STM32F103F103C8T6 for $2.25 USD

mrburnette
Tue Mar 08, 2016 9:09 pm
It’s the year of the Monkey, and my A3 level advertisement today gave me this link:
http://www.aliexpress.com/item/STM32F10 … 04541.html

Monkey_2.svg.png
Monkey_2.svg.png (14.88 KiB) Viewed 617 times

ahull
Tue Mar 08, 2016 9:39 pm
Speaking of impulse buys, I just ordered 5pcs Mini 650nm 6mm 5V 5mW Laser Dot Diode Module Head for 0.10c shipped from China, ‘cos there were no other bidders

I have absolutely no idea what I am going to do with them, so any suggestions are welcome.

Heck five lazerzzzz for ten cents!!!!… :D

Even if I don’t do *anything* with them… they are lasers.. for two cents each..

Pig scope with laser anybody? Do pigs with lasers beat sharks with lasers I wonder :?:

Image


mrburnette
Tue Mar 08, 2016 9:45 pm
ahull wrote:Speaking of impulse buys, I just ordered 5pcs Mini 650nm 6mm 5V 5mW Laser Dot Diode Module Head

RogerClark
Tue Mar 08, 2016 9:51 pm
There are some nice 5W ( not 5mW) LED lasers available.

They would be more fun. But vastly more dangerous.


ahull
Tue Mar 08, 2016 10:08 pm
I wonder how fast/far I can drive them with an STM32 gpio pin, I will probably need to tweak them to operate on 3.3V or add a transistor in to the mix.

There are claims online that these little diodes are “dangerous” and “produce well over 5 mW”, I have my doubts, but I’ll let you know. I wont be staring in to the light if I can avoid it however, so time to break out the safety specs just in case.

It should be possible to overdrive them pretty hard, so long as you keep the duty cycle pretty low. Add in a heatsink and/or active cooling and we could be in for some long distance signal bouncing fun. (I’ll try not to blind too many crows or farmers). :twisted:


mrburnette
Tue Mar 08, 2016 10:11 pm
I worked with a 1W 445nM unit while doing my laser meter project. I started with respect, but finished with respect!

The short wavelength units are dangerous, but IR probably scares me the most since it is invisible.

Ray


ahull
Tue Mar 08, 2016 10:20 pm
Some of the green and violet diodes and pointers on line are positively dangerous, the green ones also throw out quite a lot of IR, due to the way they operate and the blue/purple ones are harvested from DVD/Blueray drives, so most of their light is invisible UV.

They are not quite in to the territory of counting your fingers after every experiment to ensure they are all still there, but certainly a serious permanent eye injury hazard and not to be treated without respect.

One of my customers a few years back did sheet metal fabrication with CO2 lasers. Those things could slice you in to neat rashers without any effort. :shock: They made pretty neat stuff with them though. Much more precise than plasma or gas torches.


ahull
Tue Mar 08, 2016 10:35 pm
RogerClark wrote:There are some nice 5W ( not 5mW) LED lasers available.

They would be more fun. But vastly more dangerous.


ahull
Tue Mar 08, 2016 11:07 pm
I suppose I could try to build an open source $2.25 STM32F103F103C8T6 based laser power meter…. :D

mrburnette
Wed Mar 09, 2016 12:15 am
ahull wrote:I suppose I could try to build an open source $2.25 STM32F103F103C8T6 based laser power meter…. :D

RogerClark
Wed Mar 09, 2016 12:19 am
Andy

I have a 50W CO2 laser, of which I’m very cautious. Googles on at all times the laser PSU is switched on, even if the laser is not being fired.


mrburnette
Wed Mar 09, 2016 12:21 am
Under $2 … wow!
http://www.aliexpress.com/item/2015-New … 63739.html

Ray


mrburnette
Wed Mar 09, 2016 12:23 am
RogerClark wrote:Andy

I have a 50W CO2 laser, of which I’m very cautious. Googles on at all times the laser PSU is switched on, even if the laser is not being fired.


racemaniac
Wed Mar 09, 2016 6:56 am
I just bought some of those boards, and they’re cheaper here (at least for me): http://www.aliexpress.com/item/1pcs-STM … 20209.html
in euro your link is 2.08€, and the one above is 2.05€ :).

And i’m getting close to being A4 on aliexpress :oops: . may have been stocking up a bit too much XD. (nearing 1800 points now)


TomaTLAB
Wed Mar 09, 2016 7:54 am
ahull wrote:
5W is the start of cutting laser territory. Still not quite “1 Gillette” but they will do a little damage. 100W and upwards, and you can cut stuff 1KW and you can cut 12mm carbon steel. …

mrbwa1
Thu Mar 10, 2016 3:15 pm
I have driven the little laser modules off the 5V rail from pro minis, and pretty sure I have driven them of the 3.3V rail as well.

They are great for little projects like a tripwire. One day, I should build one of those laser microphones to hear conversations through a window pane….

Also, I want to get a pack of little mirrors from the $1 store and a fog machine and set up a spy move type laser trip beam that goes all over a room.


mrburnette
Thu Mar 10, 2016 5:03 pm
These inexpensive lasers use a resistor to limit current, the ones I have from TxHang on eBay (Alice) are 91 Ohm resistors. Running from a 3.3V supply, the laser consumes 11.15mA and the resistor has a 1.17V drop.

These diodes are particularly fragile to over-anything. They are not well heatsinked and the cleaved optical surfaces are prone to damage:

Essentially, as a result, when light propagates through the cleavage plane and transits to free space from within the semiconductor crystal, a fraction of the light energy is absorbed by the surface states where it is converted to heat by phonon-electron interactions. This heats the cleaved mirror. In addition, the mirror may heat simply because the edge of the diode laser—which is electrically pumped—is in less-than-perfect contact with the mount that provides a path for heat removal. The heating of the mirror causes the bandgap of the semiconductor to shrink in the warmer areas. The bandgap shrinkage brings more electronic band-to-band transitions into alignment with the photon energy causing yet more absorption. This is thermal runaway, a form of positive feedback, and the result can be melting of the facet, known as catastrophic optical damage, or COD.

However, the low current demands at 3.3V makes them useful for many microcontroller circuits. At 11 mA, these diodes can work off the STM32F103 directly … but you are close to the per-I/O pin limit.

CheapLaser.jpg
CheapLaser.jpg (44.43 KiB) Viewed 602 times

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *