laser lifetimes

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Oshel, Philip Eugene Oshel, Philip Eugene
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laser lifetimes

Listers,

We're in the midst of grant-writing and budgets, and I'd like to get
some folks' experiences with laser lifetimes and maintenance issues.
Specifically, multi-line argon lasers and 405 and 559 diode lasers.
These diodes in particular add a fair amount to a service contract.
How necessary is it to include the lasers in a service contract?
Currently, our old instrument has a single-line 488 argon and a HeNe
543, no contract and no problems, so I'm tending to excluding some or
all of the lasers from the contract. But ...
Thanks for the information.

Phil
--
Philip Oshel
Microscopy Facility Supervisor
Biology Department
024C Brooks Hall
Central Michigan University
Mt. Pleasant, MI 48859
(989) 774-3576
simon walker (BI) simon walker (BI)
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Re: laser lifetimes

Hi Phil,
Our Zeiss confocal has been in daily use since it was purchased 5 years
ago with the system typically turned on in the morning and off again
late in the evening.  During that 5 year period we have had the 405 nm
diode laser (unsure of manufacturer) replaced twice and the argon laser
(Lasos) replaced twice.  The 561 nm diode (Melles Griot) and 633 nm HeNe
(Lasos) lasers are still the originals, though compared with the others
the 633 HeNe gets little use.  We have the complete system including
lasers on service contract as it's important for us to minimise
downtime.  The service contract isn't cheap, but for us I think it has
given value for money.
Cheers,
Simon



-----Original Message-----
From: Confocal Microscopy List [mailto:[hidden email]]
On Behalf Of Philip Oshel
Sent: 20 January 2009 16:17
To: [hidden email]
Subject: laser lifetimes

Listers,

We're in the midst of grant-writing and budgets, and I'd like to get
some folks' experiences with laser lifetimes and maintenance issues.
Specifically, multi-line argon lasers and 405 and 559 diode lasers.
These diodes in particular add a fair amount to a service contract.
How necessary is it to include the lasers in a service contract?
Currently, our old instrument has a single-line 488 argon and a HeNe
543, no contract and no problems, so I'm tending to excluding some or
all of the lasers from the contract. But ...
Thanks for the information.

Phil
--
Philip Oshel
Microscopy Facility Supervisor
Biology Department
024C Brooks Hall
Central Michigan University
Mt. Pleasant, MI 48859
(989) 774-3576
Christian-103 Christian-103
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Re: laser lifetimes

In reply to this post by Oshel, Philip Eugene

If the service contract for the confocal unit itself covers alignment (depending on your comfort level, you might not even need that), then often it's cheaper to just outright purchase a new laser than cover one for several years and never need to have anything done with it. 

In our facility, the diode laser have worked just fine for 5 years, of course some of them are not used daily.

I also suspect service contracts will go up, and the cost of lasers will go down over the course of 5 years.

While I have not offered you anything solid, I suggest you look at your comfort level, funding and get price quotes for replacement lasers and read the fine print on the service contract.  We removed all the diodes from our contracts.

Christian




Craig Brideau Craig Brideau
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Re: laser lifetimes

I agree with Simon and Christian; if you think you can handle the alignment yourself just buying new lasers and self-installing can be cheaper.  One thing though; if you don't have someone with a decent optics skill set aligning the lasers can sometimes be tricky.  Also, when you buy your replacement laser be careful who you buy it from.  Very frequently a cheap laser is just that; a cheap laser.  There are issues of mode quality (basically shape of the beam out of the laser etc.) that need to be addressed to get good performance in a confocal system.  Again, if you don't have somebody with a basic optics background to go through all this then you could have trouble.

Craig


On Tue, Jan 20, 2009 at 9:51 AM, Christian <[hidden email]> wrote:

If the service contract for the confocal unit itself covers alignment (depending on your comfort level, you might not even need that), then often it's cheaper to just outright purchase a new laser than cover one for several years and never need to have anything done with it. 

In our facility, the diode laser have worked just fine for 5 years, of course some of them are not used daily.

I also suspect service contracts will go up, and the cost of lasers will go down over the course of 5 years.

While I have not offered you anything solid, I suggest you look at your comfort level, funding and get price quotes for replacement lasers and read the fine print on the service contract.  We removed all the diodes from our contracts.

