Lelandwelds
Well-known member
Should source direction matter?
I want to light the under car area for a car on a lift. I have suggested a few locations and methods:
1. Lift arm mounted on top shining up or bottom mounted shining down to bounce off floor.
2. Bench or wall mounted with barn doors to direct and shield light to bounce off floor under lift.
3. Vehicle mounted to bounce off floor or directly light area. (Doubles as breakdown light!)
4. In floor flush mounted to shine up.
The basic response has been "Will never work. Use a flashlight." I want something mains powered and tied to lift use only.
If the diffuser and distance to the eye is the same, should not a source above or below offer the same perceived glare?
My first choice is several integrated linear LED 10 to 15 watt fixtures mounted in a 2 inch wide pocket in the cement with a thick Lexan cover sanded translucent. I think raising the lift and breaking a hall effect, emitter/detector pair, or micro switch for hands free on and off would be perfect.
http://jamesindustry.com/wap/content/?698.html
I want to light the under car area for a car on a lift. I have suggested a few locations and methods:
1. Lift arm mounted on top shining up or bottom mounted shining down to bounce off floor.
2. Bench or wall mounted with barn doors to direct and shield light to bounce off floor under lift.
3. Vehicle mounted to bounce off floor or directly light area. (Doubles as breakdown light!)
4. In floor flush mounted to shine up.
The basic response has been "Will never work. Use a flashlight." I want something mains powered and tied to lift use only.
If the diffuser and distance to the eye is the same, should not a source above or below offer the same perceived glare?
My first choice is several integrated linear LED 10 to 15 watt fixtures mounted in a 2 inch wide pocket in the cement with a thick Lexan cover sanded translucent. I think raising the lift and breaking a hall effect, emitter/detector pair, or micro switch for hands free on and off would be perfect.
http://jamesindustry.com/wap/content/?698.html
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