got that from another post here I believe). I then soldered the positive and negative pins to 24 gauge insulated copper wire, and went a step further with the positive pin by cutting the end off of the plastic ink tube of a ball point pen, and sliding that over the exposed bit of pin, wire, and solder. I put the whole piece together, and then drilled a hole through the aluminum heat sink from a CPU and slid the module through (used a small amount of Arctic Silver Ceramique thermal paste) - it was a good snug fit and allowed me to adjust the focus of the beam.

I tested the driver one more time with my multimeter and the LED, discharged the capacitor, hooked up the diode, and fired it. I adjusted the beam a few times, the highest mA I fed it was 500mA. I burned a few pieces of electrical tape for kicks, and was satisfied that it worked. I then decided to mount and prepare my remaining diodes in the modules to save some time later on. This is when the problem began... I prepped another diode (they were still in that bag), set the driver to 300mA, discharged the capacitor, attached the diode and did a quick test fire of the laser (didn't use any heatsink besides the assembled housing). I immediately noticed that the laser was VERY dim. I re-checked all the connections, verified the voltage and current, adjusted the current to 250mA, then 300mA, then 350mA, and finally 400mA (each time discharging the capacitor before re-trying. I then tried the original diode which I had used for a few minutes the day before - same thing. Increasing the current made no difference.

I replaced every single component on the board (resistors, capacitors, LM317T, silicon diode, pot, wires), used different pins, tested it, and then tried diode #3, same thing. Then I tried diode #4.... same thing. I checked the voltage and current on the original diode (when everything was working) and saw ~2.8v at the diode and the current was the same. I checked one of the diodes that wasn't working the same way and got the same numbers. One thing I didn't notice when everything was working (but did after the fact) is that the LM317T got *very* hot so I attached another heatsink to it.

Now I'm trying to figure out what went wrong before I burn any more money on diodes... Voltage too high? Could I have damaged the diodes by leaving them in the bag they came in? Maybe the solderless breadboard is messed up? I'm completely flummoxed. I feel like I've jinxed myself here! I could go ahead and purchase a pre-made driver but a lot of the fun for me is building as much of this from scratch as I can...

Any ideas? :)
 
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Pictures would help.

You're setting the current the hard way. The easy way is to use an ammeter in series with the battery. It's a linear driver, so the current from the battery is the same as the current to the driver.
 
The driver is visually/functionally identical to the photo in the post I referenced...

11704-diy-homemade-laser-diode-driver-proto_driver_2.jpg


...with exception to the capacitor/pot/resistor used...

I'll snap some photos when I get home.
 
Hook up a (presumably) dead diode and turn the circuit on. Measure input voltage, output voltage, input current, and voltage between OUT and ADJ pins on the lm317.
 
Figured it out, it actually wasn't the driver or the diode, it was me overdoing it with the soldering iron. I played a hunch and soldered my last remaining diode at a lower power setting on the iron and made quick with the connection... diode fired up fine. I was simply applying too much heat to the pins when I was soldering. Talk about a pricey learning curve! Time to raid the DVD burner pile again until I can afford to buy some more diodes. I'm thinking maybe a low temp solder or actual connector may be a smarter option for me... Perhaps re-appropriating one of those cpu/case fan cables with the tiny jacks instead of soldering might be a better option for me.
 
If you want more problems down the line then use
a connector between the Driver and LD...

You can easily control the heat of a solder joint by
the time you leave the soldering iron tip on the
joint.
Using a good quality Rosin solder flux will decrease
the joint heating time.


Jerry

You can contact us at any time on our Website: J.BAUER Electronics
 
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