Christian





Rietdorf, Jens Rietdorf, Jens
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Re: laser lifetimes

In reply to this post by Oshel, Philip Eugene
Dear Phil,

in addition to the long lifetime of the 405, it can be switched off any
time it is not used, while gas lasers always need to run quite some time
in advance before they can be used, so you gain some extra avoiding the
warm-up periods.
If you can convince all your users to switch the 405 off whenever it is
not used, I would agree to exclude it from the service contract.

Best, jens

-----Original Message-----
From: Confocal Microscopy List [mailto:[hidden email]]
On Behalf Of Philip Oshel
Sent: Tuesday, January 20, 2009 17:17 PM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: laser lifetimes

Listers,

We're in the midst of grant-writing and budgets, and I'd like to get
some folks' experiences with laser lifetimes and maintenance issues.
Specifically, multi-line argon lasers and 405 and 559 diode lasers.
These diodes in particular add a fair amount to a service contract.
How necessary is it to include the lasers in a service contract?
Currently, our old instrument has a single-line 488 argon and a HeNe
543, no contract and no problems, so I'm tending to excluding some or
all of the lasers from the contract. But ...
Thanks for the information.

Phil
--
Philip Oshel
Microscopy Facility Supervisor
Biology Department
024C Brooks Hall
Central Michigan University
Mt. Pleasant, MI 48859
(989) 774-3576
Keith Morris Keith Morris
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Re: laser lifetimes

In reply to this post by Oshel, Philip Eugene
Hi all,

Back at UCL we had a heavily used Bio-Rad Radiance 2000, installed around
2001. Over the first 6 years [until 2006] the multi-line argon laser was
replaced twice* and the far red 633nm diode laser replaced once. I have a
feeling the red 543nm laser was also replaced, but can't be sure now [they
seem to be most reliable, possibly as they are under 5mW] - the Radiance
didn't have a 405nm laser. Over the latter years the system was used very
heavily, with 24h time-lapses occurring 4-5 times a week. The argon laser
actually lasted far longer being left on semi-permanently, compared to users
originally switching it off every-time after use before the next user
arrived [might be just luck]. Our Diode lasers are treated as best switched
off after use unless you know it will be needed, whereas argon lasers are
best left on for the next user [like Hg lamps]. I would say we had parts
replaced on the Bio-Rad that totalled up to more than the cost of a couple
of lasers over that 6 year period [e.g. new boards/filters/motorised focus
drive].

The Bio-Rad also had a serious long running problem that eventually saw the
entire lasers+system box being replaced, but I'm pretty sure that happened
late on in the first year and would have been covered by the standard 1 year
UK guarantee [it all happened before I got there].

The newer 4-laser Leica SP2 confocal needed no lasers over the 3 years
before I left, although other parts were replaced. The DAPI 405nm diode did
develop problems with brightness, but I don't think it got replaced, just
some other optics.

Here at WTCHG, Oxford University, our 2.5 year old Zeiss 510 Meta has had
the 405nm violet laser [DAPI] replaced in 2008 [along with the AOTF and a
lot of other laser optics] as we had a persistent problem in the DAPI
channel [now gone]. Otherwise the 510 has had no new lasers. It's other
454/488/514 argon, 633 & 543 diode lasers all seem fine at the moment.

One thing I would say is ask for any confocal quote to include a 5 years
full maintenance contract, as this will normally be subject to the same
large discount applied to the microscope hardware. Likewise ensure you get
all the modules you need, otherwise any extras are at full cost [£13k a year
maintenance incl. Lasers, and say another £5k for that FRET/FRAP, 3D or
time-lapse module].

In our heavily used core facilities the maintenance contract pays for
itself, any problem whatever and an engineer arrives promptly, the confocal
is in pieces and boxes of new components arrive. Our Core users pay the
maintenance charge via overheads, and so use the confocal for 'free'. On a
ad-hoc basis its £1,000 a day just for the engineers time, replacement
lasers/parts excluded. Plus you aren't given the same priority as those on
maintenance contracts. Given electrical/laser safety requirements and public
liability I wouldn't swap my own lasers - anything to do with the laser side
is always dealt with by the microscope engineers fully familiar with the
system [who have access to all the correct parts anyway]. That said I have
used ex-Bio-Rad confocal engineers who I trust, and you may have access to
locals with considerable expertise [e.g. laser system builders] on-site.
Plus non-core facility confocals may get used fairly infrequently, possibly
making maintenance contracts an expensive option [light bulbs often last
longer left in the cupboard].

