Beautiful work! thanks for the photos
fwiw, something like that could be good for pilots that want a Red Light in the cockpit, plus powerful enought white light to do exterior walk around inspections.
Wurkkos TS10 MAO w sw45k mod, thanks to _Master_Nate
picture album: imgur.com/a/KMuvsRP
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these flowcharts are just fantastic!
thank you very much for sharing them
I have started using them, marked up with the specific changes I make to different anduril lights I own, like this one for my Aluminium TS10’s:
makes it really easy to keep track of changes I make to the factory defaults
I nominate this thread to be a sticky… Thumbs Up!
thanks, fun video,
Im going to tell people that copper lights smell like mushrooms… lol…
I’m ok with testing its limits
Im appreciating learning from your experience Thanks for sharing info
I respect that youre taking precautions. I think your idea to use water cooling could work well ;-)
I did not know at the time blinky modes were conflicting with thermal throttle.
Im glad you shared your experience, I also did not know the blinkies have no Thermal Regulation…
I may use it at full power again (while shooting), but turning it off between takes and cooling it in water.
ok, I hope that works out for you… imo, the problem is that you are using too high an output, it obviously gets too hot when you use “full power”… Candle mode was intended to be used at very low outputs… you are imho, misusing the candle mode for something that is not its intended purpose, and you are allowing the light to get too hot by not holding it in your hand.
but, if you insist… I suggest you stand the light in a glass of water, so the host will be cooled during the excessively high output…
I used it continuously in candle mode @ high with the original silicone diffuser for a video shoot
now that you have learned it gets too hot and has no thermal regulation…
suggest next time you want to use candle mode, that you limit your use to level 6 of the 7 stepped modes… and check with your hand after a couple of minutes, to confirm if that keeps the light cool enough
well-photographed
thanks…
the secret for me, has turned out to be to take photos during daylight hours (not in the dark)… it seems to help the iPhone camera (auto white balance), to produce useful beam color comparisons, for me… Plus daylight shows what the host looks like.
the other thing that has turned out really handy as a background is my gray soldering mat… (better than white paper).
example: i.imgur.com/HuON5ib.jpg
UV
here is a good video of a D2 w UV: www.youtube.com/watch?v=LTk1XAh8EFU