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Tough to beat the AA Haiku.Finally got a McGizmo and quickly became 2!
McGizmo at work!
TriPak Malkoff M361N
Haiku Nichia 4000K 1.5V
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Carry On!
Apparently it’s about 83.I would think CRI of candlelight to be very nearly 100.
The best.Tough to beat the AA Haiku.
Apparently it’s about 83.
I can see why when observing things under candlelight.
I just looked it up to confirm my recall but the Planck curve is based on a black body radiation source which a candle or brush fire is not (as I understand it).I'm just confused as to why this would be if the light is being primarily generated by Planckian (thermal) radiation ?
I know that a few CPF members have access to fancy (ie expensive) spectrometers. I would be really interested to see scans of firelight (candle, match, etc), as I have often wondered about how those might differ from incandescent ( "hot wire" ) lighting. CRI, spectral differences, R9 and such.
Measuring colour rendering and the parameters used isn’t so straight forward in many cases.I'm just confused as to why this would be if the light is being primarily generated by Planckian (thermal) radiation ?
I know that a few CPF members have access to fancy (ie expensive) spectrometers. I would be really interested to see scans of firelight (candle, match, etc), as I have often wondered about how those might differ from incandescent ( "hot wire" ) lighting. CRI, spectral differences, R9 and such.
I've been on the fence as to which one to order and I feel that the 5600K may be more useful overall. I have a 3500K light and it's great at night, but kind of gets washed out during the day.I got the Sapphire 3600 and it is very warm and brighter than I would have expected. It works great for a middle of the night walk to the kitchen or toilet. I am not sure how much brighter the 5600 would be but I am thinking about getting one as well.
5600k has an excellent tint. It’s not as cool as you’d think.I've been on the fence as to which one to order and I feel that the 5600K may be more useful overall. I have a 3500K light and it's great at night, but kind of gets washed out during the day.
I’ve got the 5600K, it’s the one to get. Nice and white and renders well.I've been on the fence as to which one to order and I feel that the 5600K may be more useful overall. I have a 3500K light and it's great at night, but kind of gets washed out during the day.
It was an unbelievable advance when we actually started to be able to get preferred tints, and I've long hoped that eventually the tint could be manipulated at will, much the same way that we can select brightness.I got the Sapphire 3600 and it is very warm and brighter than I would have expected. It works great for a middle of the night walk to the kitchen or toilet. I am not sure how much brighter the 5600 would be but I am thinking about getting one as well.
Thanks for the update.There has been an unexpected flurry of interest on the Sapphire and this has caught me short on components. I am now getting the converters from Rush in Germany and am waiting on the next batch. Sold out now for a month or two. It's also a bummer thta Yuji no longer makes the 5 mm LED's and I will run out of the 5600K at some point. I am down to only a couple of the 3200K. Unless I can find another source, I will be forced to go back to the Nichia GS at some point which work great but can't compare on a white wall with the Yujis.