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ArcticMyst Security by Avery

Has anyone used any F-Theta lenses ?

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These look interesting and from what I understand can be used after beam directing mirrors to reduce divergence.

https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_from=R40&_trksid=m570.l1313&_nkw=F-Theta+Scan+Lens&_sacat=0


ftheta-10600_FunctionFigure-1.jpg
 
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kecked

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Very expensive used for printing text with laser. This is not the lens your looking for. To get one that large would be a lot like over a grand. Much better to fix before scanners. Going this route buy OPSL. Might be cheaper. Steve knows a bit about these. Is he mixedgas over here?
 
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Thanks, I am reading more about them and really should have read more 1st, it's more made to work at a specific distance than variable isn't it.

I have some optics like this salvaged from projection TV's, not the RGB CRT type but the DLP sets we don't see anymore.
 

diachi

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These look interesting and from what I understand can be used after beam directing mirrors to reduce divergence.

https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_from=R40&_trksid=m570.l1313&_nkw=F-Theta+Scan+Lens&_sacat=0


ftheta-10600_FunctionFigure-1.jpg

They are used for keeping the focal point of a scanning beam on a 2D plane. Generally used in laser engravers so that you don't have to adjust the focus on the fly. A normal lens has a constant focal length and as such as the beam scans away from the center the focal point moves away from the engraving surface.

FTH100-1064_dwg3_780.gif




Very expensive used for printing text with laser. This is not the lens your looking for. To get one that large would be a lot like over a grand. Much better to fix before scanners. Going this route buy OPSL. Might be cheaper. Steve knows a bit about these. Is he mixedgas over here?

If he's trying to engrave a flat surface using a set of scanners to direct the beam this is exactly what he wants. For projection you're better off just fixing the beams before the scanners.

Mixedgas goes by LSRFAQ here.
 
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You've piqued my curiosity here. What are you trying to scan in a planar field? Are you trying to print or do something else? Kecked is right that depending on the wavelength of your laser the Theta lens could be very expensive.
 

Benm

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They would be good for focusing on a plane instead of a part-sphere indeed.

I think they were designed to work the other way around actually: to take microscopic scans without having to adjust focus, or to take images where a whole flat slide is in focus.
 
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Huh, I wonder if it would work backwards like a meniscus lens with a ring of laser beams shown into it around it's outer perimeter from a ring close to it's diameter ?

If so an F-theta with a long FL could be used that way with another long FL lens, possibly a Plano convex ( sliding ) to control the convergence point.

If so it could aid in limiting spherical aberrations far field.
 
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Oh, I don't know if you can use them to try to converge a bunch of beams together if that is your thought. I can't think of anyone who has done that before as it was not what these lenses were made for.
 




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