3D MAX To Laser Light 39
Laserfuzz writes: "Remember LaserMAME?
Well this isn't new but Pangolin has a plug-in
for 3D
Studio MAX to convert 3D objects and scenes into laser outlines. Opens laser
show programing to a larger group of people." I s'pose not everyone has that kind of hardware sitting around, but you sure could light up a party.
Re:Laser color matching (Score:2)
Re:FPS would be fun! (Score:1)
laser shows. (Score:2)
At any other show I find them to be terribly annoying and distracting from the performers on stage.
Why would I want even more tacked onto the cost of a ticket (TM, band fees are enough) just to see a bunch of shit that I can see while watching GForce for free.
Just my worthless
Re:Stone Mountain could sure use this... (Score:1)
Re:laser shows. (Score:1)
Re:Lasers (Score:1)
Galvs expensive... (Score:4)
Cheap galvs are going set you back at least $100.00 per channel (last time I checked) - and those aren't high speed, either (lotsa bucks for those). Pro laser show equipment is pricey - but it doesn't have to be this way for your next party.
In an old back issue of Scientific American (in the late 70's-early 80's, I believe) there was an Amatuer Scientist article on building your own laser show cheaply - where the "galvs" were right angle/ortho mounted speakers with mirrors glued to the cone - the trick is using two mirror/speaker combos, each acting on the X or Y axis. The laser bounces between them, and the speakers control the deflection in the X and Y axis - tone generators control the speakers.
The article also showed how to use two motors, each with a mirror glued to the shaft at an angle - using this arrangement, bouncing the laser between the mirrors, you can create lissajous patterns (fun to watch - I actually put an entry into the AOL CD contest that did this, but used the CDs as the mirrors). Add a motor spinning a "shutter" wheel (prior to the laser hitting the first mirror) for other effects. All the motors are controlled with rheostats.
Other possibilities:
Cut away the speaker cone to reduce its mass to get higher speed. It might also be possible to extend the shaft of a regular analogue voltmeter and superglue a small mirror onto it (might have to beef up the spring a bit). Use a solenoid to activate a shutter "digitally" (pro rigs use some kind of electro-optical shutter that works similarly to an LCD). I have given thought to using headphone style speakers, or gluing the mirror to a piezo speaker for higher speeds - haven't followed through on it yet, though.
Use a PC (and accompaning sound card) to control the speaker "galvs" - the parallel port could control a solenoid shutter. Multiple shutters could be controlled serially. Mirrors could be mounted on servos for simple "sweep" effects.
Buy the small mirrors at a craft store - they make them pretty small and lightweight. Another possibility for even lighterweight mirrors is to use a small piece of highly polished blank semiconductor wafer.
Pen lasers (ie, LED lasers) can be used for small informal gatherings, but if you want to do a better, larger show, get an HeNe tube laser - output and brightness tends to be higher. Unfortunately you won't be able to get other colors without spending a lot of bucks (I think there is a blue or green laser pen out there, but it is expensive - other colored lasers are of the gas variety, and tend to be expensive). But other light effects could be used instead (maybe focused high-brightness LEDs?)...
Have phun!
Worldcom [worldcom.com] - Generation Duh!
laser printing (Score:1)
The real name escapes me, but a laser beam is fired into a vat of photosensitive resin, where it hardens, and can create a perfect 3D mold. Anyone recall? Wired said Oakley uses this technology.
Real Genius (Score:1)
Re:Just a reminder (Score:2)
It's all fun and games until someone loses an eye.
Then, it's just a game: Find the Eye.
Re:Laser color matching (Score:4)
And for a good reason [fda.gov]...
Re:Stone Mountain could sure use this... (Score:1)
BTW, I live about .8 miles from the park, so I see it quite often. :-)
-pf
Rocky Horror Laser Show? (Score:1)
The only "intuitive" interface is the nipple. After that, it's all learned.
Build your own... (Score:1)
Just a reminder (Score:5)
Warez (Score:5)
"Up there! It's a bird!"
"It's a plane!"
"IT'S A TEAPOT!!!!"
Tell me what makes you so afraid
Of all those people you say you hate
Help me Obi Wan.. (Score:2)
This reminds me a bit of a program I had way back when on my Amiga 2000 that would output audio signals to create patterns with a laser scanner. By far the simpler and cheaper route to go is to get yourself a cheap surplus laser and clue a non-flat mirror to a motor shaft.. By playing around with the angle of the mirror you can adjust the projected pattern.. Not nearly as high-tech, but cheap and cheerful for the party wall..
Re:Where can I get some of that hardware? (Score:4)
http://www.camtech.com/ [camtech.com]
www.gsilumonics.com [gsilumonics.com]
other sources and info from this page [pangolin.com].
Re:Laser light show equipment suppliers (Score:2)
NEWS: cloning, genome, privacy, surveillance, and more! [silicongod.com]
Converting 2-D into laser outlines (Score:3)
Taco's Frinkian Encounter (Score:2)
Taco: When an electron drops from an outer to an inner level, excess energy is given off as light. The wavelength or color of the emitted light is precisely related to the amount of energy released.
Cute Girl: Eh!
Taco: Yes...what is it, what, what is it?
Cute Girl: Can I play with it?
