Troubleshooting Common Faults of Outdoor Laser Lights, No Need to Spend Money on Repairs

Outdoor laser lights are exposed to complex environments for a long time, and it is inevitable to have faults such as severe heating, sudden shutdown, and blurred beams. Mastering simple troubleshooting methods can solve most minor faults by yourself, saving maintenance costs. The most common fault is severe heating, which is mostly caused by blocked cooling fans, long-term full-power operation or poor environmental ventilation. It can be solved by regularly cleaning the fan dust, appropriately reducing the power and keeping the environment ventilated.

If the laser light suddenly goes out, first check whether the safety protection mechanism (overheating, access control switch, emergency stop) is triggered, and then turn it on after the equipment cools down or resets; if it still does not light up, check the power supply and fuse, replace the damaged parts, or switch to self-running mode to check whether the control signal is lost (such as DMX/ILDA control line failure). Blurred beams and distorted colors are mostly due to dust accumulation or damage to the optical lens. You can wipe the lens with a professional lens cloth. If the lens is scratched, it needs to be replaced in time.

In addition, if the laser light has stuck patterns or unsmooth scanning, it may be a galvanometer fault or control software abnormality. You can restart the equipment and update the control software. If the problem is still not solved, contact the manufacturer’s after-sales service. Doing a good job in daily maintenance, regularly cleaning the equipment, and checking the heat dissipation and sealing conditions can effectively reduce the occurrence of faults and extend the service life of the equipment.