- Joined
- Sep 12, 2007
- Messages
- 9,399
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- 113
Really? I expect more from laserglow.
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Yeah, like I say, that might just be me... When spending so much money on so little power, it would be great to have the best you can get. However, not everyone would find it worth spending the time and money to send back the unit over such an issue as indeed, the laser is operating as LG state and is not defective. I would just be dissapointed and if a swap happened to be offered by the company, would more than likely opt for it (again, that might just be me).^I'm not getting why a laser that was specified by the supplier as operating across a range of transverse modes is defective. According to the posted specs, this laser is operating correctly. There is no rule that says all lasers must run TEM00.. There is such a thing as a multimode laser, and this is specified as such.
Also, near TEM00 means a beam with only one mode being excited, but the beam might not be perfectly round and might contain uneven power distribution (hot spots). There should be no higher-order modes being excited, and higher order modes are being excited even if there is only a portion of a second lobe showing or the full two lobes of TEM01. Both of your illustrations for near TEM00 are actually TEM01. Just because both lobes aren't of equal power doesn't change the label.
Yeah, what seems to happen is this:
It starts as a clean round dot, and then develops a 'minor' secondary dot. As it heats up, it does go to full TEM01, but even 40 feet away the two dots are fairly close together, and the null region isn't all that thick..
Just kind of learning as I go here.
Advice taken on board!TBH getting a clear description of exactly what "near TEM00" was a real pain in the neck.. I was fortunate enough to be able to ask a legendary laser expert about it and the description I gave is what he told me. You can still take his description and use it for nearly any beam profile that doesn't obviously contain higher-order modes, and most Chinese suppliers do just that.
IMO they never should have made 473nm portables. It's a crap shoot in terms of stability due to the advanced and demanding nature of 473nm generation.. It's a surefire recipe for disaster. Recently there have been some advancements in blue DPSS design using Nd:YVO4 and LBO crystals to generate light a 457nm with MUCH greater efficiency and power output possibilities than 473nm. These 457nm lasers are a MUCH better candidate for use in a portable, but no one is making them yet. CNI is trying to sway new purchasers toward 457nm if blue light is needed, and I'm sure their ultimate goal is to replace 473nm with 457nm as much as possible.