Steve Smith
Member
The light is not as bright as a bulb would be and that Wiki quote is also correct - it is not as bright as a 300 watt stage light when in its original use as a PAR 64 light. However, I was very surprised at the light output of these stage lights when I first saw them. I didn't think anything would ever replace incandescent for stage use but for small stages in marquees, etc, they are very good.
However, I didn't pay anything for it (it was a spare after I repaired another one for a sound company I occasionally work for) so I think it is well worth experimenting with.
For graded papers I can either give separate blue and green exposures or even three exposures - blue and green together, then separate blue and green exposures or I could make a continuously variable PWM system with a single control going from 100% green, 0% blue through to 0% blue, 100% green.
Whilst I like the idea of having a single 'contrast' control, this will effectively halve the output and increase printing time.
The fit is perfect. There is a plastic plate behind it with four M5 bolts which fit in the cold light transformer mounting holes and also three M3 pillars which line up with some existing holes in the PCB.
Steve.
However, I didn't pay anything for it (it was a spare after I repaired another one for a sound company I occasionally work for) so I think it is well worth experimenting with.
For graded papers I can either give separate blue and green exposures or even three exposures - blue and green together, then separate blue and green exposures or I could make a continuously variable PWM system with a single control going from 100% green, 0% blue through to 0% blue, 100% green.
Whilst I like the idea of having a single 'contrast' control, this will effectively halve the output and increase printing time.
The fit is perfect. There is a plastic plate behind it with four M5 bolts which fit in the cold light transformer mounting holes and also three M3 pillars which line up with some existing holes in the PCB.
Steve.