Hardcore UV Light

tonispeedy34

Newly Enlightened
Joined
Oct 5, 2018
Messages
1
Hey Guys,
I am looking for a cheap diving light.


The requirements would be:


UV function
red light function
operated with 18560 battery
VERY STRONG LIGHT
something like 4,000 lumens

The biggest problem is that i didnt find a Light with a strong UV function. I want to do UV fluo night dive and dont like this 2m light circel. It has do be stronger !:grin2::duh2:
If there is no light i also would have no problem with building on. But again i cant find good UV Leds.

Sorry that i open the thread here but i think this section is better than the watersport etc.
 

Greta

Flashaholic
Joined
Apr 8, 2002
Messages
15,999
Location
Arizona
I moved your thread to the Dive Lighting forum... cuz... well... that's where it belongs! Welcome to CPF! - :welcome: - Going forward, please do not just post wherever you think is better. There are specific forums for specific topics. Please use them. Thank you.
 

PhotonWrangler

Flashaholic
Joined
Oct 19, 2003
Messages
14,432
Location
In a handbasket
I'm thinking you might want an HID dive lamp with a Woods Glass or dichroic UV-pass filter in front of it. I don't have a specific model in mind, but if I was doing this, that's what I'd look for. UV exploring is fun!
 

DIWdiver

Flashlight Enthusiast
Joined
Jan 27, 2010
Messages
2,725
Location
Connecticut, USA
Hi toni, and welcome to the forum!

Unfortunately, I have bad news for you. Your requirements are mutually incompatible.

Cheap + dive light = garbage
UV + red = expensive
4000 lm + 18650 = very short runtime
any lm + UV = impossible
4000 lm + red + 18650 = very, very short runtime (minutes)
4000 lm + red = expensive

You may have seen relatively inexpensive diving lights advertised as 4000 lm, but most of these specs are total fiction. Many low-end vendors claim 2-3 times the true output, some even more.

Since any pure UV light is, by definition, zero lumens, you have to talk about power output (typically in mW). There's been some discussion of UV LED lights on CPF, specifically for fluorescence. I don't specifically recall which forum, but you should be able to find it in either Diving, LEDs, or DIY Flashlights.

Red is still measured in lumens, but the human eye sensitivity varies greatly from 635 nm (the orange end of red) to 700 nm (almost infra-red). Even very optimistically, to get 4000 lm of red at 635 nm, you'd need over 50W. At 650 nm, which is really more red, you'd need over 100W.

Even if you were talking white, 4000 lm is still 28W (assuming 140 lm/W). Even that is not going to happen in an inexpensive light running on a single 18650.
 
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