An important thing to be concerned about is if you use a UV torch, in dark conditions. The UV is bad for you eyes anyway, but when the pupil is wide open, far more so. Always use eye protection, clear plastic lenses usually block it completely, they don’t need to be tinted. Easy enough to test with something that fluoresces, even just some white paper.

Powerful UV torches can be as bright as a good white LED, just you can’t see it, your pupil won’t contract, no blink response, the wavelength is very damaging, altogether quite dangerous, not something to allow untrained people to use, nevermind children.

Natural reaction: “I turned it on but it doesn’t seem to be working. I’ve looked into the reflector and fiddled with it but there’s just a faint glow”. Add a ZWB2 filter … Oops.

The big problem with lasers is that the beam is collimated so will be focussed to a tiny spot on the retina, if visible the natural reaction is to look at it, so it’ll probably burn out the most important part of the retina, in milliseconds. Has happened to airline pilots, and is banned for military use:

Almost any of the high powered lasers that are used as toys are more than capable of blinding, even just a diode pulled from a DVD burner.

As for the OP’s question, I don’t know. But put your hand in front of a Q8 on turbo and you’ll realise in a few seconds how burning hot it is. Blink reflex is easily overcome if you insist on burning your eyes out, always a few sad cases after solar eclipses. If you are lucky you’ll just have spots before your eyes for a while, but that’s still quite bad, damage has been done, and is accumulative.