Coherent said:
[quote author=MarioMaster link=1234425031/0#3 date=1234560193]man I hate auctions like that - chopped cables and no way to determine the working condition
I know. I've been wanting a nice argon or other gas laser for a while now and all of the ones on ebay have some kind of catch that stops me from buying it. It's always one of the following.
A-The laser works and has all the needed parts, but it's way too expensive.
B-The laser works and has all needed parts, but it takes something stupid like three phase electricity.
C-The laser has all the needed parts and looks good, but it comes "as is" and untested with no warranty. Basically if it comes to your door and doesn't turn on then you have a $500 paperweight.
D-Laser is missing power supply. A laser without the matching PSU is good how? Also they can't test it without the supply.
E-Argon laser that has been left on a shelf for years unused=dead plasma tube=$500 paperweight.
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You just have to be patient - I have three argon lasers (and sold my first one, so if I had that I would now have 4) I purchased on Ebay, and only one was "not so good". All these over about a 3 year period.
I don't know about HeCd lasers, but if you're hunting for a decent argon, some words of advice:
Look for sellers that have some experience/knowledge in dealing with lasers and electronics.
Look for sellers that have excellent feedback and will stand by their sales.
Look for listings that guarantee no "DOA" and have a return/refund policy. If they offer this then they have to honor it, or at least you'd have a very good chance of getting your money back if something is wrong.
IMO I'd avoid general electronics dealers (and any other listings) that state the item is untested and "as is" that don't deal almost exclusively in lasers. If someone has an argon for sale and you look at their other stuff and they are a baseball card dealer then that's a red flag...unless you want to take a huge chance.
Avoid listings where the seller has no clue about lasers in general; if they spell the word "lazer" that's a huge flag there!
Three out of four isn't bad - you can find good, complete working units on Ebay if you're careful.
Speaking of HeCd lasers - a few days ago a complete (apparently) working unit was sold for about $275.00. It was sold as-is but they did have a beam shot of sorts - the laser was putting out a blue dot on the wall in the photo. I was watching that one but I'm kind of tapped out money-wise after buying that 514nm argon a couple weeks ago.