jbeng
Member
The term you're looking for here is "dichroic mirror".Those real laser mirrors are pretty strange, unless you get really close they look normal. But if you put them upto your eye you can see straight through them although its kind of smokey. I cant remember the proper name of them and its really bugging me lol.
Yes, laser mirrors need to be first-surface mirrors with the reflective coating on the outside, else you have various reflections from the glass surface creating ghost images of the main beam. I have used pieces of aluminum HDD data platters as laser mirrors with good results. One of the best things about using the platters is that the aluminum can be easily formed into whatever shape is desired by cutting, machining, sanding or drilling. Glass on the other hand is not so easy to work with, as it breaks very easily. I believe the platters from small laptop-style HDDs are often glass or ceramic, so they probably wouldn't be of much use.I think the beam spread is due to a normal mirror having the silvering on the back of the glass. You will get two reflections. One from the surface of the glass and the other from the silver on the back of the glass. The piece of mirror that came from a scanner could have been used both ways as there was no paint over the silvering as on normal mirrors. I expected the silvering to be soft and scratch easily if you try to clean it. It did mark easily so it must be some harder metal than silver vacume deposited. Using a disk platter as a mirror may solve this problem. When I was looking to see if anyone else had used this idea I found out that some disk platters are ceramic. All the ones that I have dismantled are hard aluminium alloy with a magnetic coating.
Most often, these devices used to move a laser beam, some at very high speed for animated graphics, are called galvanometers or scanners. They usually have a feedback sensor on the galvo (often capacitive) and use closed-loop servo amps for sensing the position of the moving parts.
Here's a link to how one guy built his own DIY projector system. It might give you some insight.
http://elm-chan.org/works/vlp/report_e.html