X Y Speaker Laser-show

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Intro: X Y Speaker Laser-show

Here I will show how to make a audio lasershow. First I have two videos for you.




I have accomplished with laser show program for mac(is also possible with a frequency generator program)and music cool effects.

The vibrations from the 2 base speakers (with 1 mirror an each speaker) makes the laserbeam move with the music and the frequencies (audio).

STEP 1: What You Need

Hotgluepistole
laser
2x base speaker
2x mirrores (1,5cm X 1,5cm)
an borde (wood)
straw
2x plastic pices(1mm thick)
wooden stix (p.ex. "mikado stix")
styropohr

STEP 2: The Morrors

Fix the mirrors as on the pocturs on and cut the strows.
Saw the plastic pices.(so they fit to the size of the speakers)

STEP 3: The Sticks

Here you have to glue the mirror pices on the speakers.It`s very important that one of the mirror module is put in an vertical position and the other module horicontal.

STEP 4: Almost Done!

Now we are almost done.
I have gluded the speakers on a pice of wood and I stabilisaisde with a styropohr-block.(picture)
I simply put the laserpen into a styropohr-block.(picture)
This styropoheblock has to be abaut the same size as the speakers and the hole has to be in the level as the mirrors.

NOW YOU HAWE MAID YOUR OWN X Y AUDIO LASERSHOW!

If you have problems or questions just whrite me an PM.

27 Comments

Nice idea for getting a pair of mirrors to move. I was lucky to find an old laser video disc player, and built a light show module using the aiming mirrors, which are directly connected to the speaker outputs of a small amplifier. The coils on each mirror were close to four ohms each, and took less than five watts to drive. Next time I fire up my module, I'll be bouncing it off of two mirrors to get a larger pattern as it plays about one foot diameter at a five foot range. I never did figure out how to get that video disc laser tube to turn on though...bummer.

I did a 4 unit independent study college course making a laser light show from a Laserdisc He/Ne laser and those exact 4 ohm dime-sized x-y galvos.

Try mixing sine/saw/square waves and 2:1 4:1 harmonics

don't overdrive the galvos. feel them to see how hot they're getting.

and be VERY careful with the laser power supply.

it can kill you. it nearly killed me.

stupid question...but What exactly is a laser video disc player... i have never heard of one of these... don't know why i might just call it something else i guess...and what do they look like it sounds interesting.
The reason todays cd's are called 'compact disc', because optical disk's used to be huge! Wiki
And the laser used in one of these old machines was just as impressive. The one I have salvaged is a CO2 tube with a high-voltage power supply. I just never was able to figure out how to get the supply to turn on...
NO. The laser tubes in Laserdisc Players were Helium-Neon made by either Toshiba or NEC) The 12" analog video players were made my Magnavox, and most likely Pioneer. If you send me an image of the power supply, I can probably tell you how to reverse engineer it (fancy words for enabling it) Its very simple.
Toshiba He-Ne, and a year after this post I re-wired the module to turn on with a single low voltage control switch. Thanks!
Perfect! Great to hear! :)))
make sure this CO2 tube is intact and still holding co2 i could be wrong but i believe their the same (CO2 - vacuum tube) if its not holding what its supposed to vacuum or co2 it wont work at all
I don't think it's a vacuum tube if it's been filled with CO2, wouldn't a vacuum require the removal of any CO2 present? The tube I have is intact as far as I can tell. No cracks or obvious signs of deterioration. But I don't think I'm ever going to use it, so it's just a shop trophy.
It's NOT a CO2 laser, those lasers were made for more power.. These he-ne's produce about 2~5 milli-watts,,,,and the helium neon tube is hard sealed and would hold the inert gases for decades+++.. They were systems from the late 70's and thru the 80's and most are still lasing today (if you can find them) and that's about 30 years ago :)
Sure. I don't know why I was thinking back then that it's a CO2 in the disk player. My mistake! Must've been spending too much time looking into how to build a CO2 system or something...

By the way, my HE-Ne laser is still working just fine.
awesome! (co2 tubes look somewhat like he-ne's :)
CO2 laser tubes do contain CO2 but at less than atmospheric pressure, so they can be (if slightly inaccurately) as containing a vacuum.
Okay, my mistake. I had thought that all gases have to be removed to have a vacuum, and didn't think of variable amounts of a vacuum.
A 'soft' vacuum is slightly lower than atmospheric pressure (14 psi). An area of extremely low pressure is know as a 'hard' vacuum. You are correct, but a 'true' or 'perfect' vacuum is impossible to generate on earth... AlexHalford
well you must live down low but where i live the atmospheris pressure is near 8-10 psi i think
Aww darn! Another one of those absolutely perfect things that is never present when you finally get it right!
I figure out the wiring on the video disk power module after finding a pinout for a similar model. Turned out to be really easy, it just needed one jumper wire across two pins.
please correct grammar other than that nice ible
No.. It should be "Please correct your grammar, other than that, nice ible." ;-)
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