charithjperera
Newly Enlightened
- Joined
- Nov 11, 2008
- Messages
- 8
Hey folks,
I am after some lighting recommendations to emulate daylight at a reasonable cost on a benchtop. My main requirement is to match the spectrum of daylight as closely as possible and then make it roughly uniform over an area of 30*30cm to 1m^2.
I have read that short arc xenons are very good for this but they seem fairly rare and also have the tendency to blow up; the latter part makes me a bit uneasy.
The next thing I've come across are car HID's that use a combination of xenon and metal halides, would anybody know what their output spectrum is like?
Thanks!
Charith
I am after some lighting recommendations to emulate daylight at a reasonable cost on a benchtop. My main requirement is to match the spectrum of daylight as closely as possible and then make it roughly uniform over an area of 30*30cm to 1m^2.
I have read that short arc xenons are very good for this but they seem fairly rare and also have the tendency to blow up; the latter part makes me a bit uneasy.
The next thing I've come across are car HID's that use a combination of xenon and metal halides, would anybody know what their output spectrum is like?
Thanks!
Charith
), not just something that happens mid service life, provided the lamp hasnt been abused by contamination on its surface, or running with excessive power, but thats the same as any other high power bulb. Hence retiring them with plenty of service life still left on the dial. Ive been working with a 75W short arc that went bang (counter intuitive controls on the 200W variable power supply and a single analog meter that read volts, amps and watts = bang, but that bulb was being severely over driven, and it took it for ~20 minutes) Your fixture design should still account for the possibility of something happening, to at least protect an operator, and hopefully other expensive lamp parts.