High Density Burning Laser

  • Invention
    12th Jan 2012 Member 0 Permalink
    After hours of experimenting with laser designs including DMND reflector, focusing lens, glas-portal combination, and many other ideas, I finally came up with this one. It's a high density laser which incorporates several individual beams from each of the hot laser producing unit which I called it shortly as 'power core'. Each power core sends it's beam to the central 'beam emitter' through portals. The more power cores available, the denser the output beam.

    A beam emitter have a limit on how dense its beam can be, depending on how many PRTO it have. With enough PRTO and power cores, this laser system is able to produce the densest laser I've seen.

    This save also comes with optional lens for converting to NEUT laser or semi NEUT/PHOT laser.

  • disturbed666
    12th Jan 2012 Member 0 Permalink

    That's cool and indeed high density only you could make it turnable phot / neut (I know how to)

     

  • therocketeer
    12th Jan 2012 Member 0 Permalink
    @Invention (View Post) that is very dense and powerfull

    I once made a high density laser, but it used the pricaple of reflection to merge the beams and has over 100 cores (105 I think)
    I'll show you anyway:

    if you pass PHOT past a DMND shape like this:-
    you get a perpinicular reflection, which is good for merging beams
    x = DMND - = space


    -x x
    x
    x

    it is more reliable than the portal method, but requires some skilled positioning. If you do it well enough it is 100% efficiant and is like a hot knife through butter. You can use it in all 4 directions too. Try it!
  • Catelite
    12th Jan 2012 Former Staff 0 Permalink
    Call me strange but that laser doesn't appear to be on fire. >:C
  • therocketeer
    12th Jan 2012 Member 0 Permalink
  • Catelite
    12th Jan 2012 Former Staff 0 Permalink
  • Invention
    12th Jan 2012 Member 0 Permalink
    @disturbed666
    Yes I know that is possible, I might include that PHOT/NEUT switch in the future

    @therocketeer
    Nice laser!

    @Catelite
    Well I'm used to call powerful laser as burning laser because I'm a real-life laser enthusiast as well. It means the laser burn things, not the laser on fire :/