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

welding glass for 532nm or IR laser

D4rB

0
Joined
Mar 24, 2015
Messages
8
Points
0
Before you say no (without reading), I'm alredy know that is very very not recomendable.
I get a piece of welding glass for a mask, I alredy read about the bad idea of using for protection since only work for a UV, now, I own a cheap 532nm "100mW" laser (not idea the real mW), I know it bleeds IR, I have work with IR ligth before, a few moths ago I mod a digital camera (an some webcams) to a IR camera, I test the laser with it and emit a lot of IR (nothing new). So I get the welding glass for another purpouse, to used as polarized filter for long exposure photos in sunligth, but the glass is too much darker that I tougth, I can se a really few things, mostly only withe things in direct sunligth, so I tested for IR filtering with the camera, I expect to see it almost translucid (sun glasses are almost clear in IR camera) but it seams that block all the IR the camera can detect, I even pointed to the sun a I can barely see a yellow circle, then I tested with an full-range camera (another camera moded, but without filters, can see UV as well as IR and visible ligth) for UV with some leds I have (400nm aprox), the camera can see just a little point of the leds, with red leds can see better, but IR leds not even a point, and those are more bright. So next step was tho test the laser, the IR camera can see an bright white point, and the full-range get so much light taht I'm not sure if it's white, green, or mix of two, depends on surface and angle, with the glass in front of the lenses the IR camera can see a little green dot (the filter are not perfect and let pass some color ligth if is very strong), the same for the full-range, none of the two see the white dot which should be the IR, so my question is:
is it possible the glass can work as IR filter? I'm not saying replacing safety glass, but if works it can be used for a window or as an temporal o emergency protection (for a visitor or someone who wants to see the laser dot or something like that, first case that come to mi mind) for a non long expose.
I don't have the cameras with me rigth now but for tomorrow I can publish some photos if anyone interested.
Sorry if it was too much text.
Thanks.
 





Welding filters are not all created equal, and different shades (darkness levels) block different areas of the spectrum. The ideal one -can- be used to block -certain- IR wavelengths, but NOT VISIBLE wavelengths.

Your camera tests are not to be trusted though since you didn't use camera filters with known transmissivity to determine the presence of IR without VIS contamination, and your cameras are not proven to be sensitive enough to nonVis light. So, disregard their results.

If you saved the internal cut filter "hot mirror" (bluish glass over camera sensor) this can be used as an IR-block filter to apply to your green laser to stop it from leaking IR. This males your laser safer for normal proper viewing only.

Invest in proper safety glasses. Only use welding filters if you have a calibrated LPM and either a spectrometer or lab grade spectral filter assortment needed to accurately measure the light hazard.
 
Yeah, I'm aware of the camera probably only see up to 1000nm or even less, I haven't measure it.

I have the hot mirror stored somewhere, I'll used for this.

I ordered a few weeks ago glasses from laserpointerpro, now I know here may be not the best option so I'm looking for something better.

Thanks.
 
If you saved the internal cut filter "hot mirror" (bluish glass over camera sensor) this can be used as an IR-block filter to apply to your green laser to stop it from leaking IR. This males your laser safer for normal proper viewing only.
Sorry to hijack....I've had this for some time, is it a "hot mirror"? If you know. IIRC got it from a camera

IMG_20150107_122945_677_1.jpg
 
Sorry to hijack....I've had this for some time, is it a "hot mirror"? If you know. IIRC got it from a camera

That looks too thick for a hot mirror, the ones I extracted are actually pretty thin (extremely fragile) and reflect in color green or pink, depend on angle.
I think you can test it with a TV remote control and a camera, put it between and check if it block the ligth from the remote, some smartphone's frontal cameras has a very weak ir filter, so it should be a better option to test.
 





Back
Top