MikeSalt
Flashlight Enthusiast
I own both incandescent and LED flashlights and I was wondering something on the way into University this morning. We all know that, at a specific lumen output, the incandescent light will give superior depth and colour rendition.:huh:
However, let us look at an extreme case. Let us take a Minimag with fresh cells (~15 bulb lumens on a good day) and a Fenix P1D-CE Q5 (~170-180 emitter lumens). Eyeballing the output, colour rendition is definately superior with the LED-based flashlight, purely due to the 'brute-force' high-lumen approach.:thumbsup:
So my question is...
"At what point does the higher lumen output of an LED compensate for the inherent colour-rendition deficeit?" :shrug:
Unfortunately, the lumen-gaps are too large between my incandescent/LED flashlights to conduct an experiment myself. From what I have read, some CPF folk would claim that a 150 lumen LED flashlight should have equal colour rendition to a 50 lumen incandescent, which means the cut-off point is at a ratio of 3x.
Of course, there are them that argue that an LED can NEVER match the rendition of glowing tungsten. Please consider though my extreme case example.
Thanks for your thoughts,
Mike
However, let us look at an extreme case. Let us take a Minimag with fresh cells (~15 bulb lumens on a good day) and a Fenix P1D-CE Q5 (~170-180 emitter lumens). Eyeballing the output, colour rendition is definately superior with the LED-based flashlight, purely due to the 'brute-force' high-lumen approach.:thumbsup:
So my question is...
"At what point does the higher lumen output of an LED compensate for the inherent colour-rendition deficeit?" :shrug:
Unfortunately, the lumen-gaps are too large between my incandescent/LED flashlights to conduct an experiment myself. From what I have read, some CPF folk would claim that a 150 lumen LED flashlight should have equal colour rendition to a 50 lumen incandescent, which means the cut-off point is at a ratio of 3x.
Of course, there are them that argue that an LED can NEVER match the rendition of glowing tungsten. Please consider though my extreme case example.
Thanks for your thoughts,
Mike