Taco: No you can't play with it. You won't enjoy it on as many levels as I do... The colors!
Oh the irony (Score:1)
Re:Hey, I use That.... (Score:1)
Yes, laser projectors are hellishly expensive, one of the reasons there are so few in the US (that are any good). You try precisely moving a very small point of light around at incredible speeds with all sorts of sharp angles and see what sort of accuracy you get.
And that says nothing for the cost of the laser itself. Or just the amount of power and water most ion lasers need if you want to be able to have it bright enough to see outside. Plus all of the special crystals and optics needed for color changing, provided you can even afford a laser with multiple wavelengths.
Now, one reason the LCMax plug-in rocks is because it saves you some money on the production end. Just about every US laser company uses Pangolin software. Typically a show is created as traditional frame by frame animation and then hand traced on a digitizing tablet into Pangolin. Frame by Frame!!
Max changes all this by making it easy to create simple objects and rotates in laser light with out all of the time consuming digitizing. If you see the Hershey Park show or SeaWorld Orlando you will be able to pick out the parts where LC Max was doing the work. The images have a really clean, distinct look to them.
Laser light is absolutely incredible. There really is nothing else like it in color or intensity. And believe it or not 3D studio and LCmax are just drops in the bucket once you put a full power system together. Hopefully it will help laser companies get out of the rut they seem to be stuck in (at least stateside) and start pushing the boundaries of this amazing art form again. Because honestly, most US laser shows these days suck like a hoover.
Where can I get some of that hardware? (Score:1)
Damn! (Score:1)
Re:laser printing (Score:1)
Stone Mountain could sure use this... (Score:2)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Laser color matching (Score:5)
Now, this is some very cool stuff. I've actually seen him make holograms using his laser projector. But if you want to do anything out in public, you'll need to be sure you have the right papers.
FPS would be fun! (Score:1)
Yummie, yummie!
Re:laser shows. (Score:1)
---
Lasers (Score:3)
Careful where you point that thing... (Score:1)
How many GFLOPS your CPU is capable? (Score:1)
- 1.2 GFLOPS???
- Quake II over 100 fps?
- MP3 encoding quick as thunder?
- 3D studio rendering over 5 complex scenes per min?
The 1st and 2nd has been shown to be true (or almost), but the 3rd... (the 1st GFLOPS running 3D studio probably came from an 1.3 GHz Athlon, if exists a 3D studio version that runs on Alpha - Alpha+WinNT? maybe... -, so CRAY machines held the crown)
Later the best-seller chipset and proeminent network adapter manufacturer launched a CPU that it claims way similar architeture, but way improved to single-unit implementaion than its dual-unit rival. Improved implementation? Now 3D studio like other CAD nightmares will run ultra-faster. Oh no... won't? Why?
- Only single-precision ops?
- Poor instruction decode performance and insufficient data bandwidth?
- No compilers for best optmization and waaaay hard to do hand picked enhancements?
The 3 objectives are true, so there are faulty engineering dept.'s. But the newer super-whooper CPUs also have problems to achieve max. performance. There are more?
- Software developers fall over the junk of x86 and x87 instruction sets.
- The own Frankenstein manufacturers doesn't know the best way possible for optimum perfomance on complex apps.
- Vicious double-precision per op use which came from the era 80-bit and 64-bit ops used rather minor precision on professional CAD (even poor physics-based CAD), home CAD, 3D modeling for macro architeture and engineering cuz' they're patterned by reference tasks that effectively needed higher precision (lab research and manufacturing industry, by example). Also, to increase precision in "single-instruction-single-data" was easier than increase FLOPS.
Ok, SIMD-FP (there is the name) this time sux (P5 FPU scked for over 4 years, K6 FPU still sux), is either manufacturers' fault like softhouses' fault.
But they at least wouldn't dare to respect the measure "GFLOPS"?
huh? (Score:1)
Or was CmdrTaco assimilated?
"I am CmdrTaco of Borg. Relevance is irrelavent. You will be annoyed by pointless articles."
Hey, I use That.... (Score:1)
Re:Hey, I use That.... (Score:1)
As for the refresh rate, it will maintain a constant rate if you tell it to maintain a constant # of points per frame.
For different scanners, you are best programming for that particular model of scanner. This is true with analog abstracts, as well as graphics, on many of the scanners I've seen.
Alot has changed at AVI since 1990 I came on in '94, and so much has improved that we don't even want to play back the old stuff. The scanners have gotten faster, the images have gotten more complex, and we can now cover the entire dome with our Omniscan projector.
hope that helped!
Blurred vision? (Score:1)
Hey there anon.c
There are also output plugins for -- (Score:3)
LightWave, Maya, and good old POV-RAY. This is nothing terribly new, but it's nice to see that someone has taken the time to put together a plug in for 3DMAX, which is one of the most used (aka most pirated) pieces of 3D software out there.
By the way
Unfortunately, the De Anza planetarium has cancelled all laser shows at the Minolta planetarium until further notice. It was one of the last good places to see the Pink Floyd laser show.
Laser light show equipment suppliers (Score:5)
The Laserist Marketplace [wa.org]
Cosmic Ray [cosmicray.com]
Spectra Physics [spectraphysics.com]