jamilm9
0
- Joined
- Jan 12, 2008
- Messages
- 1,864
- Points
- 0
how loud is very loud
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
rkcstr said:Looks like UV or violet (325nm or 442nm).
Switch said:Too bad for all these dangers.Those shortwaves flouresce a lot more stuff and they're invisible, could be pretty cool in a pointer, if not for all the dangers and [highlight]cancer[/highlight].
Switch said:Hey, it's not like I'm not trying to save lives here from cancer :
I'm not planing on bringing a plug and it will be in a glass case with a key switch.suiraM said:Don't. Please. Just don't.
Messing around with high voltages and short wavelengths with insufficient experience and comprehension of either is a recipe for disaster, to say nothing of lacking both. I know my way around a HT supply, and I would not suggest playing around with a 3.5kV supply of unknown ratings. It constitutes a credible risk of unintentional cardioversion at best, with possibly lethal results. Adding invisible, unpredictable, high-power, short wavelength pulses (and fiddling with adjustments) to that mix is simply not a good idea for a school project.
If the teachers have any wits about them, or care the least bit about their students or their liability insurance, they will not allow this device on the premises. Don't know how the rating criterion are over there, but around these parts, a nitrogen TEA laser would be considered a class 4 unit with a lethal high voltage power supply.
Never mind. Go ahead. Do it.
Who am I to stand in the way of Darwin?
Switch said:I don't think Darwin will mind.He was still dead last time I checked ;D
Neon transformers don't have polarity. They use AC so you can connect the input however you want. Just make sure you ground the transformer case. To use it as a laser power supply you will probably need to use a rectifier to get DC. Then you can use it to charge the HV caps or w/e.jamilm9 said:i got a neon transformer it says out put 3.5kv.It has no plug the input side.How do i tell the polarity..THis will be the first time messing around with the mains :-/