Re: 48w + 445nm handheld laser module
In knife edge you have let say 6 beams side by side at 2w that make a square with all of the rectangles polarized the same direction you
do not have one 12w beam you have 6- 2w beams side by side . What I am doing is using the cubes to over lap each beam. You would have 1-12w beam (l) not a thick square
knife edge pattern looks something like this but the beams touches (llllll) the way my beams will be is like this (l) one beam for max burning power. some posted that I could not get this (l) from 2 cubes it would come out like this (+) But this video show that I did
glasse on cam beam shot 001 - YouTube so with the 2 cubes coming out like this(l) it will go in to the next cube like it did in the first and repeat .This system will be small and put out a lot of power and easy to line up thanks
CNC Machines . If you like a big beam then knife edge is for you but not me.
as I have stated I am working on this and just thought people would like to see it as it comes a long ,so
please be patient.
You misunderstood the two lasers one cube statement
*IF* you shine two lasers into the one cube you must have opposite polarizations to get one through and the other to reflect.
That's how PBS cubes work
If, as you say, you are getting a "square" output, then you are shining the rectangular beams next to each other,
They are NOT "overlapping" in more than a minor way
If they were overlapping, they would still be a skinny rectangle
It is possible that the beams are so close together that you cannot "see" the separate beams, but if the shape changed, they are there
This problem is most apparent in the close field that you are working at
In the far field, these problems become easily recognizable
The other possibility is that the PBS cubes are introducing enough distortion, at even this low number of cubes, that the beams are scattering
In the real world, optics are NEVER 100% efficient and ALWAYS introduce
some distortion
The more optics you shine the beam through, the more power is lost and the more distortion is introduced
Once again, I am not saying your claim is untrue, yet.
I am saying that you are not showing what you think you are showing
Your results are easily explainable by already well understood concepts
Remember to keep Occam's Razor in mind
Those same well understood concepts also expose the potential problems of your experiment
Please do the experiment
They are a great source of knowledge
However, I would also ask you, please do not order 1,000 of these assemblies before you have a prototype working at the power levels you are hoping for
Peace,
dave