[QUOTE=buffo;120730]No, I'm not.
I know scanners are analog devices.
One more time:
OK, its nitpick with Buffo day :-) Then attack myself a bit.
Delete BLAH BLAH BLAH
I know that a CRT doesn't care about pixels. I also know that scanners don't care about points. But the fact remains that the ILDA test pattern is *THE* standard that is used to rate the speed of the scanners under a given set of conditions. (Namely, displaying the aforementioned test pattern at 8 degrees.) Yes, it's lousy, but it's all we've got.
Its better then what we had before, which was Nothing.....
Now, Steve's suggestion to use a resonant scanner is a good one, as it solves the spec problem for us. A resonant scanner *does* give you the maximum bandwidth information for a given deflection angle. But even an 8Khz unit is still 2X too slow for standard NTSC video. (To say nothing of HD resolutions.)
Now attacking myself:
I should have clarified.
The 8 Khz scanner is tunable to 7,785 hz. Since its a sinusoid instead of a ramp, you scan in both directions. Drum roll please.... instant 15,570 hz.
the 4 khz model is 3,892.5 hz. Two beams and two directions or half NTSC video, your choice.
Does anyone make a 16Khz resonant scanner? That would be ideal. Anyone? Anyone? Buehler?
Yes, but they are much more expensive then the "8 Khz" IDS.
.
Yeah, thought so... That's why they use the spinning polygonal mirror...
Or a wide window AO deflector and some fancy beam compression optics. . I own one of the AO deflectors, Dr LAVA has seen it.
And one hell of a decoding arrangement and buffer memory, Doug Dulmadge on Alt,Lasers built several of them, using AO< Galvo, and Polygons. He can tell you its a witch with the polygons unless you have massive amounts of memory.
There is/was a commercial one from Korea in production with a Purelight Star in it. The staff were/are ILDA members. Samsung I think.
Steve