DIY Video Projector Part II

Mario007 said:
You do realize that forrest is using a lcd projector and not a panel right? It is an older infocus and from what I've read it only does 640*480 res which is still pretty good. The replacement bulbs for it should be fairly cheap as it just uses a 400w halogen bulb. Although replacing it with a small metal halide would be cool.

Mario007, just to clarify it is actually a panel that i'm using, infocus does a 550ls Panelbook and a 550ls litepro or something....exactly the same electronics and LCD but one is housed with a light to make a projector....

my optics seem off people, kinda hard to get stuff in scotland so i'm thinking of trynig to find a busted OHP and steal the fresnel and lens off of that, gonna go hunting tomorrow to see what i can find....

oh, and thanks for your reply Wonneil

Cheers
 
Well I did it again

Yesterday I got a MVR1000/U/BT-37 lamp OMG its freaking bright 115,000 lumens :0 Im happy now but I still would like to make a smaller projector. I found this today but I dont know much about lasers http://www.lasershow.sk/white.htm it says the color is red,green,blue and it makes a white laser light well to me that sounds like it could work but Im not sure on how the brightness on lasers are measured. a small beam like this would be easy to use on a small lcd panel.
 
concerned...

Howdie...I've was wondering if I got totally screwed? Here is a panel that I bid on. It seemed decent enough for a first attempt at projecting. I thought I had stumbled on a great deal...then I saw a line that worried me ( Video PCB not included) I'm not sure what this means but I think it means I have a screen and no way to get a video signal to it. Is this the end of the world?
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?MfcISAPICommand=ViewItem&item=1370785894
 
Marklar

A white light laser would be perfect.

Small size
Highly collimated beam
Only need small optics to expand beam
Can be used to burn hole in neighbours house
Instant on - off
Long life
Dont need a reflector

There is just one little small problem

You need about 2 grand and up to buy one.

Try out a cheap red pointer laser. Place it where your light is. Expand beam to fill fresnel. Restrict to small size picture. You should get a very dim red picture.

Large outdoor direct projection laser projectors usually use at least 1 to 5 watt optic power lasers that consumes enough electric power for a small town. Usually 3 phase with water cooling. These new white light lasers are starting to change that. Especially for laser light shows.

Schnieder Co in Germany displayed several prototype large screen projectors at trade fairs using red/green/blue lasers but has gone into receivership.

300mw is good power for indoor direct projection and should give a watchable picture with some lights on. I work with 5 milliwats and can see very small, very dim picture in a dark room. But that is with direct projection. Not through an LCD panel.
Through an LCD panel with the light losses in the panel, I imagine you would need considerable laser power.

Pity high power lasers are so expensive. But you can make your own. See Sams laser site.

Anyone playing with lasers should be aware of safety issues concerning your eyes.
 
LASERS!!!

HMMM, i am starting to consider building a DIY laser... you know that at the focal point of DUKANE, the light is so hot, it actually turns the paper black after a awile. If we could condense that light into a thin ray, i believe that it would have enough energy to burn...

Maybe a should start a new thread...

aleksey
 
Aww yes laser beams. There were some people not to long ago who wanted to build laser projectors. Wow that sounds like a big and expensive job. Not only do you have to refresh and draw 320*240 lines of resolution you have to have three colored lasers doing it. White lasers are kind of interesting but still not a practical solution for illuminating the back of a lcd for a decent price as the price you pay for just the laser might as well buy a DLP projector.
 
Reflective LCD projector

I have had a look through the forum and cant seem to see anyone talking bout reflective LCD projectors like the one shown at http://www.audiovisualizers.com/madlab/lcd_proj.htm.
Do they work? I was thinking of trying with a 5.5" LCD and some 24W long-life bulbs (give out 1400 lumens each) to minimise heat build up. Am I dreaming???
 

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Relfective LCD Projector

Thanks for your feedback Mario007.
I was going to use a car video LCD (see http://www.mp3playerstore.com/stuff_you_need/special/th-5688.htm ) , not one that passes light through such as used for an OHP. The instructions for building it say that you only need two 75-100W globes.

If I used 150W globes and the LCD I mentioned, do you reckon it would work???
 

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Marklar!

1000W. Wow. Great work so far on your projector.

I would love to see some more shots of your projector showing movies, etc with both bulbs. Mabye in a room with some lights on too just so we can see how bright and clear it really is! If anything, it's a chance to show off! 😉