โJan-25-2016 02:20 PM
โJan-28-2016 03:24 PM
โJan-27-2016 07:57 AM
Gdetrailer wrote:4x4van wrote:
Google "color temperature", a million color charts; while they may vary a tiny bit, most pretty much agree with each other.
As for what to use in your RV, that's up to you. Many prefer warm, but warm is too yellow/dingy looking for me. I wanted more light when I made the conversion to LEDs. I prefer about 5000K, which is actually the same color as natural noontime daylight; neither blue nor yellow. Once you hit 6000K, it really starts starts to look blue, lower than 4000K looks yellow.
Here's my conversion and pics
Sadly, CONSISTENCY of LEDs with CRI (Color Rendition Index), tends to be rather poor.. Often 50-60 CRI, compared to a 5,000 K (daylight) CFL which is designed for photography use will have very high CRI of 90-99.
The higher the CRI number you get closer to actual color reproduction of the sun.
So, many LEDs (especially cheap LEDs) that are rated 5,000 K tend to be already very high in the BLUE color due to the poor CRI, often having a rather ghastly blue overtone.
For photography use there is specially designed filter gels for LEDs to correct the poor CRI.
It's buyer be aware.
Buy one of each color if you are not sure and try them out before committing to a large order.
โJan-26-2016 06:01 PM
โJan-26-2016 05:27 PM
4x4van wrote:
Google "color temperature", a million color charts; while they may vary a tiny bit, most pretty much agree with each other.
As for what to use in your RV, that's up to you. Many prefer warm, but warm is too yellow/dingy looking for me. I wanted more light when I made the conversion to LEDs. I prefer about 5000K, which is actually the same color as natural noontime daylight; neither blue nor yellow. Once you hit 6000K, it really starts starts to look blue, lower than 4000K looks yellow.
Here's my conversion and pics
โJan-26-2016 03:18 PM
โJan-26-2016 02:56 PM
โJan-26-2016 05:56 AM
Gdetrailer wrote:old guy wrote:
what color led light did most of you used when you switched to led lights, for example, warm white or cool white or what??
Don't go by the "short hand name" like warm white and so on..
LED manufacturers must get a lot of giggles out of folks buying their modules by those names since they seem to have no real rhyme or reason to the name they give the colors...
Instead you should be looking at the color temperature which is in Kelvin (K)..
For example warm white for one manufacturer could be 2600 K (very bug light yellow) and for another 2900 K.. (less yellow).
Comparing to incadescent a "soft white" bulb is typically 2700 K as a baseline to work with.
I prefer 3000K-4000K (some call that "cool white" or "bright white"), to me it is the brightest so that is what I like..
I don't like the 5000K-6500K LEDs (often called "daylight"), they just look horribly blue, I call it death blue.. Not to mention to me it takes one heck of a lot MORE bulbs to make it seem bright to me.
If the LEDs you are looking at do not give the color temp in Kelvin, skip it.. Not worth the hassle guessing at it.
โJan-26-2016 05:53 AM
โJan-25-2016 06:12 PM
โJan-25-2016 04:57 PM
โJan-25-2016 04:52 PM
โJan-25-2016 04:18 PM
โJan-25-2016 03:18 PM
old guy wrote:
what color led light did most of you used when you switched to led lights, for example, warm white or cool white or what??
โJan-25-2016 03:09 PM
old guy wrote:
what color led light did most of you used when you switched to led lights, for example, warm white or cool white or what??