A
Albert
Hi all,
According to Laser Sams FAQ at:
http://www.repairfaq.org/sam/laserdps.htm#dpslpnr
Some laser diodes are designed to be operated with a curent limiting
resistor as a driver. Sam points out that he tested some diodes that
had a very low threshold current and had a wide margin between max
output abd threshold.
While larger laser diodes operate fine like this, I've never seen a
reputable laser diode manufacturer spec his diodes to be operated in
this manner.
Yes, I know it's common practice in the Asian laser pointer biz to do
this, but has anyone ever hear of a laser diode manufacturer
specifying his doides to operate in this manner?
Also, is there any chance that the diodes that operate with a limiting
resistor only might be a VCSEL diode? VCSEL's are much more stable and
do tend to lase at much lower values while maintaining alot of
headroom to ramp up to max power out. Even the lowest powered VCSEL's
don't need photodiodes and run with limiting resistor drivers.
Any comments appreciated.
Al
According to Laser Sams FAQ at:
http://www.repairfaq.org/sam/laserdps.htm#dpslpnr
Some laser diodes are designed to be operated with a curent limiting
resistor as a driver. Sam points out that he tested some diodes that
had a very low threshold current and had a wide margin between max
output abd threshold.
While larger laser diodes operate fine like this, I've never seen a
reputable laser diode manufacturer spec his diodes to be operated in
this manner.
Yes, I know it's common practice in the Asian laser pointer biz to do
this, but has anyone ever hear of a laser diode manufacturer
specifying his doides to operate in this manner?
Also, is there any chance that the diodes that operate with a limiting
resistor only might be a VCSEL diode? VCSEL's are much more stable and
do tend to lase at much lower values while maintaining alot of
headroom to ramp up to max power out. Even the lowest powered VCSEL's
don't need photodiodes and run with limiting resistor drivers.
Any comments appreciated.
Al