PM to DTR after being asked to test these. He said to go ahead and post this, so...
OK,
To begin these are very good diodes. The divergence can be tamed with the use of independent cylinders for each axis. I was able to take the uncollimated beam out of the diode and collimate it to a 7mm by less than 2mm (the really impressive axis) and @ 11M focus it to a 12mm by 6mm spot. As a comparison in my projectors 2 Mitsu P73s can be fit into a 5mm apature scanner and at 11M give a 6mm x6mm spot. Forgive my smugness, but that's better than anyone else achieves....Anyway, when you analyze the beam dimensions; 2mmx7mm =14mmSQ vs 5mmx5mm =25mm SQ. Then, compare this to the farfield dimensions; 6mm x12mm =72mmSQ vs 6mm x6mm =36mmSQ, the result is that these are every bit as good/intense as 2 P73s except of course these C mount diodes are 2x as powerful as 2 P73s.
For line scanning applications(the company?) the good axis is extremely good and these would be a definite winner.
I did not try high power limits as you already have a handle on this. What I would like to try is multistage TEC cooling and temperature shifting down around the 630nm region. Along with this I suspect an impressive increase in power output.
With 6 of these I am pretty sure I could build a 30W red laser (world record?) that would fit the new EMS scanners...of boy. The problem is cost. @ $400 each I can take 4Mitsu P73s and combine them for the same output with less financial risk in the vulnerable components (a PBS does not go LED).
You OK if I post this?
Eric