We’ll I have to be honest here as I have from time to time held certain newly acquired hi-power torches at eye level (especially during daytime) and quickly flashed/scanned it into a mirror from let’s say 10 feet away to gage just how bright the sucker truly is against the human condition. Or if the thing has a particularly different strobe cadence to see its effects.

I don’t think this a good idea anymore. Not with the kind of stuff we’re messing with today. Then with all the gizmos emitting IR or UV even moreso.

Lasers, forget about it. I respect the hell out of them - inexpensive versions or not.

The main point why I brought this up is that we’re used to the blink reflex protecting us but as pointed out above, don’t necessarily rely upon it with the power intensities we’re seeing nowadays. I also didn’t mean to imply a lot of peeps we’re gonna go blind because we’re typically all so stupid enough to continously stare into an emitter and not use common sense otherwise.

DBSAR’s comment that his demo was painful to look at is a case in point. Not that it was dangerous per se like a laser is but just that it’s getting more commonplace that the outputs we’re dealing with is a possible cumulative adverse factor to consider. That’s all.

Well anyway, it’s good I think that occasionally we get reminded.

:neutral_face: