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Magic Leap One Teardown

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Magic Leap One Teardown: crwdns2935265:00crwdnd2935265:01crwdnd2935265:03crwdne2935265:0 Magic Leap One Teardown: crwdns2935265:00crwdnd2935265:02crwdnd2935265:03crwdne2935265:0 Magic Leap One Teardown: crwdns2935265:00crwdnd2935265:03crwdnd2935265:03crwdne2935265:0
  • Now things get a bit destructive, but it's worth it to get a peek at the optics chain.

  • A tiny ring of six LEDs starts the process—red, green and blue, times two for two focus planes.

  • The LEDs then shine on the LCOS microdisplay to generate an image. It's mounted to the black plastic housing next door.

  • From inside that housing, a collimating lens aligns the raw light output from the LEDs, and is mounted to a polarizing beam splitter.

  • The polarized beams then pass through a series of lenses to focus the image into the entrance gratings on the waveguides.

  • The entrance gratings themselves look like tiny dots embedded in the six (now slightly shattered) waveguides.

  • We pick up the "injection" unit for a closer look, revealing the colors associated with each entrance grating: two red, two green, and two blue.

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