Photo luminescent panels
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Photo luminescent panels
can anyone point me to a tutorial on choosing and installing photo-luminescent panels?
Thanks in advance
Thanks in advance
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I don't know about a tutorial, but Adafruit sells EL panels and tape.
https://www.adafruit.com/category/50
Basically you need an inverter to drive the panel. They usually off a source that's betwwn 3V to 6V depending on the area of EL panel/tape you're trying to drive.
Best of luck!
https://www.adafruit.com/category/50
Basically you need an inverter to drive the panel. They usually off a source that's betwwn 3V to 6V depending on the area of EL panel/tape you're trying to drive.
Best of luck!
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Typically about 80 hours IIRCDaveVan wrote:What lifespan do they have....I had plans to use some....thxMadman Lighting wrote:Any particular reason to choose that type of lighting?
Granted, its a very even and uniform type of light but its not that bright, requires high voltage, and has a shorter lifespan than LEDs.
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They advertise 10,000 hours. Nothing compare to 150,000 hours advertised for some LEDs, but more than will likely be used during the lifetime of most models.Kylwell wrote:Typically about 80 hours IIRCDaveVan wrote:What lifespan do they have....I had plans to use some....thxMadman Lighting wrote:Any particular reason to choose that type of lighting?
Granted, its a very even and uniform type of light but its not that bright, requires high voltage, and has a shorter lifespan than LEDs.
Somewhere I read that the stuff from Miller Engineering ( www.microstru.com ) has around a 400 hour half-life. Useless IMHO.
As noted earlier, add pots to your LEDs to reduce the brightness. If that's still not enough, you can put a filter between the LEDs and the surface.
As noted earlier, add pots to your LEDs to reduce the brightness. If that's still not enough, you can put a filter between the LEDs and the surface.
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That lifespan sounds about right to me.
When I started Madman Lighting I looked at all the available lighting sources and LEDs beat everything hands down for what I wanted to do, and in the 10 years since, they've just gotten better, by a lot.
10,000 hours is typical for LEDs and I'm sure its better than that now if you look. The way to make an LED last a long time is to keep it cool. Heat kills silicon devices of any kind. I under-drive mine just a little bit, so there's no chance of over drive and it increases lifetime. My DS9 model is 100% LED lit and it still shines, after 11 years now.
When I started Madman Lighting I looked at all the available lighting sources and LEDs beat everything hands down for what I wanted to do, and in the 10 years since, they've just gotten better, by a lot.
10,000 hours is typical for LEDs and I'm sure its better than that now if you look. The way to make an LED last a long time is to keep it cool. Heat kills silicon devices of any kind. I under-drive mine just a little bit, so there's no chance of over drive and it increases lifetime. My DS9 model is 100% LED lit and it still shines, after 11 years now.
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No, I am talking about electrically powered luminescent panels, not the ones that glows for a while after being in the light. Sorry about the confusion.Kylwell wrote:Or, as it just dawned on me, are you wanting glow-in-the-dark panels? Photoluminescence covers materials they glow after being exposed to light. Electoluminescence are materials that glow when electricity is applied.