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Class 1 lasers
There seems to be various definitions of class 1 laser online. Does the assembled intelligence of Chief Delphi believe that a spec. sheet with a picture and a bunch of documentation that says the laser is a class 1 laser according to the manufacturer would sufficiently satisfy the inspectors?
That said does anyone have a source of a class 1 laser for under 50-100$? We have only found ones in the 150$ price range. Thanks in advance. |
Re: Class 1 lasers
Why do want a class one laser? What I've read is that the only way a laser would allowed be on the robot is if the laser was part of a laser gyro.
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Re: Class 1 lasers
^^^^ Thanks for the citation. We have found a laser pointer in the shop to be of use in guesstimating the angle of our shooter is required to be at to make a shot. Anyone have a clue about definitions of laser classes or where to get a inexpensive class 1?
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laser are classed according to there output power http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laser_safety#section_4
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Re: Class 1 lasers
We actually looked into this a while ago; it wasn't me who did the research, so I'm sure the number I will give you isn't correct. That said, laser pointers are classified as something like a 3b class, and not a class 1.
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Re: Class 1 lasers
Almost every laser pointer I've ever seen is class 3A. If you do manage to find one in Class 1, there is likely to be a clear label affixed to the product (laser labelling is pretty stringent). In combination with the spec sheets and manufacturer documentation, that should be more than sufficient for the inspectors.
Wikipedia is pretty accurate on the subject of laser classifications. (I've read several of the underlying standards, which say basically the same things, but in technical legalese.) |
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As long as the laser turns on and off as part of the robots system and it is class 1 you can use it. Be prepared to have to cover it up in the pit while doing testing. We used a vertical line laser last year to do alignment and we had no problem. As long as the documentation from the manufacturer says it's class 1 you should be fine.
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Those all appear to be Class III and some Class II lasers.
Not safe or legal for FRC. Perhaps you meant to link to a different McMaster page. Quote:
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Thanks for your help. Could you tell me which laser you used last year? Thanks
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-Brando |
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Note that there is a distinction between "Class I" and "Class 1". (The rules appear to call for the former, which was the designation used in previous versions of ANSI Z136.1 and IEC 60825.)
Also, the classification is valid for the entire assembled device, not the laser emitter itself (e.g. the laser diode). If you disassemble a device, its rating is no longer applicable. |
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