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- Xref: sparky sci.electronics:22038 sci.physics:22134
- Path: sparky!uunet!caen!uflorida!reef!rgarito
- From: rgarito@reef.cis.ufl.edu (Robert Garito)
- Newsgroups: sci.electronics,sci.physics
- Subject: Re: Lasers/collimated light in RGB?
- Message-ID: <rgarito.726227989@reef>
- Date: 5 Jan 93 09:59:49 GMT
- References: <1992Dec29.195908.15003@radian.uucp>
- Sender: news@uflorida.cis.ufl.edu
- Followup-To: sci.electronics
- Lines: 42
- Nntp-Posting-Host: reef.cis.ufl.edu
-
- jlange@radian.uucp (John Lange) writes:
-
- >In nightclubs I have recently seen light effects which apparently
- >use bright red, green, and blue lasers which are modulated with
- >mirrors (I think) to do interesting things like project color
- >images on a wall. The red could be a simple He-Ne laser, but what
- >about the green and the blue? I know these light sources can be
- >made with expensive
-
- Having many years of concert lighting experience, I can tell you that
- it is unlikely that a night-club is using real lasers. Several lighting
- companies (notably Intellabeam) market devices that use incandescent
- light with optics to SIMULATE laser beams. They have a much wider
- beam spread than a real laser and are usually used in confined
- spaces only (like a nightclub). Concerrts use real lasers, usually
- ion lasers such as Argon. HeNe is used to a small extent in concerts
- also, but is generally shied away from. The reason why nightclubs
- USUALLY don't use real lasers is cost. Argon (Green/Blue) can
- run in the $10k-$20k range. Plus, they usually require cooling
- in the form of water (some newer ones are air-cooled, but,
- that is relatively new to the entertainment world). Also, REAL
- lasers are quite dangerous. Most laser shows are inspected and
- the operators licensed, because they can blind audience/crew members
- if they hit the eye. The average night-club doesn't want to get involved
- in that area...
-
- I have seen some un-licensed HeNe shows (such as Peter Pan, which I
- just worked on). They used a .25mw HeNe to depict Tinkerbell. That
- power is supposedly legal in every state (according to what they told
- me). It is possible that the red is done with HeNe, but, if you
- are seeing green or blue, most likely it is a simulator and the
- red is also simulated. If you happen to see WHITE, it is DEFINITELY
- simulated. WHITE lasers are QUITE expensive and VERY new.
-
- And, yes, the beams are modulated (in both simulated and real) via
- the use of mirrors (computer-controlled) and shutters.
-
- --
- Robert Garito
- President, MicroLAN Technologies
- rgarito@reef.cis.ufl.edu
-
-