Welcome to Laser Pointer Forums - discuss green laser pointers, blue laser pointers, and all types of lasers

Buy Site Supporter Role (remove some ads) | LPF Donations

Links below open in new window

FrozenGate by Avery

Laserbee LPM measure over 1W?

Joined
Sep 8, 2007
Messages
759
Points
0
I am just wondering What would happen if you shined a say 1.3W laser onto the LPM has any body used their laserbee for such high power?
if i did such a thing I would make sure the dot covers the whole surface area of the sensor and not just a small dot to minimize the power over area and burning of the coding.
or is it a software limitation and cant go above 1040mw?

Micahel
 





You gonna damage it I think. Ask laserbee directly about it ;)
 
The sensor MAY be able to handle it. But the actual meter only shows powers of up to 1050mW, no higher. I reckon the sensor will be okat so long as the dot is not focused to a point.
 
Using a cube with a 50/50 split would work, just double the value you see on the meter.
 
Oh yeah I forgot ! You can use an ND filter to reduce the power and then just multiply the reading until you get what it actually is ;)

Could use a 50/50 cube as suggested above :)
 
Hey f22warzone...
diachi and Gryphon are absolutely correct on both fronts....:thanks:
BTW if I have a problem with my car.... I'll call the dealer first....:whistle:


Jerry
 
hey just ship your LPM to me and we'll assume you broke it, and everyone can be happy :)
 
Hey f22warzone...
diachi and Gryphon are absolutely correct on both fronts....:thanks:
BTW if I have a problem with my car.... I'll call the dealer first....:whistle:


Jerry


ha-ha lol when I have a problem with my car I look it over, if I can't figure it out I ask a mechanic friend, and if he can't figure it out I go to the dealer where I get screwed over on the price and they tell me I need the gold plated car battery to start my car instead of the always start battery I picked up at Napa for 100$ less when the problem was the fuse was blown:P
Not trying to say anything about you though. I just figured you were a busy man and was just asking the community if anybody had done anything like this, and if I hadn't got the response I wanted, I was going to pm you directly, not trying to go around you or anything I just like peers before the dealer on simple stuff and I got the answers I wanted now just to find a 50/50 cube.
 
Last edited:
N/P... saves me the trouble of responding...
Silly me... I thought I was a part of this Laser community...

Jerry
 
You can't be part of this community with ONLY 81 Reps ..............

HMike

The beam splitter is a super idea but consider using a fan. Pass the beam through fan blades to chop the energy. The ratio of blade to open space would be your multiplier. :-)
If the blades are plastic, limit the time before the cut blades are tossed around.
 
Last edited:
N/P... saves me the trouble of responding...
Silly me... I thought I was a part of this Laser community...

Jerry


Lol you're a funny guy and I like you I was just showing my really bad dislike for car dealer ships :P but Na your cool otherwise I wouldn't have this super low cost LPM
lol should hope your part of this community but really I just didn't want to bother you as I know most owner are busy people and was wondering if anybody else had used higher power lab lasers on them.

Would a fan work? That is an interesting idea but can the laserbee measure pulses accurately?
 
Yes -- As a thermal averaging system, it should work that way in chopped mode.
I did post this as old school food for thought.

HMike
 





Back
Top