TechLasers keeps on giving
First of all, I’d like to thank TechLasers.com again for sending me the laser to review. When I agreed to review, it, I didn’t anticipate having so much fun with it and finding more uses than I wrote about previously. I also never anticipated what came next. If you click the image at right, you’ll get a larger version, where you’ll notice that JoeTech.com and a quote from my review are proudly displayed on the TechLasers home page. I was very excited to see that. Thanks again, TechLasers!
She has Lissajous cruves
Just after my last post, one of my employees told me that he had a Lissajous curve maker at home. I have to admit that I didn’t know the term, but I told him to bring it in and we’d take a few minutes and play with it. You can click the link to find out some detail about Lissajous curves, but I’ve also created a short video for you. We went into the “war room” in the back, set it all up, and shut off the lights. What resulted was the light show below (RSS readers should click through to the site to see it).
How it’s done
To the left is an image of what Andrew brought in. You can click the image to see a larger version, as always. The concept is really fairly simple. You have two small motors with speed controls. Attached to each motor is a small mirror, angled at its base. The motors are mounted at near-45 degree angles, and the laser is mounted on the clothes pin. The black panel is just to block any stray laser beams. To make this thing produce Lissajous curves, you just need to turn it and the laser on, and then adjust the speeds of the motors. The faster the motors are spinning, the more interactive and wild the designs become. I want to build one of these, myself, but I want to have the motor speeds controlled by a digital source. I think it would be pretty cool to control it remotely via the web. I will definitely post whatever I come up with.








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on March 29th, 2008 at 11:28 am
Long ago and far away, we used Lissajous patterns to test electronic components - capacitors and inductors(?) I think.
Say you get one shape on the scope, the component tested ‘good’ and if you got the other one, it tested ‘bad’ so you would need to do further testing to determine if it actually WAS bad (good?) - I think that’s how it went.
I never played with making them THIS WAY though!
It’s like a lot of things - you can use a speaker as a microphone if you know how…
Pam Hoffman
http://seminarlist.blogspot.com
Pam Hoffman’s last blog post..The Week Ahead: March 30th thru April 5th
on March 30th, 2008 at 2:45 pm
Looks pretty, but what it’s use for :shy:
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on March 31st, 2008 at 10:43 pm
Pam is right. I worked in electronics for years building silent alarms and other electronic devices.
We used a similar device to check sensitive electronic parts.
They are fun to watch. Funny what such a simple device can do.
And to what a good use they are.