AUTO XX
0
- Joined
- Aug 13, 2010
- Messages
- 839
- Points
- 28
A few weeks ago I was helping my girlfriend move into the house I just built for her. As always, I had my (1.49A so probably around 1.3W) 445 in my pocket.
Somewhere along the line I must have picked up something heavy enough to trigger the switch (I used a host that generally mitigates this problem).
Driving back with her it smelled like something was burning, we stopped, checked the car out, looked around for straw fires (when a farmer's baler screws up it is cheaper to burn the pile of straw than it is to try and re-bale it) but nothing was around.
I got home about 1/2 hour later and noticed the laser light shining THROUGH the pocket of my leather jacket.
I am one to take laser precautions very seriously so I was more than a little irate at the potential for injury but when I grabbed it, the thing was damn near on fire.
I had just charged the battery that morning (of course, it couldn't have been after using the thing for months without charging) so it was topped up splendidly.
It had burned through the pocket in ~4 spots and didn't look much like a laser spot anymore, more like a weak flashlight.
I chalked it up to "way too hot for way too long" and figured I would check out the driver to see if there was damage (I'm surprised the components didn't slide off the board on molten solder it was so hot)
and throw another diode in it.
I was checking it out today and it looked like there was melted plastic on the focus ring. Upon closer inspection, it is all over the lens as well.
When the leather was burning, it must have discharged an oily mist on the lens which of course baked on.
The laser had to have been on for over 30 minutes, it was easily 90+*C (couldn't hold it for more than a second without getting burned) and when I swapped out for a new lens, good as new....
These diodes are pretty damn tough.
I might keep the old lens for the pwetty star pattern
Somewhere along the line I must have picked up something heavy enough to trigger the switch (I used a host that generally mitigates this problem).
Driving back with her it smelled like something was burning, we stopped, checked the car out, looked around for straw fires (when a farmer's baler screws up it is cheaper to burn the pile of straw than it is to try and re-bale it) but nothing was around.
I got home about 1/2 hour later and noticed the laser light shining THROUGH the pocket of my leather jacket.
I am one to take laser precautions very seriously so I was more than a little irate at the potential for injury but when I grabbed it, the thing was damn near on fire.
I had just charged the battery that morning (of course, it couldn't have been after using the thing for months without charging) so it was topped up splendidly.
It had burned through the pocket in ~4 spots and didn't look much like a laser spot anymore, more like a weak flashlight.
I chalked it up to "way too hot for way too long" and figured I would check out the driver to see if there was damage (I'm surprised the components didn't slide off the board on molten solder it was so hot)
and throw another diode in it.
I was checking it out today and it looked like there was melted plastic on the focus ring. Upon closer inspection, it is all over the lens as well.
When the leather was burning, it must have discharged an oily mist on the lens which of course baked on.
The laser had to have been on for over 30 minutes, it was easily 90+*C (couldn't hold it for more than a second without getting burned) and when I swapped out for a new lens, good as new....
These diodes are pretty damn tough.
I might keep the old lens for the pwetty star pattern