I'd also ensure that the microscope is supplied by the confocal manufacturer
and fully covered by the maintenance contract. Our Bio-Rad used a Zeiss
Axiovert 100M the Prof. bought separately at the same time. So there was an
invisible line inside the microscope where the motorised focus moved out of
the Bio-Rad maintenance contract into the 'not our problem mate, you'll have
to contact Carl Zeiss and pay-[a lot]-as-you go[slowly]' - the irony was
lost on them when this continued after Bio-Rad became Zeiss MicroScience -
and believe me it was a complete pain.

Regards

Keith

*The Bio-Rad engineer mentioned that their argon lasers had an hours 'on'
counter and that they generally failed before the 8,000 hour rated
life-time. When Bio-Rad raised this with the laser manufacturer, they
responded promptly by removing the external hours counter.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dr Keith J. Morris,
Molecular Cytogenetics and Microscopy Core,
Laboratory 00/069 and 00/070,
The Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics,
Roosevelt Drive,
Oxford  OX3 7BN,
United Kingdom.

Telephone:  +44 (0)1865 287568
Email:  [hidden email]
Web-pages: http://www.well.ox.ac.uk/cytogenetics/
 
-----Original Message-----
From: Confocal Microscopy List [mailto:[hidden email]] On
Behalf Of Philip Oshel
Sent: 20 January 2009 16:17
To: [hidden email]
Subject: laser lifetimes

Listers,

We're in the midst of grant-writing and budgets, and I'd like to get
some folks' experiences with laser lifetimes and maintenance issues.
Specifically, multi-line argon lasers and 405 and 559 diode lasers.
These diodes in particular add a fair amount to a service contract.
How necessary is it to include the lasers in a service contract?
Currently, our old instrument has a single-line 488 argon and a HeNe
543, no contract and no problems, so I'm tending to excluding some or
all of the lasers from the contract. But ...
Thanks for the information.

Phil
--
Philip Oshel
Microscopy Facility Supervisor
Biology Department
024C Brooks Hall
Central Michigan University
Mt. Pleasant, MI 48859
(989) 774-3576
Craig Brideau Craig Brideau
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Re: laser lifetimes

What you don't know can't hurt them huh?  That's terrible; I'd never deal with a company after they did something like that.  When it comes to all these laser systems shop around and get the company's reputation from a variety of sources.
We've had a Nikon system with a yellow HeNe (594) and an Argon (488 only) and (knock on wood) they've been going strong since 2002-ish, with pretty frequent usage.
I'm leaving for Photonics West tomorrow!  Maybe I'll see some of you there!

Craig



*The Bio-Rad engineer mentioned that their argon lasers had an hours 'on'
counter and that they generally failed before the 8,000 hour rated
life-time. When Bio-Rad raised this with the laser manufacturer, they
responded promptly by removing the external hours counter.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dr Keith J. Morris,
Molecular Cytogenetics and Microscopy Core,
Laboratory 00/069 and 00/070,
The Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics,
Roosevelt Drive,
Oxford  OX3 7BN,
United Kingdom.

Telephone:  +44 (0)1865 287568
Email:  [hidden email]
Web-pages: http://www.well.ox.ac.uk/cytogenetics/

-----Original Message-----
From: Confocal Microscopy List [mailto:[hidden email]] On
Behalf Of Philip Oshel
Sent: 20 January 2009 16:17
To: [hidden email]
Subject: laser lifetimes

Listers,

We're in the midst of grant-writing and budgets, and I'd like to get
some folks' experiences with laser lifetimes and maintenance issues.
Specifically, multi-line argon lasers and 405 and 559 diode lasers.
These diodes in particular add a fair amount to a service contract.
How necessary is it to include the lasers in a service contract?
Currently, our old instrument has a single-line 488 argon and a HeNe
543, no contract and no problems, so I'm tending to excluding some or
all of the lasers from the contract. But ...
Thanks for the information.

Phil
--
Philip Oshel
Microscopy Facility Supervisor
Biology Department
024C Brooks Hall
Central Michigan University
Mt. Pleasant, MI 48859
(989) 774-3576