Graham_Wright
Well-Known Member
Filament light bulbs are expensive to purchase and run (amps). However, they had one design feature that leds cannot exactly mimic. That is the single straight filament which gives near perfect cut off edges.
I have assembled an led array with 42 high intensity leds mounted on a plastic backing that sits at the back of the housing. The array is so arranged to match the cut-off limits.
In order to test its visibility, I have found a line of sight range at around 3 miles. Although not viewed in absolute darkness due to background light from buildings, it compared favourably with the single filament bulb.
The filament lamp draws 2 amps, the leds 330mA. The downside to the arrangement is that maximum output is generated at the centre of the 112.5 arc although the brightness checks were carried out over the whole angle and the variation was not noticeable.
If I can find a longer range, I'll continue the evaluation. (I am not blessed with access to water at the moment but I am "blessed" with living in a hilly area festooned with forests!)
I have assembled an led array with 42 high intensity leds mounted on a plastic backing that sits at the back of the housing. The array is so arranged to match the cut-off limits.
In order to test its visibility, I have found a line of sight range at around 3 miles. Although not viewed in absolute darkness due to background light from buildings, it compared favourably with the single filament bulb.
The filament lamp draws 2 amps, the leds 330mA. The downside to the arrangement is that maximum output is generated at the centre of the 112.5 arc although the brightness checks were carried out over the whole angle and the variation was not noticeable.
If I can find a longer range, I'll continue the evaluation. (I am not blessed with access to water at the moment but I am "blessed" with living in a hilly area festooned with forests!)