GRYNX

8th 2005f June, 2005

Part 2 - New IR LED

by @ 11:26. Filed under Uncategorized

The components

I’ve used a similar setup as in the first part as this will enable me to experiment with the values more flexibly.

As you can see the 4230 really lights up, and I got very exited about it when I first took this picture.

Next, let’s have a result with all the test projections will the different IR LED’s.

27 Responses to “Part 2 - New IR LED”

  1. Joe Eckstein Says:

    “hey, I can still see good :) (or at least I’m under that impression.)”
    *as he crashes into the doorjam on the way out of his office*

  2. computerxpert Says:

    hmmm. i think IR does do somthing to your eyes, i have forgotten what though. I think its to do with radiation.

  3. Oscar Says:

    Chris:
    It looks like if you were making your experiments in total darkness, so probably
    the problem with your headache comes from your eye trying to catch light where there
    is not. Your iris makes efforts, wide open, to let pass light that doesn’t arrive,
    so the wear is reflected in headache. As you remark in your text, it is not a good
    idea looking straight into a lit LED like the one you’re using (no one would make
    it in a pointer LASER, I think), for the emitted power is so great that it could
    be dangerous for retina integrity.
    My best wills to your investigations, which I hope you’ll get on…

  4. hans Says:

    I got this from searching within PubMed

    Cataracts occur frequently among workers who deal with hot material such as molten glass or steel, as a result of exposure to intense infra-red radiation (i.r.) emitted from it.

    It is suggested that i.r. cataracts in the workplace result from the generation of heat by absorption of i.r. in the cornea and heat conduction to the lens.

    This absorbtion depends on the emitted power from the IR led over the surface area of your retina.

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  7. seb Says:

    I don’t think this kind of IR could be dangerous for your eyes. UV makes you blind not IR, that’s why we wear sunglasses.

    Most of camera are using IR for their auto-focus system, and I never heard about people getting blind because of this.

  8. Chris Says:

    Hmm, I guess you have a point! Thanks!

  9. NoviceScotty Says:

    Hi - my work involves infra-red lasers, and I can tell you the following:
    1) Near Infra-red causes burns to the retina at high powers.
    2) The problem is that the blink reflex doesnt work with IR, so you dont realise you’re getting burnt
    3) IR lasers are generally considered to be eye safe for powers below 1mW
    4) IR Lasers above 5mW are considered definitely an eye hazard

    So I would recommend being careful, and not looking at the LED at close range -
    at larger distance the beam spread means that not all the energy enters your eye,
    but at short distances you could do yourself permanent damage.
    (A laser is just a LED with much tighter beam spread, and so all the laser light can enter the eye
    at large distances. )

    Treat it the same way as you would a high-power white LED - you wouldn’t stare into that would you!

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  11. Amber Says:

    It looks like if you were making your experiments in total darkness, so probably
    the problem with your headache comes from your eye trying to catch light where there
    is not. Your iris makes efforts, wide open, to let pass light that doesn’t arrive,

  12. Megan Says:

    I can still see good (or at least I’m under that impression.)”

  13. backgammon Says:

    Hi - my work involves infra-red lasers, and I can tell you the following:
    1) Near Infra-red causes burns to the retina at high powers.

  14. tramadol Says:

    Most of camera are using IR for their auto-focus system, and I never heard about people getting blind because of this.

  15. Mark Says:

    Hi,

    I would definitely say that it isn’t intelligent to look into lit LED’s.

    Otherwise, thanks for the great project, just what I have been looking for.!

  16. tramadol Says:

    I never heard about people getting blind because of this.

  17. tramadol Says:

    It looks like if you were making your experiments in total darkness, so probably
    the problem with your headache comes from your eye trying to catch light where there
    is not. Your iris makes efforts, wide open, to let pass light that doesn’t arrive,

  18. rxtramadol Says:

    Hi,

    I would definitely say that it isn’t intelligent to look into lit LED’s.

    Otherwise, thanks for the great project, just what I have been looking for.!

  19. backgammon Says:

    I would definitely say that it isn’t intelligent to look into lit LED’s.

  20. backgammon online Says:

    Most of camera are using IR for their auto-focus system, and I never heard about people getting blind because of this.

  21. Backgammon Says:

    It looks like if you were making your experiments in total darkness, so probably
    the problem with your headache comes from your eye trying to catch light where there
    is not.

  22. משחק לוח Says:

    I don’t think this kind of IR could be dangerous for your eyes. UV makes you blind not IR, that’s why we wear sunglasses.

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    Cataracts occur frequently among workers who deal with hot material such as molten glass or steel, as a result of exposure to intense infra-red radiation (i.r.) emitted from it.

  24. cheap soma Says:

    so the wear is reflected in headache. As you remark in your text, it is not a good
    idea looking straight into a lit LED like the one you’re using (no one would make

  25. jumpjack Says:

    Warning man, IR rays just COOK your eyes!
    Te proof is that you CAN’T use a negative film to protect your eyes while looking at a solar eclipse, as you’ll THINK it’s shielding, as it shields VISIBLE light, but the sun IR will BURN your eye!
    And negative film is what you use to get an IR cam from a standard cam, right?

  26. Jimmy S Says:

    Hi ther my mane is Jimmy. i have installed a few night vision camera in a vets holding room, and the ? has come up about the camara uses Infrared LED for it’s night vision. Are there any long trem problems with being under the LED for a long time frams.. i have not been able to find any info about this can u help???

  27. spiffmds Says:

    “(A laser is just a LED with much tighter beam spread, and so all the laser light can enter the eye
    at large distances. )”

    Not to nitpick, but a laser is very different than an LED. A laser emits coherent, virtually monochromatic light, while an LED emits over a broad frequency range. Some lasers are based on LEDs (i.e. diode lasers), but are also based on many other materials (dye lasers, rubies etc.).

    I would guess that lasers at the right wavelength would be more dangerous than leds not only because all the energy is focused in a narrow spatial range, but also in a narrow wavelength range.

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