
Originally Posted by
lasermaster1977
Nicer explanation. Accuracy counts even for newbies.
I've never heard the term Passes per second but it could be confused with "frame passes per second" to the unknowing or to us old farts. If the definition of a "pass" is the time to go from one point to the next point, then by that definition "passes per second" would be one-half of "points per second" since there are half as many "passes" in an image as there are points.
How about this: Put it simply, laser projected images create an image by moving the laser beam very quickly on a two dimensional surface or screen, using an old true and time-tested artistic method, that many of us enjoyed as very young children growing up, referred to as "connect-the-dot-drawings". The dots on a piece of paper are numbered, beginning at one, and incrementing by one to each dot that "hides" the true image. The image is revealed by connecting the dots in their numeric order buy using a pencil or similar writing implement to draw a line (or pass?) between each successive dot. It may be hard to believe but we were able to reveal the drawn image on paper this way WITHOUT FLICKER!
Happy Newstmas Everyone!
Unless I'm completely confused - if you do 600 points per second, you're doing 599 passes. It's a fence post thing...
“I have learned very early the difference between knowing the name of something and knowing something.” ~ Richard Feynman, Nobel Laureate in Physics, 1965.
"There are painters who transform the sun into a yellow spot, but there are others who, with the help of their art and their intelligence, transform a yellow spot into the sun." Pablo Picasso