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Brightest LED This Newbie\'s Seen (Yet) -- Pics
Just got hold of one of ElektroLumens' Luxeon Star MagLites (3Cs in a 2D) and compared to what I've been dabbling in up till now, I simply cannot believe how bright this thing is. Wayne did not install ANY resistors/circuits in it at all ("direct drive"?), and I simply cannot believe how BRIGHT this thin -- uh, did I say that already?
Here is a beamshot 24 inches from the wall next to a LightWave 4000 (on the left), which was the brightest LED I had ever actually experienced in person up to this point, and below it is a LightWave 3000, also on the left:
Then the Dorcy Cool Blue on the left followed by the Photon II/white, also on the left (sorry, by this time I had run out of LEDs to compare with):
I began to feel that this wasn't a fair fight, all those little LEDs bullied around by the powerful Luxeon Star, so I put it up against two of the biggest, baddest xenon incandescents I had handy. I wanted to capture some or all of the incandescent beam "corona" and not just the hotspot, so I had to move the lights in close, to within 8 inches of the wall for lack of wall space (dang pictures and stuff my wife likes to put up all over) -- so in the next pic on the right is a MagLite 4D with RS xenon bulb at tightest focus, followed by a "50,000 candlepower" Hubbel(Pelican?) 3003-C, also on the right:
I wonder how long this 3C LS conversion will hold up, battery- as well as LED-wise...I guess time will tell.
Well, this is all I have right now -- there is another super LED light, probably even brighter, being evaluated as part of an on-the-job thing (I'm an LEO) to which I will have photography access soon -- and then we'll see how Wayne's bad boy stacks up.
Thanks Wayne, for providing this fabulous unit...
(*note - if the pictures do not appear above, here are the direct links):
http://communities.msn.com/e5qmoda/shoebox.msnw?action=ShowPhoto&PhotoID=83
http://communities.msn.com/e5qmoda/shoebox.msnw?action=ShowPhoto&PhotoID=84
http://communities.msn.com/e5qmoda/shoebox.msnw?action=ShowPhoto&PhotoID=85
Just got hold of one of ElektroLumens' Luxeon Star MagLites (3Cs in a 2D) and compared to what I've been dabbling in up till now, I simply cannot believe how bright this thing is. Wayne did not install ANY resistors/circuits in it at all ("direct drive"?), and I simply cannot believe how BRIGHT this thin -- uh, did I say that already?
Here is a beamshot 24 inches from the wall next to a LightWave 4000 (on the left), which was the brightest LED I had ever actually experienced in person up to this point, and below it is a LightWave 3000, also on the left:
Then the Dorcy Cool Blue on the left followed by the Photon II/white, also on the left (sorry, by this time I had run out of LEDs to compare with):
I began to feel that this wasn't a fair fight, all those little LEDs bullied around by the powerful Luxeon Star, so I put it up against two of the biggest, baddest xenon incandescents I had handy. I wanted to capture some or all of the incandescent beam "corona" and not just the hotspot, so I had to move the lights in close, to within 8 inches of the wall for lack of wall space (dang pictures and stuff my wife likes to put up all over) -- so in the next pic on the right is a MagLite 4D with RS xenon bulb at tightest focus, followed by a "50,000 candlepower" Hubbel(Pelican?) 3003-C, also on the right:
I wonder how long this 3C LS conversion will hold up, battery- as well as LED-wise...I guess time will tell.
Well, this is all I have right now -- there is another super LED light, probably even brighter, being evaluated as part of an on-the-job thing (I'm an LEO) to which I will have photography access soon -- and then we'll see how Wayne's bad boy stacks up.
Thanks Wayne, for providing this fabulous unit...
(*note - if the pictures do not appear above, here are the direct links):
http://communities.msn.com/e5qmoda/shoebox.msnw?action=ShowPhoto&PhotoID=83
http://communities.msn.com/e5qmoda/shoebox.msnw?action=ShowPhoto&PhotoID=84
http://communities.msn.com/e5qmoda/shoebox.msnw?action=ShowPhoto&PhotoID=85