Blu-Ray Star Trek laser pops balloons across a room

phaser-12X-cone-7.jpg

MAKE rockstar Kipkay first put a Blu-Ray laser diode into a Star Trek phaser toy back in 2007. Hack N Mod's Jay has added an illuminated safety switch, a large heat sink, and a custom focusing adapter at the tip. The laser operates at 320 mA and gives 465 mW of power, and is, to be fair, quite dangerous for the eyes. Definitely not a toy. Even though it's, um, built into one. [via DVICE]



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Posted by: Anonymous Kill Joy on January 20, 2010 at 11:18 AM

All Fun and Games Until Someone Looses An Eye

Seriously, you are pointing a fricken laser beam at a chrome tap, crystal glasses, I don't know how many reflective surfaces...

The laser has enough power to pop a balloon, what do you think it is going to do to your eyes.

How much insurance does Make magazine carry anyway?


Posted by: Anonymous on January 20, 2010 at 11:26 AM

Wear some laser goggles please and take a look at ANSI Z136!


Posted by: Paul on January 20, 2010 at 11:35 AM

would you weld without a shield?
wire a 220 socket with the power on?
use a table saw without a blade guard?
run a drill press with your eyes closed?
smoke while making your own dynamite?

Not really bothered with the device itself, just the lackadaisical approach to safety.

I vote for an issue of make all focused on safety in the "lab" (where lab is the workshop, the kitchen, and everywhere else we're doing experiments.)


Posted by: Seth on January 20, 2010 at 12:20 PM

Disclaimer

His writeup says: Proper eye protection for 405nm wave length is recommended. And extreme caution needed when using. I would recommend storing it in a lockable case so that it cannot be accessed by just any person or child...

Eye Protection: (405nm)
http://store.oemlasersystems.com/ind...91239ce0cbfdb4

Stop complaining and enjoy...


Posted by: Jake von Slatt on January 20, 2010 at 1:09 PM

>would you weld without a shield?
Yes, well to tack anyway

>wire a 220 socket with the power on?
Yep.

>use a table saw without a blade guard?
Hell yeah.

>run a drill press with your eyes closed?
No prob, once I'd done the setup.

>smoke while making your own dynamite?
Dynamite yeah, gunpowder no.

>Not really bothered with the device itself, just the >lackadaisical approach to safety.

This thing scares the crap out of me. If it were in my house I would treat it just like a handgun.

>I vote for an issue of make all focused on safety in the >"lab" (where lab is the workshop, the kitchen, and >everywhere else we're doing experiments.)

Usually I'm a "safety third" kind of guy, but building something genuinely dangerous into a toy gun is a bad, bad idea.


Posted by: Jake von Slatt on January 20, 2010 at 1:11 PM

Also: DO WANT!


Posted by: Simon on January 20, 2010 at 7:59 PM

Jake, am counting down to the steampunk ray-gun version now!

Sort of related but if you use one of those really high power LEDs they used for lighting these days and focus the light with a lens does that give you enough power to burn things. Obviously only at the focal point (like a magnifying glass and ants) but that could be useful for various things.


Posted by: craig on January 21, 2010 at 7:08 AM

Well, yes, I do weld without a shield all the time, what I call 'blink-welding'. And the guard on my table saw is more dangerous if it's on.
History has shown us that if you have the intelligence and disipline to make such a weapon, you generally have learmed the responsibility that comes with it. It's when you toss handguns into a monkey cage when all heck breaks loose.


Posted by: Jake von Slatt on January 21, 2010 at 1:27 PM

Oh damn! I totally want to toss handguns into a monkey cage now! :P

Honestly, it's the building it into a toy that gets to me. I can respect guns as tools but I have a visceral reaction to toy guns of all sorts.


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