I have several and Ive seen several hundred others available surplus in the US and I doubt that many of the people that bought those as surplus are aware of their classification or are aware that the sensor material is classified over and beyond the cyrocooler itself.
Cite your sources. There's nothing "classified" about thermal image sensors, all of the technologies are either published in papers, patented, or both.
make dammed sure of what you have and what sensor material is in
Makes absolutely no sense. Material? Vanadium oxide, mercury cadmium telluride, or the composition of strained layer superlattices is somehow classified?
And don't try to side step the issue by saying "space qualified". Any military grade cyro cooler and/or sensor is likely to be classified and export restricted no matter whether it's used in aircraft, missile or ground or ANY other environment.
Blatantly false. Most of the ones available on the market today aren't even made in the US or Europe. "Military grade" is only a synonym for "lowest bidder". Unless it's an actual munition(hence why J-T coolers are specified explicitly in part 121, and are of no use to me), there's absolutely nothing that differentiates a Ricor K543 inside a FLIR SC-series camera from one inside a Lockheed Raytheon Grumman HellMissile Long Range People Deleter. I can go buy a K543 right now and the only thing that I'll have to sign is the invoice for my kidney removal.
To be blunt, stop this fearmongering bullshit. I'm not interested in military surplus, and I specifically said that
I don't want complete units, just the coolers, which are common off the shelf items.
Where that comes from doesn't matter, whether it be a vintage Inframetrics PM290 or a missile, it's the same device. Not to mention, in non-functional condition.
Oh, and nothing ships here from the US anyway, so don't get your panties in a twist.