Just a quick comment... As I said before, I have in fact had a few stupid slip ups with my own lasers over the years. My first big whoops was shortly after I did a couple of minor modifications to my Leadlight green pointer and like the moron I so was back then, I took a nice specular hit from aiming it out a window. I guestimate that at the time it was doing somewhere between 30 to 50 milliwatts, and the reflection was a good direct hit, albeit brief. I was VERY worried about it for a couple of weeks, but nothing ever came of it except a relatively long lasting "sunspot" in that eye.
My second major whoops was actually not long ago... I was tweaking the design for my Athena high power red, and did a current drain test and took a good specular hit from the beam striking the backside of a potentiometer laying on the desk. Again, I was very worried about it, especially considering that red laser goes around 200mW. For a time afterward, I seemed to be able to see an afterimage of part of a rounded shape, under certain circumstances. I've been unable to prove or disprove that I did any permanent damage, but next time I go for contact lenses I intend to have them look for such things.
The definitive all time stupid slip was a fluorescence test in a glass of iced tea, using my 445nm "Diana" blue laser. At that time, THANKFULLY, I had not yet made the design improvements that have allowed it to peak out at just around one full watt. I'm unsure of what I actually took into my eye, but I would think that the beam power was anywhere from 300 to 500 milliwatts. I had aimed it down into the glass, and like the idiot I am, for some reason I looked down into the glass when I fired the laser. The pulse was short, but there was of course a brilliant flash of light, very dazzling, in my right eye. I had again a relatively long lasting sunspot effect, but it did fade away.
With these three major accidents and several far more minor hits and various observations of superbright dots on various surfaces, I do not notice any loss in visual acuity that I can't attribute to other things like astigmatism or the fact that my eyes are changing with age. The only thing I ever notice are some speckle spots that only seem to appear when I am first waking up in the morning, and not every time. I also suffer from spots that come and go in my vision when I am under stress (could be burst capillaries from high blood pressure, or early signs of macular degeneration, or any number of visual ailments... I do need to have that checked out), and so it's possible that these waking spots I see are actually cumulative damage from some other cause than my hobby with lasers. I deal with it fine, it's just something that is "there" right now. The point is this: I've had my share of real accidents with very real, high power lasers, and I am not bumping into walls or unsure of how many fingers someone is holding up. My vision seems no worse to me than it has in years, really, and I don't detect any loss or alteration of color perception either. I guess I am saying, or maybe reiterating, that this kid most likely deliberately pointed that laser INTO his eyes to see what it would look like, and probably tolerated it a bit to see what he could stand. If a momentary back reflection off a liquid surface of a half watt laser didn't leave me noticeably visually damaged, then how did this kid manage catastrophic damage from much less power? I get it, it was a mirror... but still... seems really fishy to me that he not only did severe damage, he did it REPEATEDLY. It comes off like either the act of someone impaired mentally by drugs or alcohol, or the act of someone severely uninformed of what he was doing to himself. My opinion is, that this being the world of commonly available high power lasers, education is a MUST, and focusing instead on elimination of the threat isn't really the best way to approach the situation.
</soapbox>
- NR