Dougal
Well-Known Member
I see a lot of discussion about LED's for Tri-lights, and I 'THINK' they seem to refer to LED's with 3 colours??? Can I not then, simply replace my awful 25watt bayonet bulb with a white LED?
I see a lot of discussion about LED's for Tri-lights, and I 'THINK' they seem to refer to LED's with 3 colours??? Can I not then, simply replace my awful 25watt bayonet bulb with a white LED?
Which ITYWF why a warm white is satisfactory for the red and green sectors of a tri or bicolour, while a cool white is notThe spectrum of a white LED is completely different to that of a white filament lamp, so what comes out may not be what you expect or want.
Which ITYWF why a warm white is satisfactory for the red and green sectors of a tri or bicolour, while a cool white is not
It seems to me that a white LED bulb will have actual LED emitters around a circumference perhaps 2 cms in diameter. Probably stacks about 2.5cms high.
This is fitted inside a 3 or 2 sector coloured lens about 5cms diameter.
Now the original incandescant bulb had a vertical filament meaning the source of light in azimuth is very small so gives sharp delineation between the sectors. Now you fit a bulb with a light source near 2cms across as seen in azimuth. It must therefor confuse the delineation between sectors.
This is the reason why bulbs are made for tricolour with 3 different coloured LED emitters to amtch the lens colour and hence improve the sector sharpness.
I guess much depends on the size of the LED bulb in terms of number of emitters and spread of each emitters light. So a smaller bulb with less emitters will give better differentiation of sectors but not so bright.
So is my theory right or does it not matter in practice? I have no practical experience as I use cabin side mounted LED individula nav lights. olewill
If I was replacing it now i would use a warm white and save a load of cash
I'm not saying it wouldn't work, but I'd want evidence that it did. regarding viewing angle and distance, with a specific lamp, before fitting one.
Now the original incandescant bulb had a vertical filament meaning the source of light in azimuth is very small so gives sharp delineation between the sectors. Now you fit a bulb with a light source near 2cms across as seen in azimuth. It must therefor confuse the delineation between sectors.