Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
And, of course, our own Pierre was one of the first to try and report on the first of these by one of our members, the Baby Joe 2000 from LDTRONIX.We have a thread here from February. http://www.theshirtboard.com/index.php/topic,7229.0.htmlIt was inevitable that this new technology would catch on.
I'm interested in seeing how these fare as well.It would be a purchase for us not just to save on electricity / bulbs but redundancy with our old unit. We use a CTS so I wouldn't even need the vacuum. I could almost make an LED exposure unit myself with how simple it would be. We've already made and wired our own LED backlights for the washout booths.The things the baby joe didn't have that I would want would be storing many more presets and 1/10ths of a second setting.
Quote from: Admiral on July 12, 2013, 03:50:40 PMI'm interested in seeing how these fare as well.It would be a purchase for us not just to save on electricity / bulbs but redundancy with our old unit. We use a CTS so I wouldn't even need the vacuum. I could almost make an LED exposure unit myself with how simple it would be. We've already made and wired our own LED backlights for the washout booths.The things the baby joe didn't have that I would want would be storing many more presets and 1/10ths of a second setting.while it might be easy to put some bulbs together, getting the proper light distribution is a bit more work. The problem is that the light has to be uniform across the whole exposure area. While it might sound simple to think you just space the light sources evenly, the problem is that the light intensity drops with the square of the distance so the outer edges of the cones will produce less light than the centers. An easy way around that seems to be to overlap the light sources similar to the bottom image, but then the light is coming from 5 different directions (under, front, back, left and right) or potentially even more adjacent bulbs and undercutting is introduced. The intensity of the bulbs will dictate the proper distance to the screen, the angle of the light distribution dictates the distance between the bulbs. All of this has to be done right and somehow measured to confirm the uniformity of the light field (which Lou from LD tronix has done). It seems easy, but it really does take more than wiring LEDs on the backing board to get good results.As much as I believe I could figure most of these things out and build it myself, it just seems to make a lot more sense to buy it from Lou or Vastex. . .pierre