Audience scanning requires a variance, approved control system such as Pangolin's "Pass", each effect must be tested and documented as safe using a variety of precise, expensive, and calibrated equipment. A pre-show, instrumented, quality control session is required, and in some cases cumulative exposure must be monitored and timed. There is a minimum distance to the audience that has to be observed. Lots of documentation, and generally a safety evaluation by an outside, qualified, non ionizing radiation specialist.
At any given time there are maybe 5-10 such variances in the US max. If done properly, choreographed properly, it is enjoyable, but somewhat weak effect.
My friend who has three such projectors spent about 25,000$ over the top of the projector cost, hired an expert, bought the logging radiometer, LPM, oscilloscope, fast photodiode, etc... He spent beaucoup money on training and insurance, and is reluctant to use the gear for anything but the most special of gigs. Yearly traceable calibration of the measuring gear is expensive. Such gigs are filmed, because one of the bigger hazards of such gigs is an audience person with a high power pointer mimicking the effects, which has happened with bad results in Europe. Having video saved the laserist in that case from a huge financial settlement.
If I ever do gigs again on my own again, the show rider says "Pointers will be banned from the facility, a notice of such will be posted, and event security agrees to confiscate ANY active pointers, any questions, see 21 CFR 1040.1.J"
Guess who is legally responsible during a show if an exposure comes from ANY coherent source. Hint, it may not be the pointer owner...
That said, it can be done, and really you just need good insurance, avove average hardware, math skills*, and a tight Quality Control (QC) proceedure.
*College Level General Math / low end Algebra.. class, not even Calculus.
Steve
Last edited by mixedgas; 09-20-2023 at 09:59.
Qui habet Christos, habet Vitam!
I should have rented the space under my name for advertising.
When I still could have...