View Full Version : A laser-pointer visible from outer-space?
MrFug
10th September, 2011, 04:19 AM
Yep, that's wickedlasers at it again. Creating highly dangerous weapons and branded them as toys. This time they've pushed the boundary right to the limit, in terms of legality, with a 1W laser. 8,000 times brighter than the sun and with a beam that can traverse a distance of 84-miles, extending beyond the earths atmosphere and into outer-space. No longer are laser pointers the bane of bus drivers or low flying aircrafts, now astronauts and satellite hardware are at risk.
Take a shot to the eye, even a reflected beam, with the krypton and it's instant Stevie Wonder.
And yet very little regulation, so if you want one, buy one quick before the UK government slams an iron curtain down on this trade avenue.
Oops, almost forgot the link http://www.wickedlasers.com/lasers/S3_Krypton_Series-113-63.html
DJSimo
10th September, 2011, 06:37 AM
ON The website it says:-
Warning: This laser's brightness is potentially hazardous to pilots' vision and satellite sensors. NEVER point it at an aircraft or a satellite. The S3 Krypton is too powerful to be used as a laser pointer or a gunsight. Never point it at another person, an animal or a vehicle.
How are you supposed to know if you have pointed it at a satellite????? The tv ones most on here should know roughly where they are, but what about all the private and military satellites????????
Shady
10th September, 2011, 07:33 AM
NEVER point it at an aircraft or a satellite. The S3 Krypton is too powerful to be used as a laser pointer or a gunsight. Never point it at another person, an animal or a vehicle.
what the ~~~~s it FOR then?
super jumbe
10th September, 2011, 08:52 AM
Originally Posted by DJSimo
NEVER point it at an aircraft or a satellite. The S3 Krypton is too powerful to be used as a laser pointer or a gunsight. Never point it at another person, an animal or a vehicle.
It should be banned and they should stop production???.
Imagine if terrorists got hold of it, danger to our boy?s life in the front line!!!!!!!!!!!!!
:toilet:
Shady
10th September, 2011, 08:53 AM
Imagine if terrorists got hold of it, danger to our boy?s life in the front line!!!!!!!!!!!!!
ah yeah.. ~~~~ the suicide bombers, guns, bombs, missiles, etc.. they got LASERS lads!!!!
~~~~ing hell jumbe.. do you live in the real world?
MrFug
10th September, 2011, 10:44 AM
what the ~~~~s it FOR then?
They have no practical application at all. Some astronomers use lasers for pointing out constellations, but a laser far less powerful will suffice for that purpose.
A laser that stretches 84 mile is purely, well, fun. :-D
Sent from my GT-I9100 using Tapatalk
lagerland
10th September, 2011, 10:47 AM
Thats the kids sorted for christmas then..................:roflmao:
Meat-Head
10th September, 2011, 11:32 AM
so, if Buzz Lightyear is spacewalking, holding a ballon, can you pop it with one of these?
gopher7
10th September, 2011, 11:52 AM
Watch out ET, we got LASERS. :) :guns:
johnboy1974
12th September, 2011, 06:06 PM
Now we can check to see if theres really reflectors on the moon.
garry1312
12th September, 2011, 06:19 PM
lol you seen the price of one of these bad boys lol.
Got to admit it looks pretty awsome, but seriously what use would anyone have for this?
DJSimo
12th September, 2011, 07:00 PM
At 1000Mw you?ll easily burn through plastic, paper and a whole lot more. A laser so powerful, it should be illegal ? but is actually approved by the FDA
Taken from another site selling them...
Canker_Canison
12th September, 2011, 07:37 PM
I'd be blinding ~~~~ers who leave their full beam on. But then I am evil..... & a little nuts.
If I had $1000 to waste I'd have one in an instant.
Meat-Head
12th September, 2011, 08:04 PM
If I had $1000 to waste I'd have one in an instant.
OK, we can get DK members to stand down the A1, with ballons you in London, see if, you can pop them.
OFF TOPIC:-
There are vids on youtube, how to make lazer pen pop ballons, go to the fair, where they give you blunt darts and flat ballons, stab, BLAM snigger
super jumbe
12th September, 2011, 08:15 PM
Is the laser good enough to cut cash machine in half I will buy five in instalments, and will eventually pay instantly after the experiment???????
:party: :party: :party:
TheCoder
12th September, 2011, 11:04 PM
This isn't really anything new !
You've been able to aquire lab laser units upto several Watts power for a similar price for years now with little in the way of restriction. Until fairly recently you could also purchase ex US military laser equipment of upto 20W output power for just a few hundred $, mostly parts from tank laser targetting systems.
The only real difference here is the relative smallness of the unit.
btw, the stuff about it affecting satellites is bull. The only possible thing to affect on a satellite would be a camera and all space-borne camera's have circuitry which protect sensors long before any damage could occur, even if you could focus the beam on a particular spot long enough (which would be nigh on impossible without a sophisticated servo-assembly). The chances of hitting an astronaut in an 84 mile or less orbit are remote to say the least and even if you did visors on spacesuits are far more efficient than any 'laser' goggles your likely to be able to purchase.
The 84 miles is also under optimum conditions, ie a perfectly cloudless and dustless night sky such as only ever really occurs at the poles. In the UK, you would be lucky to get 5 miles out of the thing although I must agree that would still potentially be hazardous to aircraft.
TheCoder
12th September, 2011, 11:19 PM
At 1000Mw you?ll easily burn through plastic, paper and a whole lot more. A laser so powerful, it should be illegal ? but is actually approved by the FDA...
1000Mw, you could probably cut chunks off the moon but I presume you meant 1000mW ;)
It would be interesting to see the proper technical specs for this device as its almost certainly not a continuous beam device. Very few laser diodes could handle a 1W constant output power so they tend to be modulated or 'pulsed', often at several thousand times per second and usually with a relatively low duty cycle (off 95% of time is common). I'm not sure whether this would be a 1W pulse device or an average 1W device (pulses upto several hundred Watts but of very short duration - bit like a very fast flashgun).
Johnner
12th September, 2011, 11:20 PM
I'd be blinding ~~~~ers who leave their full beam on. But then I am evil..... & a little nuts.
If I had $1000 to waste I'd have one in an instant.
Canker,you'd be ~~~~ing there all night if that was the case !!
janobi
13th September, 2011, 12:30 PM
You can make one with the laser from a DVD player ;)
Canker_Canison
13th September, 2011, 01:33 PM
Canker,you'd be ~~~~ing there all night if that was the case !!
Maybe I'd find a busy junction or roundabout & zap everyone who either cuts across lanes or just shouldn't be on the road.
I can picture the mayhem now........ Mmmmmm
You can make one with the laser from a DVD player ;)
You can but the power output is a lot less than 1watt. It also has a very short focal length.
The general rule...If a 6 year old can't do it, neither can 80% of the population.
DJSimo
13th September, 2011, 02:28 PM
1000Mw, you could probably cut chunks off the moon but I presume you meant 1000mW ;)
It would be interesting to see the proper technical specs for this device as its almost certainly not a continuous beam device. Very few laser diodes could handle a 1W constant output power so they tend to be modulated or 'pulsed', often at several thousand times per second and usually with a relatively low duty cycle (off 95% of time is common). I'm not sure whether this would be a 1W pulse device or an average 1W device (pulses upto several hundred Watts but of very short duration - bit like a very fast flashgun).
I just cut and paste that info off their site so just shows how professional they are
garry1312
13th September, 2011, 03:12 PM
My dog and two cats love lazer pens, think ill buy one of these lol
janobi
13th September, 2011, 04:41 PM
You can but the power output is a lot less than 1watt. It also has a very short focal length.
The general rule...If a 6 year old can't do it, neither can 80% of the population.
Whilst that may be true, I challenge anyone to prove that this can go 86 miles, or whatever it said. How would you even know? Clever marketing imho.
TheCoder
13th September, 2011, 07:06 PM
Whilst that may be true, I challenge anyone to prove that this can go 86 miles, or whatever it said. How would you even know? Clever marketing imho.
As I hinted above, the 86 miles thing will be a theoretical calculation based on ideal conditions. Of course those conditions rarely occur on Earth so you'd actually be lucky to get 5 miles out of it. Backscatter caused by dust particles and refraction caused by moisture droplets effectively cut terrestrial laser-light transfer down to virtually no distance at all - one of the reasons the US military all but abandoned research on active laser weaponary.
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