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Switch said:Wavelength is not proportional to price :IR, red , blu-ray are cheap because they are mass produced diodes for disk media.Green is cheap because they are mass produced DPSS lasers mainly just for laser pointers/handhelds/lab lasers/laser shows, and is the most common and most efficient DPSS process.Blue and yellow(473nm and 593.5nm) are ridiculously expensive because their DPSS process is more complicated, less efficient, and not produced in such quantity as the greens.
So in order you have the most common wavelengths: blu-ray , blue , green , yellow, red(635nm/660nm) , IR(790nm , 808nm , 980nm etc...)
And relative price: cheap , expensive , cheaper , really expensive , even cheaper , cheapest.
Of course there's also DPSS red (671nm) which is also expensive.
And as for other less common wavelengths ,whether their diodes or DPSS(only talking about diodes and DPSS now...) , they're even more rare and thus even more expensive. :![]()
pwnstar said:[quote author=Ace82 link=1210795895/0#5 date=1210868598]Basically, the wavelength of a laser has NOTHING to do with the price, it just so happens that the current technology required to make certain lasers at different wavelengths are different therefore so is the cost.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't IR the most abundent LD because it was the first mass produced used in cd players?
http://www.lexellaser.com/techinfo_wavelengths.htm
VillageIdiot said:So in order from cheapest to most expensive
Infrared
Red
Green
Blu-Ray (Violet)
DPSS Red
Blue
Yellow
Yes?
iewed said:[quote author=VillageIdiot link=1210795895/0#3 date=1210851651]So in order from cheapest to most expensive
Infrared
Red
Green
Blu-Ray (Violet)
DPSS Red
Blue
Yellow
Yes?
360freak said:Why do you say that? A 50 mW green nova costs about $120.