I'm looking at possibly building a UV LED head for my Beseler 45. There are a number LEDs that output Peak Wavelength at 395nm and I'm trying to figure out if they will work.
I'm looking at possibly building a UV LED head for my Beseler 45. There are a number LEDs that output Peak Wavelength at 395nm and I'm trying to figure out if they will work.
I'm looking at possibly building a UV LED head for my Beseler 45. There are a number LEDs that output Peak Wavelength at 395nm and I'm trying to figure out if they will work.
I have tried UV LEDs that had the UVA output you mentioned. They were of insufficient intensity to expose Azo in my tests. For your information, I mounted the LEDs immediately adjacent to each other.
The spectral sensitivity of Azo, as I recall, is 360-425 nm.
I have tried UV LEDs that had the UVA output you mentioned. They were of insufficient intensity to expose Azo in my tests. For your information, I mounted the LEDs immediately adjacent to each other.
The spectral sensitivity of Azo, as I recall, is 360-425 nm.
A few months ago I looked at high power UV LEDs, they seemed to be more expensive and have less output/watt than the visable light LEDs. I don't know the relative sensitivites of AZO in UV and regular paper in blue, but from everything I've read, I'd be suprised if it was faster than regular paper, when each are exposed at their optimum wavelength.
On the AZO forum (www.michaelandpaula.com) there were a few recent threads of people using UV BLB bulbs to make an enlarger light source. That may be a far more cost effective solution for now. Might give you some ideas anyway.
The spectral sensitivity of Azo peaks at 350 nm (see Tech Pub G-10), which is a perfect match to the peak spectral output of BLB fluorescent bulbs, also 350 nm. This is why a spiral BLB bulb works well in an enlarger to enlarge onto Azo. All you need is the proper diffusion. Im one of those people using BLB bulbs to make an enlarger light source. See the Azo Forum.
The spectral sensitivity of Azo peaks at 350 nm (see Tech Pub G-10), which is a perfect match to the peak spectral output of BLB fluorescent bulbs, also 350 nm. This is why a spiral BLB bulb works well in an enlarger to enlarge onto Azo. All you need is the proper diffusion. Im one of those people using BLB bulbs to make an enlarger light source. See the Azo Forum.